Data di Pubblicazione:
2006
Abstract:
Arginine (ARG) is an amino acid (AA) with unique properties
and with a key-role in the metabolic, immune and reparative response to
trauma and sepsis. This study has been performed to characterize the
correlations between plasma levels of ARG, of other AA and of multiple
metabolic variables in trauma and sepsis.
Two-hundred and sixty-three plasma amino-acidograms with a large
series of additional biochemical and blood variables were obtained consecutively
in 9 trauma patients who developed sepsis, undergoing total
parenteral nutrition with dextrose, fat and a mixed AA solution containing
10.4% arginine.
ARG was low soon after trauma, then it increased with increasing
distance from trauma and with the development of sepsis. ARG was also
directly related to the AA infusion rate (AAIR) and for any given AAIR,
was lower after trauma than after the development of sepsis. ARG was
also related directly to the plasma levels of most of the other AA, the best
correlation being that with lysine (r2=0.81, p<0.001). These correlations
were often shifted downwards (showing lower ARG for any given level of
the other AA) in measurements performed after trauma, compared to those
performed after development of sepsis; this effect was more pronounced
for the correlations with branched chain AA. Correlations between ARG
and non-AA variables were not particularly relevant. The best simultaneous
correlates of ARG, among variables involved in plasma ARG
availability, were citrulline level, AAIR and urinary 3-methylhistidine
excretion (accounting for the effect of endogenous proteolysis) (multiple
r2=0.70, p<0.001). Plasma ornithine (ORN), the AA more specifically
linked to ARG metabolism, correlated with AAIR better than ARG and,
for any given AAIR, was lower after trauma than after the development
of sepsis. Correlations of ORN with other AA levels were poorer than
those found for ARG, however ORN was directly related to white blood
cell and platelet count, fibrinogen, transferrin, cholesterol and many AA
clearances.
These data show that changes in ARG in trauma and sepsis are correlated
with changes in other AA and, within these correlations, reconfirm a
tendency to lower ARG in trauma compared to sepsis. The strong correlation
with lysine warrants a deeper assessment of the practical implications
of interdependency between these two AA. The data also suggest that
changes in plasma ORN in trauma and sepsis may reflect adequacy of AA
substrate to support acute-phase and other synthetic processes.
Tipologia CRIS:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
Plasma arginine; amino acids; sepsis; parenteral nutrition; ornithine
Elenco autori:
Giovannini, Ivo; Chiarla, Carlo
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