Plasma amino acids were measured in 17 postoperative subjects randomly assigned to receive for ≤ 5 d tube feeding or total parenteral nutrition (TPN) that had identical energy, nitrogen, and glutamine contents. Subjects required gastric or pancreatic surgery for malignancy and were well-matched for age and body mass index. Tube feeding or TPN began on postoperative day 1 and advanced in daily 25% increments to meet goals of 105 kJ·kg body wt -1·d-1, 1.5 g protein·kg body wt -1·d-1, and 0.3 g glutamine·kg body wt-1·d-1. Delivered energy, nitrogen, and glutamine were closely matched on day 4. Nitrogen balance and plasma proteins did not differ significantly between feeding groups. Total indispensable amino acids, branched-chain amino acids, and glutamine declined 25% on postoperative day 1 compared with preoperative day 0. Indispensable and branched-chain amino acid concentrations were restored with 5 d of either tube feeding or TPN. Glutamine concentrations did not differ significantly by feeding group, though a trend suggested that glutamine recovered more slowly in the tube- fed than in the TPN-fed subjects. Plasma amino acids otherwise reflected formula composition with ratios of valine to leucine of 1.24 and 3.69 μmol/L in subjects receiving 5 d of tube feeding or TPN, respectively. These findings suggest that glutamine-enriched tube feeding and TPN can result in similar profiles for most plasma amino acids at carefully matched doses.
CITATION STYLE
Fish, J., Sporay, G., Beyer, K., Jones, J., Kihara, T., Kennedy, A., … Jensen, G. L. (1997). A prospective randomized study of glutamine-enriched parenteral compared with enteral feeding in postoperative patients. American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, 65(4), 977–983. https://doi.org/10.1093/ajcn/65.4.977
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