December 2024
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2 Reads
Journal of Renal Nutrition
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December 2024
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2 Reads
Journal of Renal Nutrition
November 2024
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9 Reads
The bone-derived hormone FGF23, primarily secreted by osteocytes, is a major player in the regulation of phosphate homeostasis. It becomes upregulated by increased circulating phosphate concentration, e.g. due to elevations in phosphorus intake (P-In) or alterations in habitual dietary acid load. The present study aimed to investigate whether long-term endogenous acid production or a habitual high phosphorus intake during childhood and adolescence may be prospectively related with altered adult levels of FGF23 and the FGF23-related metabolite α-klotho. Urinary phosphate excretion (PO4-Ex), net acid excretion (NAE), and potential renal acid load (uPRAL) were analyzed in 24-h urine samples (n = 3369) collected from 343 healthy 3–17 years old participants of the DONALD Study (Dortmund, Germany) to assess, biomarker-based, P-In and habitual dietary acid load. Circulating FGF23, α-klotho, and further blood parameters were additionally examined in young adulthood. Individual means of standard-deviation-scores were calculated for 24-h urinary biomarker excretions and anthropometrics longitudinally determined between ages 3–17 years. Multivariable linear regression was used to analyze the prospective relations of pre-adulthood PO4-Ex, NAE, and uPRAL with the adulthood outcomes FGF23 and α-klotho. After adjusting for growth period-related covariates and adulthood confounders only for P-In during growth, i.e., PO4-Ex, but not for NAE and uPRAL, a significant positive association (p = 0.03) with FGF23 and an inverse trend (p = 0.10) with the FGF23-α-klotho ratio were observed. Neither PO4-Ex, nor NAE or uPRAL were associated with soluble α-klotho levels in adulthood. The prospective relationships of long-term assessed 24-h phosphaturia and habitual dietary acid load during growth with adult circulating, phosphate-adjusted FGF23 strongly suggest that children´s habitually higher P-In does unfavorably affect adult FGF23–α-klotho axis.
February 2024
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7 Reads
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1 Citation
Journal of the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics
January 2024
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16 Reads
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3 Citations
High dietary phosphorus intake (P-In) and high acid loads may adversely affect kidney function. In animal models, excessive phosphorus intake causes renal injury, which, in humans, is also inducible by chronic metabolic acidosis. We thus examined whether habitually high P-In and endogenous acid production during childhood and adolescence may be early indicators of incipient renal inflammatory processes later in adulthood. P-In and acid–base status were longitudinally and exclusively determined by biomarker-based assessment in 277 healthy children, utilizing phosphate and net acid excretion (NAE) measurements in 24 h urine samples repeatedly collected between the ages of 3 and 17 years. Standard deviation scores (by sex and age) were calculated for anthropometric data and for the urinary biomarkers available within age range 3–17 years. Multivariable linear regression was used to analyze the relations of phosphate excretion and NAE with the adulthood outcome circulating interleukin-18 (IL-18), a marker of inflammation and kidney dysfunction. After adjusting for growth- and adulthood-related covariates and pro-inflammatory biomarkers to rule out confounding by non-renal inflammatory processes, regression models revealed a significant positive relationship of long-term NAE (p = 0.01), but not of long-term phosphate excretion with adult serum IL-18. Similar significant positive regression results were obtained after replacing NAE with 24 h urinary ammonium excretion as the exposition variable. Our results suggest that even moderate elevations in renal ammonia production, as caused by habitually higher acid loading during growth, may affect the intrarenal pro-inflammatory system in the long-term, known to be boosted by acidosis-induced raised ammoniagenesis.
May 2023
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270 Reads
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16 Citations
European Journal of Nutrition
Purpose Changes in dietary protein intake metabolically affect kidney functions. However, knowledge on potential adverse consequences of long-term higher protein intake (HPI) for kidney health is lacking. To summarise and evaluate the available evidence for a relation between HPI and kidney diseases, an umbrella review of systematic reviews (SR) was conducted. Methods PubMed, Embase and Cochrane Database of SRs published until 12/2022 were searched for the respective SRs with and without meta-analyses (MA) of randomised controlled trials or cohort studies. For assessments of methodological quality and of outcome-specific certainty of evidence, a modified version of AMSTAR 2 and the NutriGrade scoring tool were used, respectively. The overall certainty of evidence was assessed according to predefined criteria. Results Six SRs with MA and three SRs without MA on various kidney-related outcomes were identified. Outcomes were chronic kidney disease, kidney stones and kidney function-related parameters: albuminuria, glomerular filtration rate, serum urea, urinary pH and urinary calcium excretion. Overall certainty of evidence was graded as ‘possible’ for stone risk not to be associated with HPI and albuminuria not to be elevated through HPI (above recommendations (> 0.8 g/kg body weight/day)) and graded as ‘probable’ or ‘possible’ for most other kidney function-related parameters to be physiologically increased with HPI. Conclusion Changes of the assessed outcomes may have reflected mostly physiological (regulatory), but not pathometabolic responses to higher protein loads. For none of the outcomes, evidence was found that HPI does specifically trigger kidney stones or diseases. However, for potential recommendations long-term data, also over decades, are required.
