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J Appl Physiol 99: 261-267, 2005. First published February 24, 2005; doi:10.1152/japplphysiol.01317.2004
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Extracellular water: greater expansion with age in African Americans

Analiza M. Silva,2 Jack Wang,1 Richard N. Pierson, Jr,1 ZiMian Wang,1 Steven B. Heymsfield,1 Luis B. Sardinha,2 and Stanley Heshka1

1New York Obesity Research Center, St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital, Columbia University Institute of Human Nutrition, College of Physicians and Surgeons, New York, New York; and 2Exercise and Health Laboratory, Faculty of Human Movement-Technical University of Lisbon, Lisbon, Portugal

Submitted 23 November 2004 ; accepted in final form 17 February 2005

Aging is associated with the onset of chronic diseases that lead to pathological expansion of the extracellular water (ECW) compartment. Healthy aging, in the absence of disease, is also reportedly accompanied by a relative expansion of the ECW compartment, although the studies on which this observation is based are few in number, applied different ECW measurement methods, included small ethnically homogeneous subject samples, and failed to adjust ECW for non-age-related influencing factors. The aim of the current study was to examine, in a large (n = 1,538) ethnically diverse [African American (AA), Asian, Caucasian, Hispanic] subject group the cross-sectional relationships between ECW and age after controlling first for other potential factors that may influence fluid distribution. ECW and intracellular water (ICW) were derived from measured total body water (isotope dilution) and potassium (40K whole body counting). The cross-sectional relationships between ECW, ICW, and ECW/ICW (E/I), and age were developed using multiple regression modelling methods. Body weight, weight squared, height, age, sex, race, and interactions were all significant ECW predictors. The slope of the observed race x age interaction was significantly greater in AA ({beta} = 0.0005, P = 0.005) than in the three other race groups. Race, sex, and age differences in fluid distribution persisted after adjusting for body composition in a subgroup (n = 994) with dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry lean soft tissue and fat measurements. A relative ECW expansion (i.e., E/I) was present with greater age in most sex-race groups, although the effect was not significantly larger in AA males (P > 0.05) compared with the other race groups, except Asians (P < 0.05). For females, a larger E/I-age effect was found in AA compared with the other race groups, but only the comparison against Hispanics was significant (P < 0.05). The ECW compartment and E/I are thus variably larger, according to race, in healthy older subjects independent of sex, lean soft tissue, and fat mass.

body composition; obesity; aging; fluid distribution; ethnicity



Address for correspondence: S. Heshka, Obesity Research Center, 1090 Amsterdam Ave., 14th Floor, New York, NY 10025 (E-mail: sh311{at}columbia.edu)







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