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. 1983 May:104:41-50.
doi: 10.1242/jeb.104.1.41.

The role of urinary precipitates in the excretion of electrolytes and urate in the domestic fowl

The role of urinary precipitates in the excretion of electrolytes and urate in the domestic fowl

S Long et al. J Exp Biol. 1983 May.

Abstract

1. In order to quantify losses of Na and K associated with precipitate fractions in semi-solid avian urines, Na, K, uric acid and urates (UA + U) and inulin were measured in plasma, in whole ureteral urine, and in urinary precipitates of hens. Ten animals were used, five fed a control commercial poultry meal (Diet A) and five maintained on a high protein, low-Na feed (Diet B). 2. In ureteral urines from hens on Diet A, dried precipitate accounted for 5.6% of the total whole urine weight, on the average. UA + U constituted about two-thirds of the precipitates' weight and 80% of the total excreted UA + U load of 97.4 mM. The average molar fractions, [Na]/[UA + U] and [K]/[UA + U], in precipitates were in the range 0.1-0.2; and the Na and K lost in these fractions were 12.8 mequiv and 9.6 mequiv, respectively, per 1 whole urine. These losses represent 9% and 23% of total Na and K excretion. 3. Diet B was used to accentuate potential cation loss in precipitates if obligatory binding of K and especially Na were to occur in precipitates. Urinary [UA + U] in whole urine rose to 146 mM of which 95% was found in precipitates. The average molar fraction [Na]/[UA + U], however, fell to 0.06 and that of [K]/[UA + U] to 0.08. Renal loss of Na was 8.5 mequiv and of K was 11.5 mequiv per 1 whole urine. 4. These experiments reveal that significant but minor fractions of excreted Na and K are associated with precipitates of avian urine, although the loss is insignificant compared to that reported in starlings (Braun, 1978). They further indicate that the Na/inulin clearance ratio, based on measurements in whole urine and plasma, adequately reflects fractional excretion which, on Diet A, was 1.8% of the filtered load and, on the Na-poor Diet B, less than 0.1%. These values place the Na-reabsorbing abilities of these birds easily within the range reported for ureotelic vertebrates and suggest that uricotelism does not impose a major renal salt loss in birds.

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