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American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, Vol. 77, No. 1, 250-256, January 2003
© 2003 American Society for Clinical Nutrition


Original Research Communication

Plasma taurine concentrations increase after enteral glutamine supplementation in trauma patients and stressed rats1,2,3

Petra G Boelens, Alexander PJ Houdijk, Hélène N de Thouars, Tom Teerlink, Marina IA van Engeland, Henk JTM Haarman and Paul AM van Leeuwen

1 From the Department of Surgery and Clinical Chemistry, Vrije Universiteit Medical Center, Amsterdam.

Background: Taurine is a unique amino acid with antioxidant and osmolytic properties. Glutamine serves as the preferred fuel for the gut, liver, and immune cells and as a precursor for antioxidants. Trauma patients have low glutamine concentrations.

Objectives: We investigated the effect of glutamine-enriched enteral nutrition on plasma taurine concentrations in patients with severe trauma (injury severity score >20). Additionally, plasma taurine concentrations and organ fluxes were studied in a stressed rat model.

Design: Twenty-nine patients with multiple trauma received glutamine-enriched nutrition and 31 patients received isocaloric, isonitrogenous control solution for 5 d. Plasma taurine and glutamine concentrations were measured. Male Wistar rats (250–300 g) received a glutamine-enriched diet (12%, by wt) or a control solution for 2 wk. Plasma taurine concentrations were measured. Taurine fluxes and fractional extraction rates in the liver, kidneys, and gut were assessed with a radioactive microsphere technique.

Results: Both patient groups had low taurine concentrations on day 1. From day 3 onward, the glutamine-fed patients had significantly higher taurine concentrations. Rats fed a glutamine-enriched diet had significantly higher plasma taurine concentrations than did the controls. A high taurine uptake was found in the liver, kidneys, and gut of the glutamine-fed rats. Fractional extraction rates were not significantly different between the rat groups.

Conclusions: Glutamine enrichment increases plasma taurine in trauma patients and in stressed rats. Because of increased availability, organ fluxes showed a higher taurine uptake in the liver, kidneys, and gut. The reduction in morbidity with glutamine enrichment could be explained in part by increased taurine availability.

Key Words: Glutamine • taurine • osmoregulation • antioxidants • trauma patients • rats • surgery




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[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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