skip to main content

Attention:

The NSF Public Access Repository (PAR) system and access will be unavailable from 8:00 PM ET on Friday, March 21 until 8:00 AM ET on Saturday, March 22 due to maintenance. We apologize for the inconvenience.


Title: Age‐related decline in urine concentration may not be universal: Comparative study from the U.S. and two small‐scale societies
Abstract Objectives

Evidence from industrialized populations suggests that urine concentrating ability declines with age. However, lifestyle factors including episodic protein intake and low hypertension may help explain differences between populations. Whether this age‐related decline occurs among small‐scale populations with active lifestyles and non‐Western diets is unknown. We test the universality of age‐related urine concentration decline.

Materials and Methods

We used urine specific gravity (Usg) and urine osmolality (Uosm) data from 15,055 U.S. nonpregnant adults without kidney failure aged 18–80 in 2007–2012 participating in the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES). We tested the relationship of age on urine concentration biomarkers with multiple linear regressions using survey commands. We compared results to longitudinal data on Usg from 116 Tsimane’ forager‐horticulturalists (266 observations) adults aged 18–83 in 2013–2014 from Lowland Bolivia, and to 38 Hadza hunter‐gatherers (156 observations) aged 18–75 in 2010–2015 from Tanzania using random‐effects panel linear regressions.

Results

Among U.S. adults, age was significantly negatively associated with Usg (Adjusted beta [B] = −0.0009 g/mL/10 years; SE = 0.0001;p < 0.001) and Uosm (B = −28.1 mOsm/kg/10 yr; SE = 2.4; p < 0.001). In contrast, among Tsimane’ (B = 0.0003 g/mL/10 yr; SE = 0.0002;p = 0.16) and Hadza (B = −0.0004 g/mL/10 yr; SE = 0.0004;p = 0.29) age was not associated with Usg. Older Tsimane’ and Hadza exhibited similar within‐individual variability in Usg equivalent to younger adults.

Discussion

While U.S. adults exhibited age‐related declines in urine concentration, Tsimane’ and Hadza adults did not exhibit the same statistical decline in Usg. Mismatches between evolved physiology and modern environments in lifestyle may affect kidney physiology and disease risk.

 
more » « less
PAR ID:
10462901
Author(s) / Creator(s):
 ;  ;  ;  ;  ;  
Publisher / Repository:
Wiley Blackwell (John Wiley & Sons)
Date Published:
Journal Name:
American Journal of Physical Anthropology
Volume:
168
Issue:
4
ISSN:
0002-9483
Page Range / eLocation ID:
p. 705-716
Format(s):
Medium: X
Sponsoring Org:
National Science Foundation
More Like this
  1. Abstract Objectives

    This study investigates bone density across the life course among Bolivian Tsimane and Ecuadorian Shuar of Amazonia. Both groups are rural, high‐fertility forager‐horticulturalists, with high lifetime physical activity levels. We test whether Tsimane and Shuar bone density patterns are different from each other, and if both groups are characterized by lower osteoporosis risk compared to U.S. references.

    Methods

    Anthropometric and calcaneal bone density data, obtained via quantitative ultrasonometry (QUS), were collected from 678 Tsimane and 235 Shuar (13–92 years old). Population and sex differences in QUS values (estimated bone mineral density, speed of sound, broadband ultrasound attenuation) by age group were assessed using Mann–WhitneyUtests. Age‐related change and age at peak QUS value were determined using polynomial regressions. One‐way analyses of covariance assessed population‐level differences in QUS values by age group adjusting for body mass index. Participants aged 50+ years at elevated osteoporosis risk were identified using aTscore < −1.8; binomial tests assessed risk compared to U.S. references.

    Results

    Shuar males and females <50 years old have QUS values 3–36% higher than Tsimane, with differences evident in adolescence. Among Tsimane and Shuar, 49 and 23% of participants aged 50+ years old, respectively, are at high risk for osteoporosis, compared to 34% of Americans; Shuar osteoporosis risk is comparable to Americans, while Tsimane risk is elevated.

    Conclusions

    Disparate patterns in QUS values are documented for Tsimane and Shuar, with pronounced differences early in life. Potential explanations for differences include gene–environment interactions and/or degree of market integration, which influences diet, activity profiles, pathogen exposures, and other lifestyle covariates. As Tsimane osteoporosis risk is greater than in the United States, findings point to alternative risk factors for low bone density that are not readily discernible in industrialized populations.

     
    more » « less
  2. ABSTRACT BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE

    Transvascular water exchange plays a key role in the functional integrity of the blood–brain barrier (BBB). In white matter (WM), a variety of imaging modalities have demonstrated age‐related changes in structure and metabolism, but the extent to which water exchange is altered remains unclear. Here, we investigated the cumulative effects of healthy aging on WM capillary water exchange.

    METHODS

    A total of 38 healthy adults (aged 36‐80 years) were studied using 7T dynamic contrast enhanced MRI. Blood volume fraction (vb) and capillary water efflux rate constant (kpo) were determined by fitting changes in the1H2O longitudinal relaxation rate constant (R1) during contrast agent bolus passage to a two‐compartment exchange model. WM volume was determined by morphometric analysis of structural images.