October 2022
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234 Reads
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7 Citations
Both veganism and high dietary acid load are linked to unfavorable bone health. However, the specific role of dietary alkali or acid load for the bone health of vegans is so far unknown. Thus, the renal biomarker for dietary acid or alkali load, i.e., urinary potential renal acid load (uPRAL), was measured in 24 h urine samples of 34 vegans and 35 omnivores (50.7% males). Bone health was assessed via calcaneal quantitative ultrasound. Associations between uPRAL and bone health indices were examined using multivariable general linear models. Compared to omnivores, vegans had a significantly lower uPRAL (mean difference = −34.5 mEq/24 h, p < 0.0001), a lower 24 h urinary phosphate excretion (p = 0.0004), a lower 24 h urinary sulfate excretion (p = 0.01), and a higher urine pH value (p < 0.0001). Broadband ultrasound attenuation (BUA) was lower among vegans versus omnivores (p = 0.037), yet it was not associated with uPRAL irrespective of adjustments. This study confirms different acid-base profiles of vegans and omnivores, with a pronounced alkaline excess among vegans and a rather low acid load among a group of omnivores with moderate protein intake. Within this spectrum of alkaline to low acid load, no association with bone health was found.
August 2022
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15 Reads
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1 Citation
The Journal of Steroid Biochemistry and Molecular Biology
Discovered about 50 years ago, the four C21 steroidal acids (α-)cortolic acid, β-cortolic acid, (α‑)cortolonic acid and β-cortolonic acid present the oxidative end products of cortisol metabolism. Undergoing renal elimination, these cortoic acids have been assumed to constitute up to 25% of total urinary cortisol metabolites. However, their analysis has been difficult, only few data has been published in adults, and this class of steroids has become practically forgotten. Since data in children are lacking and nothing is known about their metabolism during human development, we aimed at establishing a more practical analytical method and determined their urinary concentrations in a high number of healthy subjects. In our method, 5-mL-aliquots of 24-hour urine samples were subjected to solid phase extraction (C18 cartridges), followed by strong anion exchange chromatography, and formation of 2-propylester-trimethylsilylether derivatives (2-PR/TMS). The cortoic acids were quantified by targeted gas chromatography–mass spectrometry (GC-MS) using a nonpolar GC column and selected ion monitoring (SIM). Baseline separation of all cortoic acids was achieved. Calibration graphs were linear (R² > 0.98). Variations in precision and accuracy were less than 15%, respectively. The detection limit was 100 pg (injected) with a signal-to-noise ratio of 3. 240 specimens from 24-hour urine collections from healthy children (120 boys, 120 girls, aged 3-18 years; DONALD study) were analyzed for cortoic acids and neutral cortisol metabolites to create first reference ranges. The profile of cortoic acids was dominated by α-cortolonic acid with excretion rates up to 70 µg/d. Absolute excretion rates of cortoic acids increased with age, their total excretion rates ranged between 11.0 – 127.3 µg/d (median 45.7 µg/d), but did not show any sexual dimorphism. Since cortoic acids make up only about 1 percent of total urinary cortisol metabolites, determination of neutral urinary steroids reliably allows assessment of cortisol production. However, cortoic acids might present potential biomarkers of the body’s redox state.
July 2022
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634 Reads
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8 Citations
Advances in Chronic Kidney Disease
Eating a net acid-producing diet can produce an “acid stress” of severity proportional to the diet net acid load, as indexed by the steady-state renal net acid excretion rate. Depending on how much acid or base is ingested or produced from endogenous metabolic processes and how well our homeostatic mechanisms can buffer or eliminate the additional acids or bases, we can alter our systemic acid-base balance. With increasing age, the kidney's ability to excrete daily net acid loads declines (a condition similar to that of mild CKD), invoking increased utilization of potential base stores (eg, bone, skeletal muscle) on a daily basis to mitigate the acid accumulation, thereby contributing to development of osteoporosis, loss of muscle mass, and age-related renal insufficiency. Patients suffering from more advanced CKD often present with more severe acid stress or metabolic acidosis, as the kidney can no longer excrete the entire acid load. Alkaline diets based on fruits and vegetables may have a positive effect on long-term preservation of renal function while maintaining nutritional status. This chapter discusses the biochemistry of dietary precursors that affect acid or base production.
