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Urea

About: Urea is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 21394 publications have been published within this topic receiving 382444 citations. The topic is also known as: carbamide & carbonic acid diamide.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: If phenazone is substituted for perchloric acid or arsenic pentoxide in the diacetylmonoxime reaction for urea determination, a colored product is formed, apparently from a double condensation of Phenazone with diacetymoxime and urea, and Beer's law is followed.

134 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, two-dimensional nickel hydroxide nanosheets were synthesized by exfoliating surfactant intercalated layered Ni(OH) hydroxides and developed as electrocatalysts for urea electro-oxidation.

134 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is concluded that urea is a good alternative in the treatment of patients with SIADH who presented with persistent hyponatremia despite the restriction of water intake.

134 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results suggest that the influence of urea from coastal runoff may prove to be more important in the development or maintenance of toxic blooms than previously thought, and that the source of nitrogen may be a determining factor in the relative toxicity of west coast blooms of P. australis.

134 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Rates of flux through, and transfer of N between these and other nitrogenous pools in the body were calculated by solving this model and the information derived has been applied to whole-animal models with a view to subsequently using these models in computer simulation studies.
Abstract: 1. A study of ammonia and urea metabolism in sheep was made using isotope dilution techniques with (15NH4)2SO4,[15N]urea and [14C]urea in order to determine quantitatively the movements of urea-N and NH3-N throughout the body of normal, feeding sheep. 2. Single injections of 15N-labelled compounds were made into the rumen fluid NH3, caecal fluid NH3 and the blood urea pools, in order to estimate the rates of flux through, and the transfer of N between, these and other nitrogenous pools in the body. 51CrEDTA was injected into the rumen and caecum with (15NH4)2SO4 to allow estimation of fluid volumes and to provide an indication of mixing, and of times of transit of isotopes between different sampling sites in the digestive tract. 3. The sheep ate approximately 22 g lucerne chaff/h and the mean dietary N intake was 16-3 g/d. 4. The rate of flux of NH3 through the rumen NH3 pool was 15-0 g/d (i.e. 90% of the dietary N ingested; however, this amount also included N from plasma urea (1-1 g/d) and other endogenous sources including NH3 derived from caecal NH3 (0-4 g/d). 5. Only 40% of the N in isolated rumen bacteria was derived from NH3, indicating that a considerable proportion of their N requirements were obtained from compounds other than NH3 (e.g. peptides and amino acids). 6. There was evidence of recycling of N between nitrogenous pools in the rumen, probably through rumen NH3 leads to microbial N leads to NH3. 7. It was estimated that 5-3 g blood urea-N/d entered the digestive tract; 20% of this urea was degraded in the rumen, 25% in the caecum and the remainder was apparently degraded elsewhere; there was evidence of urea degradation in the large intestine posterior to the caecum and it is suggested that urea degradation and absorption of the resultant NH3 may occur in the ileum. 8. Of the 4-8 g N/d entering the caecal NH3 pool, 4-2 g N/d left and did not return and the difference (0-6 g N/d) was recycled, possibly through caecal NH3 leads to microbial N leads to NH3. 9. A large proportion of the NH3 entering the caecal NH3 pool (70% or 3-2 g N/d) was apparently derived from degradation of nitrogenous products, other than urea, including rumen microbial N (1-0 g N/d) passing undigested from the small intestine. 10. Less than half the NH3-N of caecal origin entering the rumen passed through the blood urea pool; the remainder was apparently transported as other nitrogenous compounds in the blood or body fluids. 11. The results of the three experiments were combined in a general three-pool, open-compartment model which formally recognizes an unlimited number of other unspecified, interconnected pools together comprising the whole-animal system. Rates of flux through, and transfer of N between these and other nitrogenous pools in the body were calculated by solving this model and the information derived has been applied to whole-animal models with a view to subsequently using these models in computer simulation studies.

134 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
20231,000
20221,982
2021433
2020502
2019589
2018557