6533b82efe1ef96bd129305d
RESEARCH PRODUCT
TAURINE SUPPLEMENTATION PREVENTS HYPERAMINOACIDEMIA IN GROWING TERM INFANTS FED HIGH PROTEIN COW'S MILK FORMULA. † 1891
Angela Fazzolari-nesciGünther BoehmNiels C. R. Räihäsubject
chemistry.chemical_classificationmedicine.medical_specialtyTaurineMilk formulaUrinemedicine.diseaseAmino acidchemistry.chemical_compoundEndocrinologyBiochemistrychemistryInternal medicineCaseinPediatrics Perinatology and Child HealthmedicineHyperaminoacidemiamedicine.symptomBlood urea nitrogenWeight gaindescription
Blood urea nitrogen (BUN) and plasma and urine amino acid concentrations were compared between three cohorts of healthy term infants who were breast-fed (BF) or randomly assigned to one of two formulas either taurine non-supplemented (FF) or taurine supplemented (FF+T). The formulas had a protein concentration of 2 g/dl (2.9 g/100 kcal) and a whey/casein ratio of 20/80. The infants were studied from 2 to 12 weeks of age. Weight gain and growth in length was normal and similar in all three feeding groups during the study interval. At 12 weeks BUN was significantly higher in the FF group than in the BF and FF+T groups of infants, 16.5 mg/dl vs 7.0 and 7.3 mg/dl respectively. Total plasma amino acids (FF group: 240.5±110.1μmoles/dl; BF group: 180.1±28.7 μmoles/dl; FF+T group: 182.3±89.4 μmoles/dl) and total essential amino acids (FF group: 89.8±37.3 μmoles/dl; BF group: 56.1±16.3 μmoles/dl; FF+T group: 53.0±24.2 μmoles/dl). The urine amino acid concentrations reflected the plasma levels in all groups. The results indicate that taurine supplementation to a high protein formula lowers BUN levels and plasma and urine amino acid concentrations by some yet unknown mechanism, to concentrations similar to those found in breast-fed infants with a much lower protein intake.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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1996-04-01 | Pediatric Research |