Specific gravity and creatinine as corrections for variation in urine concentration in humans, gorillas, and woolly monkeys

Hormones excreted in the urine are widely used to assess the physiological and psychological condition of unrestrained animals. In order to control for variation in the water concentration of urine samples, the hormone concentration is often indexed to the concentration of creatinine. Because there...

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Veröffentlicht in:American journal of primatology 2010-12, Vol.72 (12), p.1082-1091
Hauptverfasser: White, Brent C., Jamison, Keri M., Grieb, Cassie, Lally, Drew, Luckett, Cloe, Kramer, Katie S., Phillips, Justin
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container_issue 12
container_start_page 1082
container_title American journal of primatology
container_volume 72
creator White, Brent C.
Jamison, Keri M.
Grieb, Cassie
Lally, Drew
Luckett, Cloe
Kramer, Katie S.
Phillips, Justin
description Hormones excreted in the urine are widely used to assess the physiological and psychological condition of unrestrained animals. In order to control for variation in the water concentration of urine samples, the hormone concentration is often indexed to the concentration of creatinine. Because there are several problems with using creatinine, we have investigated the efficacy of specific gravity as an alternative basis for adjusting the hormone concentration in humans, gorillas, and woolly monkeys. In an experimental manipulation of human urine hydration, ten volunteers drank a water load proportional to body weight, and provided complete urine collection and saliva samples for four consecutive 20 min intervals. From the urine, we measured cortisol (radioimmunoassay), creatinine (colorimetric assay), and specific gravity (refractometer). Only cortisol was assayed from saliva. During 80 min following water ingestion, cortisol, creatinine, and specific gravity declined as urine became diluted; however, total cortisol excretion remained constant. Only cortisol concentration indexed to specific gravity accurately reflected the consistent cortisol excretion. Specific gravity and creatinine‐corrected cortisol values were highly correlated but were significantly different. Salivary cortisol provided evidence for the relative stability of serum cortisol. To determine the utility of these corrections in other primates, we compared specific gravity‐ and creatinine‐corrected cortisol in urine samples from captive gorillas (N=16) and woolly monkeys (N=8). As with the human study, the two corrections were strongly correlated in each species, but the means were different. Specific gravity correction was superior in revealing the circadian variation in cortisol. Am. J. Primatol. 72:1082–1091, 2010. © 2010 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.
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subjects Adult
Animals
Atelinae - blood
Atelinae - urine
circadian variation
Colorimetry
cortisol
Creatine - blood
Creatine - urine
creatinine
Female
gorilla
Gorilla gorilla - blood
Gorilla gorilla - urine
Humans
Hydrocortisone - analysis
Hydrocortisone - blood
Male
Middle Aged
Radioimmunoassay
Reference Values
Refractometry
Saliva - chemistry
Specific Gravity
woolly monkey
title Specific gravity and creatinine as corrections for variation in urine concentration in humans, gorillas, and woolly monkeys
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