With a j-pouch, you lose more water through BMs and our transit time and absorption is different to the standard population.
So the volume of urine we pass in 24 hours is probably going to be lower.
But what about the composition?
I don’t have a GI specialist or surgeon at the moment to ask, and my current GP doesn’t know the answer. Specialist who ordered tests hadn’t heard of the j-pouch, so he’s definitely not going to know!
The two tests I had were 24-hour sodium, and 24-hour catecholamines and metanephrines.
I don’t think the catecholamines and metanephrines would be affected because they come from the blood.
But I suspect the sodium could be affected because we might lose a bit more sodium via BMs.
Does anyone know? Or can you point me to a reference?
I don’t want to have unnecessary testing and investigations because people can’t allow for the effect of a j-pouch when interpreting results.