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Am J Physiol Endocrinol Metab 280: E509-E517, 2001;
0193-1849/01 $5.00
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Vol. 280, Issue 3, E509-E517, March 2001

Arginine and ornithine kinetics in severely burned patients: increased rate of arginine disposal

Yong-Ming Yu, Colleen M. Ryan, Leticia Castillo, Xiao-Ming Lu, Louis Beaumier, Ronald G. Tompkins, and Vernon R. Young

Shriners Burns Hospital and Trauma Service, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston 02114; and Laboratory of Human Nutrition and Clinical Research Center, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02139

Arginine serves multiple roles in the pathophysiological response to burn injury. Our previous studies in burn patients demonstrated a limited net rate of arginine de novo synthesis despite a significantly increased arginine turnover (flux), suggesting that this amino acid is a conditionally indispensable amino acid after major burns. This study used [15N2-guanidino-5,5-2H2]arginine and [5-13C]ornithine as tracers to assess the rate of arginine disposal via its conversion to and subsequent oxidation of ornithine; [5,5-2H2]proline and [5,5,5-2H3]leucine were also used to assess proline and protein kinetics. Nine severely burned patients were studied during a protein-free fast ("basal" or fast) and total parenteral nutrition (TPN) feedings. Compared with values from healthy volunteers, burn injury significantly increased 1) fluxes of arginine, ornithine, leucine, and proline; 2) arginine-to-ornithine conversion; 3) ornithine oxidation; and 4) arginine oxidation. TPN increased arginine-to-ornithine conversion and proportionally increased irreversible arginine oxidation. The elevated arginine oxidation, with limited net de novo synthesis from its immediate precursors, further implies that arginine is a conditionally indispensable amino acid in severely burned patients receiving TPN.

leucine; de novo synthesis; oxidation; basal phase; total parental nutrition


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