Asunto(s)
Asma/tratamiento farmacológico , Terbutalina/administración & dosificación , Administración por Inhalación , Adolescente , Niño , Preescolar , Humanos , Nebulizadores y Vaporizadores , Polvos/administración & dosificación , Polvos/efectos adversos , Pruebas de Función Respiratoria , Terapia Respiratoria , Terbutalina/uso terapéutico , Resultado del TratamientoRESUMEN
The kinetics of urea metabolism were measured in children recovering from severe malnutrition. For a period of up to 10 d they receive one of four diets which provided 711 kj (170 kcal)/kg per d. Two groups received a diet with a high protein:energy (P:E) ratio of 10.6 percent (HP), enriched with either fat (HP/F) or maize starch and sucrose HP/C). Two groups received a diet with a low P:E ratio of 8.8 percent (LP), enriched with either fat (LP/F) or maize starch and sucrose (LP/C). The rate of weight gain on the HP diets was significsntly greater than on the LP diets. There was no difference in urea production between any of the four diets: HP/F 1.23 (se 0.12), HP/C 1.37 (se 0.14), LP/F 1.64 (se 0.22) LP/C 1.15 (se 0.15) mmol nitrogen/kg per h. On the HP diets urea excretion was 0.77 (se0.07) mmol N/kg per h, 61 percent of production. There was significantly less urea excreted in the urine on diet LP/C than on LP/F (0.36 (se0.05) and 0.64 (se 0.04)mmol N/kg per h respectively). A significantly greater percentage of the urea production was hydrolysed on the LP diets (61 percent) compared with the HP diets (39 percent), with the consequence that 50 percent of urea-N produced was available for synthetic activity on the LP diets compared with 30 percent on the HP diets. The increase in the urea hydrolysed on the LP diets was equivalent in magnitude to the decreased intake of N, so that overall intake plus hydrolysis did not differ between the LP and HP diets. Crude N balance was similiar on diets HP/F, HP/C and LP/C, but was significantly reduced on diet LP/F. These results show that there is an accommodation in urea kinetics during rapid catch-up weight gain, which becomes evident when the P:E ratio of 8.8 percent, protein is limiting for catch-up growth. When the intake has a P:E ratio of 8.8 percent the pattern of urea kinetics can be modified by the relative proportion of fat and carbohydrate in the diet. The measurement of urea kinetics provides a useful approach to the definition of the adequacy of the protein in the diet. (AU)