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CAPS - The use of urine sodium to creatinine ratio as a marker of total body sodium in infants with intestinal failure - Sara Choi

Video Published 2022-05-24 Updated 2022-10-20

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Topic Overview

Retrospective study evaluating urine sodium-to-creatinine ratio as a non-invasive marker of total body sodium status in infants with intestinal failure. Found that ratio >35 predicted adequate weight gain and correlated better with sodium intake than urine sodium alone, offering a more accurate assessment tool for guiding supplementation in this vulnerable population.

Key Takeaways

  • Serum sodium does not reflect total body sodium stores in infants with intestinal failure; urine markers are needed for assessment.
  • Urine sodium-to-creatinine ratio >35 better predicts adequate weight gain than urine sodium alone by accounting for variable urine flow.
  • Sodium depletion causes poor growth refractory to increased calories; supplementation restores growth but does not enable catch-up growth.
  • 19% of cases showed discordance between urine sodium and ratio thresholds, highlighting the ratio's potential clinical utility.
  • Infants with stomas and high stool losses are at high risk for sodium, bicarbonate, and magnesium depletion affecting growth.

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