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American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, Vol 29, 956-960, Copyright © 1976 by The American Society for Clinical Nutrition, Inc
ORIGINAL RESEARCH COMMUNICATIONS |
DP Rose, JE Leklem, RR Brown and C Potera
Plasma alanine or glycine concentrations and blood pyruvate were studied before and after oral administration of the two amino acids to women using estrogen-containing oral contraceptives and to a control group of women. Thirty oral contraceptive users and 14 controls received alanine loads (200 mg/kg of body weight). The two groups had similar fasting plasma alanine levels, but the fasting blood pyruvate was elevated in the contraceptive steroid-treated women. After alanine ingestion, the increases in plasma alanine were significantly lower in the oral contraceptive users. Both groups showed a rise in blood pyruvate; there were no differences in the increments above fasting values. Treatment with pyridoxine hydrochloride, 25 mg for 4 weeks, had not effect on the responses of 11 oral contraceptive users to alanine loading. Twenty-four oral contraceptive users and 14 controls were studied before and after a glycine load (140 mg/kg of body weight). The fasting plasma glycine levels were similar, but lesser increases after ingestion of the amino acid occurred in the oral contraceptive-treated group. Blood pyruvate concentrations in both oral contraceptive users and controls were unaffected by oral glycine loads.
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