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  • Title: Threonine kinetics in preterm infants fed their mothers' milk or formula with various ratios of whey to casein.
    Author: Darling PB, Dunn M, Sarwar G, Brookes S, Ball RO, Pencharz PB.
    Journal: Am J Clin Nutr; 1999 Jan; 69(1):105-14. PubMed ID: 9925131.
    Abstract:
    BACKGROUND: Plasma threonine concentrations are elevated in infants fed formula containing a whey-to-casein protein ratio of 60:40 compared with concentrations in infants fed formula containing a ratio of 20:80 or human milk (60:40). OBJECTIVE: We studied whether degradation of excess threonine was lower in formula-fed infants than in infants fed their mothers' milk. DESIGN: Threonine kinetics were examined in 17 preterm infants (gestational age: 31+/-2 wk: birth weight: 1720+/-330 g) by using an 18-h oral infusion of [1-13C]threonine at a postnatal age of 21+/-11 d and weight of 1971+/-270 g. Five infants received breast milk. Formula-fed infants (n = 12) were randomly assigned to receive 1 of 3 formulas (5.3 g protein/MJ) that differed only in the whey-to-casein ratio (20:80, 40:60, and 60:40). RESULTS: Threonine intake increased significantly in formula-fed infants with increasing whey content of the formula (48.5, 56.4, and 63.2 micromol.kg(-1).h(-1), respectively; pooled SD: 2.2; P = 0.0001), as did plasma threonine concentrations (228, 344, and 419 micromol/L, respectively; pooled SD: 75; P = 0.03). Despite a generous threonine intake by infants fed breast milk (58.0+/-16.0 micromol.kg(-1).h(-1), plasma threonine concentrations remained low (208+/-41 micromol/L). Fecal threonine excretion and net threonine tissue gain, estimated by nitrogen balance, did not differ significantly among groups. Threonine oxidation did not differ significantly among formula-fed infants but was significantly lower in formula-fed infants fed than in infants fed breast milk (17.1% compared with 24.3% of threonine intake, respectively). CONCLUSION: Formula-fed infants have a lower capacity to oxidize threonine than do infants fed breast milk.
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