June 2022
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30 Reads
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1 Citation
June 2022
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206 Reads
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8 Citations
European Journal of Nutrition
Purpose The present work aimed to delineate (i) a revised protocol according to recent methodological developments in evidence generation, to (ii) describe its interpretation, the assessment of the overall certainty of evidence and to (iii) outline an Evidence to Decision framework for deriving an evidence-based guideline on quantitative and qualitative aspects of dietary protein intake. Methods A methodological protocol to systematically investigate the association between dietary protein intake and several health outcomes and for deriving dietary protein intake recommendations for the primary prevention of various non-communicable diseases in the general adult population was developed. Results The developed methodological protocol relies on umbrella reviews including systematic reviews with or without meta-analyses. Systematic literature searches in three databases will be performed for each health-related outcome. The methodological quality of all selected systematic reviews will be evaluated using a modified version of AMSTAR 2, and the outcome-specific certainty of evidence for systematic reviews with or without meta-analysis will be assessed with NutriGrade. The general outline of the Evidence to Decision framework foresees that recommendations in the derived guideline will be given based on the overall certainty of evidence as well as on additional criteria such as sustainability. Conclusion The methodological protocol permits a systematic evaluation of published systematic reviews on dietary protein intake and its association with selected health-related outcomes. An Evidence to Decision framework will be the basis for the overall conclusions and the resulting recommendations for dietary protein intake.
... Our study in healthy children and youth adds specific and substantially new data to the hitherto inconsistent findings on children's FGF23-P-In relationship in that a habitual high P-In with usual childhood and adolescent nutrition has been shown to affect the FGF23-α-klotho axis. Children's and adolescents´ regular P-In exceeds Recommended Dietary Allowances 39 in around 50% of the study participants 12 . For α-klotho, no relationship with any of the pre-adulthood exposition variables was discernible. ...
February 2024
Journal of the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics
... Substantial evidence shows that severe metabolic acidosis-induced increases in local ammonia concentration can stimulate maladaptive complement activation, resulting in heightened inflammatory and pro-fibrotic responses. 18 Key inflammatory mediators causing kidney tissue damage include nitric oxide (NO) and ROS. 19 Consequently, it is believed that carbonic anhydrase inhibitors, such as benzene sulfonamide derivatives, might prevent the severe inflammation associated with this type of injury. ...
January 2024
... Albumin also binds calcium ions to maintain urinary calcium homeostasis. A reduction in albumin levels can lead to increased urinary calcium concentrations, promoting the formation of calcium-based stones [37,38]. ...
May 2023
European Journal of Nutrition
... In Western countries, typical omnivorous diets mainly reduce blood pH by about 50-70 mEq/day (53). Plant-based diets, on the contrary, have an alkalizing effect (117,(147)(148)(149) (89). A significant alkalizing effect of food was also found in vegans in Germany (−39 mEq/day) (117). ...
October 2022
... A high intake of acid-yielding animal source foods, coupled with a low intake of base-yielding fruits and vegetables, can distort acid-base balance [223][224][225]. Low-grade metabolic acidosis has been suggested to be a factor in current western disease, and in particular in bone and kidney disorders [223][224][225]. ...
Reference:
Saturated fat in an evolutionary context
July 2022
Advances in Chronic Kidney Disease
... The latter supports existing evidence from cohort studies collecting high-quality primary data which showed that the prevalence of clinically significant thyroid disorders in general, including structural anomalies, has reduced substantially after the introduction of the iodine fortification program in Germany 2 . There were also studies reporting a shift of the TSH levels towards the right in response to this program 26 , similar to studies from several other countries showing increased rather than decreased TSH population levels a few years after improved iodine supply 27 . Using fixed cut-off levels for TSH values, i.e., not taking into account these changes due to the improved iodine supply, may lead to overdiagnosis and overtreatment of subclinical thyroid disease. ...
June 2022
... Our findings contradict two earlier cross-sectional studies that reported a positive association between dietary protein intake and linear growth [21,22]. Some prospective studies also reported a positive association between protein intake with height [23][24][25][26]. For instance, Catherine S Berkey et al. contributed to research on the impact of milk on growth in a cohort of 5101 premenarchal girls from throughout the United States completed annual surveys (1996)(1997)(1998)(1999)(2000)(2001)2003). ...
March 2022
The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism
... Quantitative data on how the low iodine status lactating mothers affects the iodine status of neonates and infants is sparse. For example, a study from 2006 on neonates in Germany reported adequate iodine status [10] while more recent data for older children (6-12 years), suggest a suboptimal status [11]. An easy collection of urine in neonates and infants could be a valuable tool to improve the monitoring of iodine status of this vulnerable group. ...
June 2022
European Journal of Nutrition
... Thus, we carried out an umbrella review of SRs of human studies on protein intake (overall, as well as animal and plant protein) and cancer risk (overall and by cancer type) based on standardised approaches to evaluate the quality of published SRs and to grade the certainty of the evidence. Our study is part of a series of umbrella reviews on protein intake and healthrelated outcomes, carried out as the basis of a new Protein Guideline by the German Nutrition Society [23]. ...
June 2022
European Journal of Nutrition
... While many studies investigated associations between early life factors and childhood overweight or elevated blood pressure, only few studies [9][10][11] focused on potential associations with MetS and its components [12] despite its increasing prevalence in children and adolescents. In addition, evidence from these studies is inconsistent [9-11, 13,14]. ...
April 2021
Nutrition Metabolism and Cardiovascular Diseases