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Evaluation of a dietary Na reduction trial in a community setting.
Community-based randomized trial. Ten-week nutrition intervention activities focused on lifestyle modification to decrease dietary Na intake, under the supervision of a registered dietitian. Twenty-four hour urine specimens were collected at baseline and follow-up visits to determine 24 h urinary Na excretion.
The University of Pittsburgh Center for Healthy Aging, Key to Life Nutrition Program.
Hypertensive adults at least 65 years of age.
Mean age of participants was 75 years. Twenty-four hour mean urinary Na excretion at baseline was 3174 mg/d. This reduced to 2944 mg/d (P = 0·30) and 2875 mg/d (P ≤ 0·03) at 6- and 12-month follow-ups, respectively. In a sub-sample (urine volume of ≥1000 ml, baseline to 12 months), mean urinary Na excretion decreased from 3220 mg/d to 2875 mg/d (P ≤ 0·02).
Significant reductions in mean 24 h urinary Na were reported, but results fell short of the recommended guidelines of 1500 mg/d for at-risk individuals. Our results reiterate the difficulty in implementing these guidelines in community-based programmes. More aggressive public health efforts, food industry support and health policy changes are needed to decrease Na levels in older adults to the recommended guidelines.
InxGa1−xAs epilayers grown on GaAs(100) were studied by cathodoluminescence (CL) spectroscopy and imaging technique with 0.8 nm spectral resolution, using a transmission electron microscope. Linear features appear in the monochromatic CL image taken by the emission from the InxGa1−x.As layers, and do not appear in those from the GaAs layers. There is no direct correlation between the dark-line contrast in the panchromatic CL image (due to misfit dislocations) and the strong line contrast in the monochromatic CL images of the InxGa1−xAs layers. A peak wavelength shift in the CL spectrum was observed as the electron probe was moved across the linear features. The linear features also appear in a thin sample where the misfit dislocations are removed by ion milling, which clearly reveals that the strong line contrast is not directly due to the misfit dislocation. From those results the linear features in the monochromatic CL image are considered to be due to compositional fluctuations of the In concentration in the InxGa1−xAs layer.
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