ClinicalTrials.Veeva

Menu

Food and Salt Handling in Diuresis

G

Ghent University Hospital (UZ)

Status

Completed

Conditions

Nocturia
Polyuria

Treatments

Dietary Supplement: Ingestion of testing nutrient/food capsules
Diagnostic Test: Bio-impedance measurement (BIA)
Diagnostic Test: Urine sample
Diagnostic Test: Blood sample

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT04526340
EC 2019/0710

Details and patient eligibility

About

Understanding the impact of food/nutrients on body fluid metabolism is important for improving diagnosis and treatment of nocturia, polyuria in relation to lifestyle interventions. This study on "Food and Salt Handling in Diuresis" examines the role of certain food and nutrients in diuresis. The study design is to investigate the possible acute effects and mechanisms of selected food (which are known to be diuretic) and nutrients (e.g. salt) in diuresis in healthy individuals. The study will provide insights into the management of nocturia, nocturnal polyuria or oedema which are common clinical sign in a wide range of disorders as cardiovascular, renal and metabolic disorders.

During the study the volunteers will be asked to ingest a certain dosage of a food/nutrient in capsules along with a defined amount of water (500 ml). 2 Blood and 3 urine samples will be collected at different time points to measure the urine output and urine composition derived by the ingestion of the particular food item. Renal Function Profiling is used as an easy and cheap tool to understand the mechanism of action behind the observed effect in diuresis. Renal function profiles distinguish the osmotic form water diuresis from a change in filtration.

Bio-electrical impedance analysis (BIA) is also used to evaluate oedema and fluid volumes in body tissues. BIA is a non-invasive technique based on Ohm's law whereby the resistance of a tissue against an electric current is inversely proportional to the water content and directly proportional to the length of the tissue. For the BIA measurement, a device is used in which 8 tactile electrodes are placed: 2 in contact with the thumb and middle finger of each hand, and 2 in contact with the inside and outside of each foot. Before the start of the measurements, the length and body weight are measured. The resistance of the arms, torso and legs is measured at different frequencies.

Full description

Research design: Prospective intervention study to investigate the impact of food/nutrients on urine production and fluid distribution in the body.

Study sample: The sample size was calculated for a power of 80% and for control vs. treatment using a paired-sample t-test at the 5% significance level. Thus 30 young healthy volunteers for each food group (total 300 subjects for 10 food/nutrients groups as; leek, asparagus, onion, garlic, cranberry, barley, parsley, cardamom, coffee and salt) with no acute or chronic disease, no use of medication (except contraception), not being pregnant or menstruating at the time of the study, no any food allergies and age between 20-35 years with BMI 18.5-25 kg/m2 will be included. Volunteers with an implanted electronic device (e.g. Pacemaker) will not be included.

Methodology: The subjects will be tested in fasted and sober state in the morning. No food/drink 6hrs prior to the test. The subjects will be asked to take 2 different dosages of testing nutrient and along with 500ml of water and only 500ml water for the control, on 3 different test days. Nutrients will prepared in 1g capsules. The test will last for 4 hrs after taking of the capsules.

Analyses: 3-Days food diary: Once only. For salt, caffeine and energy intake Anthropometric measurements: at the beginning of each test day 2 Blood samples at the beginning and end of the test: Haptoglobin phenotyping (serum), Haptoglobin concentration (μmol/l) (serum), Sodium (mmol/l) (serum), Osmolality (mOsm/kg) (serum), Urea (g/l) (serum), Creatinine (g/dl) (serum) 3 Urine samples at the beginning, after 2 hrs and at the end of the test: Total voided volume, Osmolality (mOsm/kg), Creatinine (g/dl), Sodium (mmol/l), Potassium (mmol/l), Urea (g/l) Bio-impedance measurement (BIA): for every 30 min for 4 hours

Sample analysis and storage: Half of the urine samples and blood samples are sent immediately after collection to the university hospital Gent clinical laboratory. The other half of the samples will be stored for a certain time in a freezer at -80 °C and will be processed and examined for a second time. The other urine samples and blood samples that are not used for the research are stored as a bio-bank.

Enrollment

21 patients

Sex

All

Ages

20 to 35 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Healthy male/female
  • Age between 20-35 years
  • No use of medication (except contraception)
  • Have no health issues
  • Not being pregnant or menstruating at the time of the study
  • BMI 18.5 -25 kg / m2
  • No food allergies

Exclusion criteria

  • Volunteers with an implanted electronic device (e.g. Pacemaker)

Trial design

Primary purpose

Prevention

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Crossover Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

21 participants in 2 patient groups, including a placebo group

Nutrient day
Experimental group
Description:
on the nutrient day the subjects will take the testing food/nutrient capsules with 500 ml water
Treatment:
Diagnostic Test: Blood sample
Diagnostic Test: Urine sample
Diagnostic Test: Bio-impedance measurement (BIA)
Dietary Supplement: Ingestion of testing nutrient/food capsules
Control day
Placebo Comparator group
Description:
on the control day the subjects will take 500 ml water without nutrient/food capsules
Treatment:
Diagnostic Test: Blood sample
Diagnostic Test: Urine sample
Diagnostic Test: Bio-impedance measurement (BIA)

Trial contacts and locations

1

Loading...

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

Clinical trials

Find clinical trialsTrials by location
© Copyright 2025 Veeva Systems