Effect of ammonium-chloride-induced metabolic acidosis on renal electrolyte handling in human neonates
- PMID: 2119683
- DOI: 10.1007/BF00862528
Effect of ammonium-chloride-induced metabolic acidosis on renal electrolyte handling in human neonates
Abstract
The present study was undertaken to determine the relative contribution of altered glomerular and tubular functions to the metabolic-acidosis-induced increase of renal electrolyte excretion in healthy preterm and full-term neonates and in older infants. Studies were performed in 10 premature infants (mean birth weight 1618 g, gestational age 30.8 weeks) weekly for 6 consecutive weeks, in 11 full-term neonates (mean birth weight 3085 g, gestational age 38.6 weeks) on the 7th day of life and in 25 older control infants (mean age 6.5 months, body weight 6802 g), before and after NH4Cl loading. Blood acid-base parameters, plasma and urine electrolyte and creatinine concentrations were measured, endogenous creatinine clearance and fractional electrolyte excretion (FE) calculated. It was demonstrated that the significant reduction in blood pH and total CO2 content induced by NH4Cl administration was associated with significant increases in glomerular filtration rate (GFR), urine flow rate, FENa and FECl, in each group studied, irrespective of maturity, postnatal age or pre load values. FEK also tended to increase, but the change reached statistical significance only in older infants and in premature babies during the 1st, 2nd and 5th week of post-natal life. FECa and FEPO4 increased slightly in preterm and full-term newborns and became significant in older infants. Prior to NH4Cl administration, FECa correlated positively with FENa in each group. NH4Cl metabolic acidosis, however, dissociated FECa from FENa in the full-term newborns and older infants but not in the preterm neonates.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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