Hypertension, Vol 1, 631-636, Copyright © 1979 by American Heart Association
K Liu, R Cooper, I Soltero and J Stamler
How many 24-hour urine sodium measurements are adequate for characterizing
a child's salt intake? Can overnight urine specimens accurately replace
24-hour collections for salt assessment? A sample of 73 6th-8th grade
children was taken from two parochial schools in Chicago to investigate
systematically these questions. Seven consecutive 24-hour-urine specimens
were collected from each child. The estimated ratio of intra- to
inter-individual variances was 1.94 for 24- hour-urine sodium. Based on
this value, eight 24-hour specimens are necessary to limit to 10% the
diminution of the estimated correlation coefficient between 24-hour-urine
sodium and blood pressure. Six measurements are required to reduce to 0.01
the probability of misclassifying a child in tertile 1 versus tertile 3.
The overnight specimens show a moderate consistency with the 24-hour
collections in detecting children with high or low salt intake. For example
92% and 85% of children in the fifth quintile and the third tertile
respectively of the true mean overnight sodium have their true mean 24-
hour Na in the upper half of the distribution. These results suggest that
in a large scale epidemiologic study, overnight specimens may be reasonable
alternatives when 24-hour-urine sodium is practically very difficult to
collect.
ARTICLES
Variability in 24-hour urine sodium excretion in children
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