Title of article :
The effects of human burn injury on urinary nitrate excretion
Author/Authors :
Mark Abrahams، نويسنده , , Folke Sjoberg، نويسنده , , Anna Oscarsson، نويسنده , , Tommy Sundqvist، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1999
Abstract :
Different studies have demonstrated both an increase and a decrease in the biosynthesis of nitric oxide (NO) during the first 2 days following experimental and human burn trauma. This study investigated changes in urinary nitrate excretion in humans following thermal injury in order to determine the temporal relationship between NO release and the initial injury. Urinary nitrate was measured in daily 24-h urine collections taken on days 1–7 following burn injury from 15 patients. The control group consisted of 11 healthy, age- and sex-matched patients who kept a nitrate-restricted diet for five days prior to collection of a single 24-h urine sample. The burns group had a mean age of 41.9±19.4 (mean±S.D.) years and a mean total burn surface area (TBSA) of 30.2±24.9% (mean±S.D.). In the burn injured patients, urinary nitrate levels peaked at day 4 and a 2-fold increase relative to day 1 was observed. Urinary nitrate levels were significantly higher in the burns group than the control group on days 4 and 5 only (p<0.05 for both days). There was no correlation between TBSA and the measured urinary nitrate levels. This study confirms that the biosynthesis of NO is increased during the first week following burn trauma and establishes that the renal elimination of the by-products of NO metabolism is not increased during the first three days after injury. Notwithstanding the potential effects of burns on nitrate distribution, our findings may reflect a delay in the release of NO following the initial insult.