Journal of Applied Physiology AJP: Gastrointestinal and Liver Physiology
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J Appl Physiol (June 1, 2006). doi:10.1152/japplphysiol.00999.2005
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Submitted on August 17, 2005
Accepted on May 8, 2006

Measuring Partial Body Potassium in the Arm versus Total Body Potassium

Lucian Wielopolski1*, Lisa M Ramirez1, Dympna Gallagher2, Steve B Heymsfield2, and ZiMian Wang3

1 Medical Department, Brookhaven National Laboratory, Upton, New York, United States
2 Nutritional Medicine, Columbia University, New York, New York, United States
3 Nutritional Medicine, St. Luke's/Roosevelt Hospital Center Columbia University, New York, New York, United States

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: lwielo{at}bnl.gov.

Skeletal muscle (SM), the body's main structural support, has been implicated in metabolic, physiological, and disease processes in humans. Despite being the largest tissue in the human body, its assessment remains difficult and indirect. However, being metabolically active it contains over 50% of the total body potassium (TBK) pool. We present our preliminary results from a new system for measuring partial body K (PBK) that presently are limited to the arm yet provide a direct and specific measure of the SM. This uniquely specific quantification of the SM mass in the arm, which is shielded from the body during measurement, allows us to simplify the assumptions used in deriving the total SM, thereby possibly improving the modeling of the human body compartments. Preliminary results show that PBK measurements are consistent with those from the TBK previously obtained from the same subjects, thus offering a simpler alternative to CT and MRI imaging used for the same purposes. The PBK system, which can be set up in a physician's office or bedside in a hospital, is completely passive, safe, and inexpensive, it can be used on immobilized patients, children, pregnant women, or other at-risk populations.




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L. Wielopolski, L. M. Ramirez, A. M. Spungen, S. Swaby, P. Asselin, and W. A. Bauman
Measuring partial body potassium in the legs of patients with spinal cord injury: a new approach
J Appl Physiol, January 1, 2009; 106(1): 268 - 273.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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