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Urinary excretion of retinol in children with acute diarrhea.

J O Alvarez, E Salazar-Lindo, J Kohatsu, P Miranda, C B Stephensen
Other The American journal of clinical nutrition 1995 103 citations
PubMed DOI
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Study Design

Study Type
Other
Sample Size
44
Population
children
Intervention
Urinary excretion of retinol in children with acute diarrhea. None
Comparator
control group
Primary Outcome
diarrhea
Effect Direction
Mixed
Risk of Bias
Moderate

Abstract

Acute infections of childhood are associated with an increased of xerophthalmia, apparently due to depletion of vitamin A stores. The mechanism responsible for this is not known. Recently, it has been reported that severe infections in adult patients (ie, sepsis and pneumonia) result in excretion of large quantities of retinol in the urine. In 44 children hospitalized for treatment of acute diarrhea we found mean urinary excretions of 1.44 mumol retinol/24 h on day 1 of hospitalization, 0.62 mumol retinol/24 h on day 2, and 0.23 mumol/24 h on day 3. Healthy control subjects matched for age did not excrete measurable amounts of retinol in the urine. Retinol excretion was associated strongly with rotavirus diarrhea and presence of fever. Furthermore, serum retinol concentration was negatively associated with duration of diarrhea before hospitalization, suggesting that urinary excretion of retinol may be an important contributor to vitamin A depletion.

TL;DR

Retinol excretion was associated strongly with rotavirus diarrhea and presence of fever, and serum retinol concentration was negatively associated with duration of diarrhea before hospitalization, suggesting that urinary excretion ofretinol may be an important contributor to vitamin A depletion.

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