Clinical nutrition : official journal of the European Society of Parenteral and Enteral Nutrition
-
In the infant on parenteral nutrition, cysteine supplementation has been suggested due to low levels of hepatic cystathionase activity limiting synthesis from methionine. We have examined the plasma concentrations of sulfur amino acids in four groups of post-surgical infants requiring parenteral nutrition receiving (A) a low methionine + cysteine + taurine formula, (B) a high methionine formula (non-steady state), (C) a high methionine formula (steady state), and (D) a high methionine + cysteine formula. Plasma methionine concentrations were above the normal reference range (2.2-4.9 micromol/dL) of normal breast-fed infants in Groups B (15.9 +/- 10.7 micromol/dL) and D (5.7 +/- 1.9 micromol/dL) and at the upper limit for Group C (4.9 +/- 1.7 micromol/dL). ⋯ Parenteral cysteine administration resulted in a greater proportion of plasma free cysteine concentration, but not cystine. The proportion of free to bound cysteine/cystine, as well as the proportion of free cystine to cysteine, was not normal during parenteral nutrition with or without cysteine HCI supplementation. Little benefit in plasma concentrations was derived from cysteine HCI supplementation to a high methionine formulation.