2006
DOI: 10.2215/cjn.00320106
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Age-Related Increase in Plasma Urea Level and Decrease in Fractional Urea Excretion

Abstract: This study confirms in humans an age-related increase in plasma urea levels (r ‫؍‬ 0.62; P < 0.001; y ‫؍‬ 0.229x ؉ 18.26) and no correlation between plasma creatinine and age (r ‫؍‬ 0.06; NS). Fractional urea excretion (FE urea) decreases with age (r ‫؍‬ ؊0.41; P < 0.001; y ‫؍‬ ؊0.226x ؉ 55). Comparing urea and creatinine clearances, measured in 19 young and in 15 old women, a larger decrease of urea clearance (؊56%) compared with the creatinine clearance (؊43%) was observed as expected, explaining the lower F… Show more

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Cited by 73 publications
(49 citation statements)
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“…This variable expressivity could be explained by the influence of modificator genes, as for many genetic diseases, on one hand, and by the major environmental influence of differences and variation in fluid and/or solute intake on the other hand (15). Idiopathic chronic SIADH is frequent in the elderly (16); it is not excluded that some of these patients in fact present NSIAD, which is "revealed" late in life because of the widely know decrease in solute intake in the elderly (17,18).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This variable expressivity could be explained by the influence of modificator genes, as for many genetic diseases, on one hand, and by the major environmental influence of differences and variation in fluid and/or solute intake on the other hand (15). Idiopathic chronic SIADH is frequent in the elderly (16); it is not excluded that some of these patients in fact present NSIAD, which is "revealed" late in life because of the widely know decrease in solute intake in the elderly (17,18).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Reprinted from reference (36), with permission. increase in plasma urea level and decrease in fractional urea excretion (Figure 4), which explains the difference in urea and FEurea between young and old patients with SIADH (mean urea and FEurea in young patients with SIADH 18 mg/dl and 58%, respectively, and in old patients 29 mg/dl and 44%, respectively) (38). As for urea, the level of serum uric acid is known to be partially dependent on its renal clearance, which is influenced by different factors, one of the most important being EV.…”
Section: Serum Creatinine Urea and Uratementioning
confidence: 95%
“…Hyponatremia in young patients with SIADH is usually associated with low plasma creatinine concentration, whereas this is not the case in old patients with SIADH (37,38). SIADH is also associated with low plasma urea levels as a result of a high renal clearance (39), whereas in hyponatremia that is caused by salt depletion, plasma urea usually is increased as a result of an abnormal low FEurea (40) (prerenal uremia).…”
Section: Serum Creatinine Urea and Uratementioning
confidence: 99%
“…8 In the elderly, the production of creatinine also decreases with age, whereas the secretion of creatinine from the tubules increases. 22 Therefore, although the glomerular filtration rate declines in aging kidneys, the serum creatinine levels may remain stable, 23 which further highlights the limitation of using relative insensitive serum creatinine levels as a marker of renal function.…”
Section: Nephron Functionmentioning
confidence: 99%