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Tissue Nitrogen and Potassium Variation in Trauma, Starvation, and RealimentationDepartments of Surgery and Pathology, the University of Oklahoma Tulsa Medical College and the Muskogee Veterans Administration Medical Center, Tulsa, Oklahoma
Departments of Surgery and Pathology, the University of Oklahoma Tulsa Medical College and the Muskogee Veterans Administration Medical Center, Tulsa, Oklahoma
Departments of Surgery and Pathology, the University of Oklahoma Tulsa Medical College and the Muskogee Veterans Administration Medical Center, Tulsa, Oklahoma
Departments of Surgery and Pathology, the University of Oklahoma Tulsa Medical College and the Muskogee Veterans Administration Medical Center, Tulsa, Oklahoma
Total body or exchangeable potassium is used as an important indicator of body cell mass in the study of body composition. Body composition studies have been used extensively in the study of nutrition but recent work has questioned the validity of using changes in total body potassium as a measure of protein or nitrogen variation. To investigate the relationship between tissue nitrogen and potassium during nutritional manipulation 382 tissue samples from 100 surgical patients were analyzed by Kjeldahl analysis for nitrogen content and flame photometric analysis for potassium content. Nitrogen was related to potassium in parenchymous or cellular tissues by the relationship N (mg/g) = 14.7 + 0.17 K (µEq/g). The tissue content of the two elements was highly correlated (r = 0.80, p
Journal of Parenteral and Enteral Nutrition, Vol. 8, No. 6,
665-667 (1984) |
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0.001). For skeletal muscle a similar relationship existed N (mg/g) = 16.6 + 0.15 K (µEq/g) (r = 0.76, p
N/