Maximal rates of excretion and synthesis of urea in normal and cirrhotic subjects

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Abstract

When normal individuals eat 0.33 g protein N/kg metabolic body weight (MBW) per day, they excrete 10-15 mg urea N/h per kg MBW. If they then ingest (at 0 hr) 0.27 (dose A), 0.40 (dose B), 0.53 (dose C), 0.94 (dose D), or 1.33 (dose E) g protein N/kg MBW (in the form of casein, ovalbumin, or lactalbumin), the rate of urea N excretion accelerates within 4 hr. At dose C a maximal rate of urinary urea N excretion (MRUE) is reached, which averages 55 mg urea N/h per kg MBW and which persists for 16 hr. Higher doses of protein do not further accelerate urea excretion, but prolong the duration of MRUE to 28 hr (after dose E). Blood urea N (BUN) rises by 7-20 mg/100 ml during the first 8 hr after dose C to E, and remains stable within ± 5 mg/100 ml during the ensuing 8-28 hr of MRUE. Each increment of protein above dose C causes a further increment in plasma α amino N. During infusion of free amino acids at a rate of 110 or 165 mg amino acid N/h per kg MBW for 12 hr, rate of urea excretion increases to the MRUE value produced by dose C-E of oral protein. These findings indicate that MRUE corresponds to a period of maximal rate of urea synthesis (MRUS). MRUS is greater than MRUE because one fraction of newly formed urea is hydrolyzed in the gastrointestinal tract, and another fraction may accumulate temporarily in body water during the MRUE period. Oral neomycin reduces the proportion of urea hydrolyzed in the gut to less than 20%; its extent is measured by recovery in the urine of a tracer dose of [14C] urea injected intramuscularly during determination of MRUE. Accumulation of urea in body water is estimated from increment in BUN during the period of MRUE measurement (8-24 hr after dose E of casein) and from body water measured with 3H2O. Then MRUS is calculated as: ([mg urea N excreted between 8 and 24 hr after dose E] + [BUN at 24 hr BUN at 8 hr] x [ body water]) x (100/% recovery [14C] urea) x (1/kg MBW) x (1/16 hr). MRUS in 10 normal subjects averaged 65 mg urea N/hr per kg MBW (range 55-76), and in 34 cirrhotics 27 mg urea N/hr per kg MBW (range 6-64). Among 19 cirrhotic patients fed 40, 60, 80, or 100 g protein daily for successive 10 day periods, the occurrences of hyperammonemia, hyperaminoacidemia, and encephalopathy at each level of protein intake were inversely related to MRUS value.

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Rudman, D., DiFulco, T. J., Galambos, J. T., Smith IIIrd, R. B., Salam, A. A., & Warren, W. D. (1973). Maximal rates of excretion and synthesis of urea in normal and cirrhotic subjects. Journal of Clinical Investigation, 52(9), 2241–2249. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI107410

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