The British journal of nutrition
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Rates of protein synthesis for the liver, plasma albumin and total plasma protein were quantified in sheep either offered a supra-maintenance intake or fasted for 3 d. The technique of continuous infusion over a 12 h period was employed with the simultaneous infusion of [1-13C]glycine, [1-13C]leucine and [2H5]phenylalanine. Blood and plasma samples were removed at timed intervals from the hepatic portal and hepatic veins plus the aorta. ⋯ There were, however, significant declines, based on hepatic venous free phenylalanine enrichment, at the lower intake in both the fractional (3.4 v. 4.7% per d; P = 0.024) and absolute (2.4 v. 4.2 g/d; P = 0.011) synthesis rates of albumin, which matched the estimated decrease in total plasma albumin content (52 v. 67 g, P < 0.01). In contrast, there was a smaller reduction in total plasma protein mass (145 v. 151 g, P = 0.035) with no observed significant difference in kinetic parameters. Albumin synthesis was calculated to account for a maximum of 17% of total liver protein synthesis in the fed condition and this may fall to 8% during moderate fasts.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical Trial
The effect of long-term calcium supplementation on indices of iron, zinc and magnesium status in lactating Gambian women.
The effect of long-term supplementation with CaCO3 on indices of Fe, Zn and Mg status was investigated in a randomized, double-blind intervention study of sixty lactating Gambian women. The supplement contained 1000 mg Ca and was consumed between meals 5 d/week, for 1 year starting 1.5 weeks postpartum. Compliance was 100%. ⋯ Low plasma concentrations of ferritin and Zn indicated that the Gambian women were at high risk of Fe and Zn deficiency. Measurements of alpha 1-antichymotrypsin suggested that the results were not confounded by acute-phase responses. The results of the present study indicate that 1000 mg Ca as CaCO3 given between meals does not deleteriously affect plasma ferritin and Zn concentrations or urinary Mg excretion in women who are at risk of Fe and Zn deficiency.
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Comparative Study
Urea kinetics in healthy young women: minimal effect of stage of menstrual cycle, contraceptive pill and protein intake.
Urea kinetics were measured using prime/intermittent oral doses of [15N15N]urea, on five separate protocols in thirteen normal young women. Each woman underwent either two or three study protocols. Measurements were made at day 12 and day 22 of the menstrual cycle, whilst consuming their habitual protein intake in seven women not taking the contraceptive pill and in six women taking the contraceptive pill. ⋯ The variability was reduced on the controlled low intake of 55 g protein compared with the habitual intake. These results confirm the wide variability in aspects of urea kinetics between individuals. In women this variability is not, to any large extent, accounted for by changes associated with the menstrual cycle.
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Comparative Study
Effects of varying content of soluble dietary fibre from wheat flour and oat milling fractions on gastric emptying in pigs.
Four pigs fitted with a gastric cannula were fed on a wheat-flour-based diet (WF) and three oat-based diets, consisting mainly of oat flour (OF), rolled oats (RO) or oat bran (OB), for 1 week each. The stomach contents were collected quantitatively daily at 0.5, 1, 2, 3 or 5 h after feeding. The viscosity (mPa.s) of the liquid fraction of stomach contents 1 h after feeding was 1.7 with diet WF, 15 with diet OF, 30 with diet RO and approximately 400 with diet OB. ⋯ No effect related to the DF content of the diet was seen in the gastric emptying of starch and Cr2O3 (solid-phase marker). In conclusion, soluble DF from oats increased the viscosity of stomach contents and increased the ability of the dry matter to retain water. Higher levels of soluble DF led to higher recoveries of digesta, the liquid phase and DF itself in the initial stage of gastric emptying, whereas no effect was seen on the gastric emptying of starch.
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The effect of dietary protein content (25, 60, 95, 130, 165 and 200 g crude protein (N x 6.25)/kg diet) on the apparent and true ileal digestibilities of N and amino acids in meat-and-bone meal given to the growing rat was investigated. Semi-synthetic diets in which meat-and-bone meal was the sole protein source were given to 180 g body-weight rats for 14 d. On the fourteenth day the rats were fed and then killed 4 h after the start of feeding and digesta were sampled from the terminal 200 mm ileum. ⋯ The mean apparent ileal digestibility of N in meat-and-bone meal ranged from 65.6 to 75.3%. The corresponding range for the true ileal digestibility of N was 76.9 to 78.2%. True ileal digestibility, unlike apparent digestibility, appears to be independent of dietary protein level and may allow feed ingredients to be compared accurately even if they are ingested in different quantities.