    RESULTS

    R1values and WM volume showed similar trajectories of age‐related decline. Among all subjects,vbandkpoaveraged 1.7 (±0.5) mL/100 g of tissue and 2.1 (±1.1) s−1, respectively. Whilevbshowed minimal changes over the 40‐year‐age span of participants,kpodeclined 0.06 s−1(ca. 3%) per year (r= −.66;< .0005), from near 4 s−1at age 30 to ca. 2 s−1at age 70. The association remained significant after controlling for WM volume.

    CONCLUSIONS

    Previous studies have shown thatkpotracks Na+, K+‐ATPase activity‐dependent water exchange at the BBB and likely reflects neurogliovascular unit (NGVU) coupled metabolic activity. The age‐related decline inkpoobserved here is consistent with compromised NGVU metabolism in older individuals and the dysregulated cellular bioenergetics that accompany normal brain aging.

     
    more » « less
  3. Abstract Objectives

    This study compared the prevalence of concentrated urine (urine specific gravity ≥1.021), an indicator of hypohydration, across Tsimane' hunter‐forager‐horticulturalists living in hot‐humid lowland Bolivia and Daasanach agropastoralists living in hot‐arid Northern Kenya. It tested the hypotheses that household water and food insecurity would be associated with higher odds of hypohydration.

    Methods

    This study collected spot urine samples and corresponding weather data along with data on household water and food insecurity, demographics, and health characteristics among 266 Tsimane' households (N = 224 men, 235 women, 219 children) and 136 Daasanach households (N = 107 men, 120 women, 102 children).

    Results

    The prevalence of hypohydration among Tsimane' men (50.0%) and women (54.0%) was substantially higher (P < .001) than for Daasanach men (15.9%) and women (17.5%); the prevalence of hypohydration among Tsimane' (37.0%) and Daasanach (31.4%) children was not significantly different (P= .33). Multiple logistic regression models suggested positive but not statistically significant trends between household water insecurity and odds of hypohydration within populations, yet some significant joint effects of water and food insecurity were observed. Heat index (2°C) was associated with a 23% (95% confidence interval [CI]: 1.09‐1.40,P= .001), 34% (95% CI: 1.18‐1.53,P < .0005), and 23% (95% CI: 1.04‐1.44,P= .01) higher odds of hypohydration among Tsimane' men, women, and children, respectively, and a 48% (95% CI: 1.02‐2.15,P= .04) increase in the odds among Daasanach women. Lactation status was also associated with hypohydration among Tsimane' women (odds ratio = 3.35, 95% CI: 1.62‐6.95,P= .001).

    Conclusion

    These results suggest that heat stress and reproductive status may have a greater impact on hydration status than water insecurity across diverse ecological contexts.

     
    more » « less
  4. Abstract

    Impaired cerebrovascular function contributes to the genesis of age‐related cognitive decline. In this study, the hypothesis is tested that impairments in neurovascular coupling (NVC) responses and brain network function predict cognitive dysfunction in older adults. Cerebromicrovascular and working memory function of healthy young (n= 21, 33.2±7.0 years) and aged (n= 30, 75.9±6.9 years) participants are assessed. To determine NVC responses and functional connectivity (FC) during a working memory (n‐back) paradigm, oxy‐ and deoxyhemoglobin concentration changes from the frontal cortex using functional near‐infrared spectroscopy are recorded. NVC responses are significantly impaired during the 2‐back task in aged participants, while the frontal networks are characterized by higher local and global connection strength, and dynamic FC (p< 0.05). Both impaired NVC and increased FC correlate with age‐related decline in accuracy during the 2‐back task. These findings suggest that task‐related brain states in older adults require stronger functional connections to compensate for the attenuated NVC responses associated with working memory load.

     
    more » « less
  5. ABSTRACT Objective:

    Determine the minimum dosage of alanyl‐glutamine (Ala‐Gln) required to improve gut integrity and growth in children at risk of environmental enteropathy (EE).

    Methods:

    This was a double‐blinded randomized placebo‐controlled dose‐response trial. We enrolled 140 children residing in a low‐income community in Fortaleza, Brazil. Participants were 2 to 60 months old and had weight‐for‐age (WAZ), height‐for‐age (HAZ), or weight‐for‐height (WHZ)z‐scores less than −1. We randomized children to 10 days of nutritional supplementation: Ala‐Gln at 3 g/day, Ala‐Gln at 6 g/day, Ala‐Gln at 12 g/day, or an isonitrogenous dose of glycine (Gly) placebo at 12.5 g/day. Our primary outcome was urinary lactulose‐mannitol excretion testing. Secondary outcomes were anthropometry, fecal markers of inflammation, urine metabolic profiles, and malabsorption (spot fecal energy).

    Results:

    Of 140 children, 103 completed 120 days of follow‐up (24% dropout). In the group receiving the highest dose of Ala‐Gln, we detected a modest improvement in urinary lactulose excretion from 0.19% on day 1 to 0.17% on day 10 (P = 0.05). We observed significant but transient improvements in WHZ at day 10 in 2 Ala‐Gln groups, and in WHZ and WAZ in all Ala‐Gln groups at day 30. We detected no effects on fecal inflammatory markers, diarrheal morbidity, or urine metabolic profiles; but did observe modest reductions in fecal energy and fecal lactoferrin in participants receiving Ala‐Gln.

    Conclusions:

    Intermediate dose Ala‐Gln promotes short‐term improvement in gut integrity and ponderal growth in children at risk of EE. Lower doses produced improvements in ponderal growth in the absence of enhanced gut integrity.

     
    more » « less