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Lysine requirement of healthy, school-aged Indian children determined by the indicator amino acid oxidation technique

Groups and Associations Pillai RR, Elango R, Muthayya S, Ball RO, Kurpad AV, Pencharz PB
National Library of Medicine 2009

We recently reported the lysine requirement of school-aged children living in Canada consuming a mixed diet to be 35 mg.kg(-1).d(-1). Because the majority of children in the world live on cereal-based diets in developing countries, we measured the daily lysine requirement in healthy children living in India and consuming a mostly cereal-based diet. Our objective in this study was to determine the lysine requirement in healthy, school-aged children in the developing world by using the indicator amino acid oxidation method with l-[1-(13)C] phenylalanine. Six healthy, school-aged children consumed 7 levels of lysine (5, 15, 25, 35, 50, 65, and 80 mg.kg(-1).d(-1)) each in a random order along with an amino acid mixture providing energy and protein intakes of 1.7 x resting energy expenditure and 1.5 g.kg(-1).d(-1), respectively. The mean lysine requirement was determined by applying a 2-phase linear regression crossover analysis on tracer oxidation (F(13)CO(2)) data, which identified a breakpoint (requirement) at minimal F(13)CO(2) in response to the graded lysine intakes. The mean lysine requirements with the upper 95% CI for children were determined to be 33.5 and 46.6 mg.kg(-1).d(-1), respectively, by breakpoint analysis of the F(13)CO(2) data. The mean lysine requirements of Indian children were almost identical to that of Canadian children (35 mg.kg(-1).d(-1)). There is no evidence for any adaptation in lysine requirements in children from developing countries such as India.

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19923398