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Journal of Parenteral and Enteral Nutrition
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Nitrogen Utilization from Elemental Diets

Jorge E. Albina, M.D.

Departments of Surgery and Otorhinolaryngology, School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania and Philadelphia Veterans Administration Medical Center, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

Danny O. Jacobs, M.D.

Departments of Surgery and Otorhinolaryngology, School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania and Philadelphia Veterans Administration Medical Center, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

George Melnik, R.PH.

Departments of Surgery and Otorhinolaryngology, School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania and Philadelphia Veterans Administration Medical Center, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

R. Gregg Settle, PH.D.

Departments of Surgery and Otorhinolaryngology, School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania and Philadelphia Veterans Administration Medical Center, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

T. Peter Stein, PH.D.

Departments of Surgery and Otorhinolaryngology, School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania and Philadelphia Veterans Administration Medical Center, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

David Guy, PH.D.

Mead-Johnson Laboratories, Evansville, Indiana

John L. Rombeau, M.D.

Departments of Surgery and Otorhinolaryngology, School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania and Philadelphia Veterans Administration Medical Center, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

Repletion experiments were performed in malnourished, chair-adapted primates to explore recently reported differences in nitrogen utilization from elemental diets. Two elemental diets were fed consecutively for 8 days through a gastrostomy. Diet C (maltodextrins, peptides, crystalline amino acids) resulted in: larger weight gain (F1,6 = 17.93, p < 0.01); smaller decrease of serum albumin (F1,5 = 11.2, p < 0.015), larger increase in total iron binding capacity (F1,6 = 30.6, p < 0.002), and a more positive nitrogen balance (F1,6 = 30.4, p < 0.002) than diet V (glucose oligosaccharides, crystalline amino acids). Diet C was considered to be more effective in the nutritional repletion of the study animals. Additional experiments were performed in normal human volunteers to investigate the metabolic fate of ingested glutamine and whether the rapid catabolism and excretion of the amido nitrogen of this amino acid, which constitutes 11.56% of total nitrogen in diet V, could explain the differences observed in primates in our study and in human subjects by other authors. Six normal volunteers were fed 15N amino glutamine, 15N alanine, or 15N H4Cl. Similar amounts of 15N from Gln and Ala were excreted in 10 hr. The amido group of glutamine does not seem to be metabolized differently from the {alpha}-amino group of alanine under the conditions of the study. The marked differences in nitrogen utilization from the study diets could not be explained by the presence of relatively large amounts of glutamine in one of them. (Journal of Parenteral and Enteral Nutrition 9:189-195, 1985)

Journal of Parenteral and Enteral Nutrition, Vol. 9, No. 2, 189-195 (1985)
DOI: 10.1177/0148607185009002189


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JPEN J Parenter Enteral NutrHome page
P. A. Heller, E. Shronts, S. Akrabawi, and S. B. Heymsfield
Free Amino Acid Formula: Nitrogen Utilization and Metabolic Effects in Normal Subjects
JPEN J Parenter Enteral Nutr, November 1, 1987; 11(6): 533 - 539.
[Abstract] [PDF]