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Title: Evaluation of protein intake by dietary diaries and urea-N excretion in children with chronic renal failure. European Study Group for Nutritional Treatment of Chronic Renal Failure in Childhood. Author: Wingen AM, Fabian-Bach C, Mehls O. Journal: Clin Nephrol; 1993 Oct; 40(4):208-15. PubMed ID: 8261677. Abstract: In 1988 a European multicentre, randomized trial was started in order to analyse the influence of protein intake on the progression of chronic renal failure in children. Compliance to the dietary prescriptions, i.e. protein intake, was checked by written dietary diaries and in addition by urinary urea-N excretion. This provided a unique chance to compare both methods in non-hospitalized children. Of a total of 200 patients 123 were selected, in whom at least 4 consecutive dietary diaries plus 4 completely collected 24-hour urine samples were available. Whereas urea-N excretion and simultaneously recorded protein intake did not correlate well, mean urinary urea-N excretion and mean protein intake of at least 4 observations in each patient correlated highly (r = 0.803, p = 0.0001). The difference between protein-N intake and urea-N excretion was not a constant amount of 0.031 g/kg/day as proposed by Maroni et al. [1985] but figured at 0.085 +/- 0.061 g/kg/day and was highly correlated to protein intake (r = 0.839, p = 0.0001). The correlation of protein intake and urea-N excretion was best described by the formula: protein-intake (g/kg/day) = (urea-N excretion [g/kg/day]x 15.39) -0.8 or protein intake (g/kg/day) = urea-N excretion (g/kg/day) x 9.5. Maroni's formula underestimated the high protein intake of young children. In only a few patients dietary diaries severely underestimated protein intake as compared to calculation by urea-N excretion.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]