Water and Electrolyte Salvage in an Animal Model of Dehydration and Malnutrition

Author:

Islam Sufia1,Abély Michel2,Alam N. Hoque1,Dossou Flore2,Chowdhury A. K. Azad3,Desjeux Jehan‐François2

Affiliation:

1. ICDDR B: Centre for Health and Population Research India

2. Chaire de Biologie Conservatoire National des Arts et Métiers Paris France

3. University of Dhaka, Bangladesh India

Abstract

ABSTRACTBackground and aimRecently, a new oral rehydration solution (ORS) called Resomal has been designed specifically for children with severe malnutrition. The aim of this study was to assess the effect of malnutrition on renal and intestinal responses to dehydration, and to compare intestinal water and electrolyte absorption from Resomal and from the standard World Health Organization‐Oral Rehydration Solution (WHO‐ORS).MethodsMalnutrition was achieved in a rabbit model by feeding the animals daily for 30 days with half the amount of food that a well‐nourished group of control animals had consumed on the previous day. Dehydration was achieved by water deprivation for 46 hours in both control and malnourished rabbits. At 46 hours, dehydration was assessed by changes in body weight, urinary volume and osmolarity, and blood urea nitrogen concentration. At that time active colonic and jejunal mucosal electrolyte transport in Ussing chambers was also measured. Small intestinal absorption of water, sodium, and potassium was measured in vivo during intestinal perfusion of the two ORSs and in vitro by measurement of mucosal electrogenic glucose‐stimulated sodium absorption across intestinal patches.ResultsCompared to controls (C), well‐nourished but dehydrated (C+D) animals lost 12% of their body weight, with an 87% reduction in urine volume, a 110% increase in urine osmolality, and a 94% increase in blood urea nitrogen. In the colon of C+D animals, short‐circuit current (Isc) and net sodium transepithelial flux (JNa+ net) were increased. Almost identical results were obtained in malnourished and dehydrated (M+D) animals. In the jejunum, net in vivo absorption of water (JWater), sodium (JNa+), and potassium (JK+) were increased during standard ORS infusion in both dehydrated groups. During Resomal infusion, water absorption was the same as seen with WHO‐ORS, but sodium absorption was reduced, and potassium absorption was increased in both well‐nourished and malnourished dehydrated animals. In vitro, compared to controls, the glucose‐stimulated short‐circuit current (ΔIsc), JNa+ net and G were increased in both dehydrated groups.ConclusionDuring experimental dehydration, the kidney and large intestine salvage water and electrolytes, thus reducing the consequences of dehydration. These findings indicate that jejunal water absorption from Resomal and WHO‐ORS is increased during dehydration, but Resomal allows for less sodium and more potassium to be absorbed, both in well‐nourished and malnourished dehydrated rabbits.

Publisher

Wiley

Reference36 articles.

1. Treatment of Severe Malnutrition

2. Risk factors for fatal diarrhoea among dehydrated malnourished children in a Madagascar hospital;Ravelomanana N;Eur J Clin Nutr,1995

3. The use and calibration of a small whole body counter for the measurement of total body potassium in malnourished infants;Garrow JS;West Indian Med J,1965

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