Relationship between urinary sodium excretion, blood, pressure and BMI in young adults

0Citations
Citations of this article
9Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

Abstract

Introduction: the daily urinary excretion of sodium (Natriuria) reflects the consumption of salt in the diet and this has been already related from the Anglo-Saxon literature with arterial hypertension; and more recently with metabolic alterations such as overweight and obesity; therefore it is deduced that it would be a relevance determinant in the study of cardic-brain-vascular diseases. Objectives: to determine the relationship between urinary sodium excretion, blood pressure and BMI in young adults of the “Hospital Nacional de Itauguá”. Material and methods: prospective, descriptive, observational study with analytical components carried out in adults-young inpatients and staff of the Medical Clinic service of the “Hospital Nacional” in 2018. Results: the average age was 35 ± 11 years. Female patients predominated (62%). The incidence of arterial hypertension was 66%, overweight was observed in 40% and obesity in 30%. The average of Natriuria was 8.8gr / day (SD: ± 0.8 g / day) that would correspond to the daily salt content in the diet of the individuals studied and its correlation with both systolic blood pressures (r = 0.34) as diastolic (r = 0.34) and the BMI (r = 0.60) yielded positive data with p <0.01. Conclusion: the consumption of salt was almost double that recommended and varied slightly with the last report made in our country and with neighboring countries. A positive relationship between high salt intake and exposed clinical parameters was demonstrated, the same correlation was seen both for systolic and diastolic pressures and a higher relationship with BMI, presenting a trend line that supposes a higher BMI higher natriuria and consequently higher blood pressure.

Author supplied keywords

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Ortiz, J. W., Aveiro, A. C., & Filartiga, E. O. (2019). Relationship between urinary sodium excretion, blood, pressure and BMI in young adults. Revista Del Nacional (Itaugua), 11(1), 39–55. https://doi.org/10.18004/rdn2019.0011.01.039-055

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free