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Muscle Protein Synthesis after Protein Administration in Critical Illness

Authors :
Lee-anne S. Chapple
Imre W. K. Kouw
Matthew J. Summers
Luke M. Weinel
Samuel Gluck
Eamon Raith
Peter Slobodian
Stijn Soenen
Adam M. Deane
Luc J. C. van Loon
Marianne J. Chapman
Physiotherapy, Human Physiology and Anatomy
Human Physiology and Sports Physiotherapy Research Group
Humane Biologie
RS: NUTRIM - R3 - Respiratory & Age-related Health
Source :
American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine, 206(6), 740-749. American Thoracic Society
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
American Thoracic Society, 2022.

Abstract

Rationale: Dietary protein may attenuate the muscle atrophy experienced by patients in the ICU, yet protein handling is poorly understood. Objectives: To quantify protein digestion and amino acid absorption and fasting and postprandial myofibrillar protein synthesis during critical illness. Methods: Fifteen mechanically ventilated adults (12 male; aged 50 ± 17 yr; body mass index, 27 ± 5 kg⋅m-2) and 10 healthy control subjects (6 male; 54 ± 23 yr; body mass index, 27 ± 4 kg⋅m-2) received a primed intravenous L-[ring-2H5]-phenylalanine, L-[3,5-2H2]-tyrosine, and L-[1-13C]-leucine infusion over 9.5 hours and a duodenal bolus of intrinsically labeled (L-[1-13C]-phenylalanine and L-[1-13C]-leucine) intact milk protein (20 g protein) over 60 minutes. Arterial blood and muscle samples were taken at baseline (fasting) and for 6 hours following duodenal protein administration. Data are mean ± SD, analyzed with two-way repeated measures ANOVA and independent samples t test. Measurements and Main Results: Fasting myofibrillar protein synthesis rates did not differ between ICU patients and healthy control subjects (0.023 ± 0.013% h-1 vs. 0.034 ± 0.016% h-1; P = 0.077). After protein administration, plasma amino acid availability did not differ between groups (ICU patients, 54.2 ± 9.1%, vs. healthy control subjects, 61.8 ± 13.1%; P = 0.12), and myofibrillar protein synthesis rates increased in both groups (0.028 ± 0.010% h-1 vs. 0.043 ± 0.018% h-1; main time effect P = 0.046; P-interaction = 0.584) with lower rates in ICU patients than in healthy control subjects (main group effect P = 0.001). Incorporation of protein-derived phenylalanine into myofibrillar protein was ∼60% lower in ICU patients (0.007 ± 0.007 mol percent excess vs. 0.017 ± 0.009 mol percent excess; P = 0.007). Conclusions: The capacity for critically ill patients to use ingested protein for muscle protein synthesis is markedly blunted despite relatively normal protein digestion and amino acid absorption.

Details

ISSN :
15354970 and 1073449X
Volume :
206
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....da3cecdde98310bb70de7d6be173a498
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1164/rccm.202112-2780oc