Transport Phenomena In Zonal Centrifuge Rotors. VI. Concentration-Dependent Diffusivities of Potassium Citrate and Potassium Tartrate In Aqueous Solutions

1972 ◽  
Vol 7 (5) ◽  
pp. 491-503 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. M. McDonald ◽  
H. W. Hsu
2020 ◽  
pp. 269-284
Author(s):  
Ana C. F. Ribeiro ◽  
Eduarda F. G. Azevedo ◽  
Ana Paula Couceiro Figueira ◽  
Victor M. M. Lobo

2007 ◽  
Vol 98 (1) ◽  
pp. 72-77 ◽  
Author(s):  
Houda Sabboh ◽  
Véronique Coxam ◽  
Marie-Noëlle Horcajada ◽  
Christian Rémésy ◽  
Christian Demigné

Potassium (K) organic anion salts, such as potassium citrate or potassium malate in plant foods, may counteract low-grade metabolic acidosis induced by western diets, but little is known about the effect of other minor plant anions. Effects of K salts (chloride, citrate, galacturonate or tartrate) were thus studied on the mineral balance and digestive fermentations in groups of 6-week-old rats adapted to an acidogenic/5 % inulin diet. In all diet groups, substantial amounts of lactate and succinate were present in the caecum, besides SCFA. SCFA were poorly affected by K salts conditions. The KCl-supplemented diet elicited an accumulation of lactate in the caecum; whereas the lactate caecal pool was low in rats fed the potassium tartrate-supplemented (K TAR) diet. A fraction of tartrate (around 50 %) was recovered in urine of rats fed the K TAR diet. Potassium citrate and potassium galacturonate diets exerted a marked alkalinizing effect on urine pH and promoted a notable citraturia (around 0·5 μmol/24 h). All the K organic anion salts counteracted Ca and Mg hyperexcretion in urine, especially potassium tartrate as to magnesuria. The present findings indicate that K salts of unabsorbed organic anions exert alkalinizing effects when metabolizable in the large intestine, even if K and finally available anions (likely SCFA) are not simultaneously bioavailable. Whether this observation is also relevant for a fraction of SCFA arising from dietary fibre breakdown (which represents the major organic anions absorbed in the digestive tract in man) deserves further investigation.


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