Excretion in a sentence as a noun

If they are in fact small enough to escape via biliary excretion, that would be great.

Yet sodium excretion from just one day does not reflect peoples salt intake patterns over long periods of time.

" Transplant makes it sound like you're moving an organ around rather than just some fungible bodily excretion.

Its weak science to use one-day sodium excretion to predict heart disease or mortality decades later.

Twenty-four hour urinary cortisol excretion, a hormonal measure of stress, was highest with the very low-carbohydrate diet.

Intersalt: an international study of electrolyte excretion and blood pressure.

Results for 24 hour urinary sodium and potassium excretion.

While they increase the dietary content of zinc, iron, magnesium and calcium when compared to refined grains, they also promptly increase the excretion of these minerals from the body.

This is because the body responds to sodium intake by adjusting the production of aldosterone, which controls water retention and sodium excretion in the kidneys.

Unlike xylitol, erythritol is actually absorbed into the bloodstream after consumption but before excretion.

On the contrary, low sodium excretion predicted higher cardiovascular mortality.

In contrast, the very low-carbohydrate diet had the most beneficial effects on energy expenditure and several metabolic syndrome components, but this restrictive regimen may increase cortisol excretion and CRP.

There was also an interaction between sodium excretion and potassium excretion: high sodium excretion was more strongly associated with increased blood pressure in persons with lower potassium excretion.

Both disorders appear to paint a common picture of inflammation-related hyper-histaminemia, oxidative stress, autoimmune response and BBB opening, and a deficit in melatonin excretion.

And I'm not even sure what of seawater would be absorbed on an empty stomach...it's possible more salt than water would be absorbed, leading to diarrhea as water is left unabsorbed in the intestine, leading to dehydration from poor water absorption and poor salt excretion.

Nevertheless, this large study does provide evidence that both high and low levels of sodium excretion may be associated with an increased risk of death and cardiovascular-disease outcomes and that increasing the urinary potassium excretion counterbalances the adverse effect of high sodium excretion.

Excretion definitions

noun

the bodily process of discharging waste matter

See also: elimination evacuation excreting voiding

noun

waste matter (as urine or sweat but especially feces) discharged from the body

See also: excreta excrement