Protein Quality and Nitrogen Balance

Protein Quality and Nitrogen Balance

Protein Quality and Nitrogen Balance

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Protein Quality & Essentials - Amino Acid Lineup

  • Protein Quality: Efficiency of dietary protein for growth & maintenance. Depends on:
    • Digestibility
    • Essential Amino Acid (EAA) content & profile.
  • Essential Amino Acids (EAAs): Body cannot synthesize; must be dietary.
    • 📌 Mnemonic: PVT TIM HALL
      • Phenylalanine, Valine, Threonine
      • Tryptophan, Isoleucine, Methionine
      • Histidine, Arginine*, Leucine, Lysine
      • *Arginine: semi-essential (children; conditional in adults).
  • Conditionally Essential AAs: Become essential in stress/disease (e.g., Cysteine, Tyrosine, Glutamine).
  • Limiting Amino Acid: EAA in lowest concentration relative to needs.
    • Cereals: Lysine
    • Legumes: Methionine

⭐ Lysine is the first limiting amino acid in wheat, rice, and corn.

Assessing Protein Worth - Quality Scorecard

  • Biological Value (BV)
    • Measures efficiency of absorbed protein utilization; proportion of absorbed nitrogen (N) retained for tissue synthesis & maintenance.
    • Formula: $BV = (N_{retained} / N_{absorbed}) \times \textbf{100}$
    • Whole egg protein has a BV of 100, serving as a reference standard.
  • Net Protein Utilization (NPU)
    • Measures overall protein utilization; proportion of ingested N retained in the body.
    • Formula: $NPU = (N_{retained} / N_{ingested}) \times \textbf{100}$
    • Accounts for digestibility: $NPU = BV \times \text{Digestibility Coefficient}$.
  • Protein Efficiency Ratio (PER)
    • Ratio of body weight gain (g) of a growing animal to its dietary protein intake (g).
    • Formula: $PER = \text{Weight gain (g)} / \text{Protein intake (g)}$
    • Commonly used for evaluating protein quality in infant formulas; casein standard PER is 2.5.
  • Amino Acid Score (AAS) / Chemical Score (CS)
    • Compares the essential amino acid (EAA) content of a test protein with that of a high-quality reference protein (e.g., FAO/WHO pattern, egg).
    • The score is determined by the most limiting EAA present in the lowest quantity.
    • Formula: $AAS = (\text{mg of limiting EAA per g test protein} / \text{mg of same EAA per g reference protein}) \times \textbf{100}$
  • Protein Digestibility Corrected Amino Acid Score (PDCAAS)
    • AAS adjusted for true fecal protein digestibility, reflecting human EAA requirements.
    • Formula: $PDCAAS = \text{Amino Acid Score} \times \text{True Digestibility Percentage}$
    • Values range 0-1.0 (or 0-100%); 1.0 indicates highest quality (e.g., milk, egg, soy).

    ⭐ PDCAAS is the current internationally recommended method by FAO/WHO for evaluating protein quality in human diets.

  • Definition: Reflects the net change in total body protein, comparing nitrogen (N) intake to N output.
  • Calculation:
    • $N_{Intake} ; (g/day) = \frac{\text{Protein Intake (g/day)}}{\mathbf{6.25}}$ (Protein is ~16% Nitrogen)
    • $N_{Output} ; (g/day) = \text{Urinary Urea Nitrogen (UUN) (g/day)} + \mathbf{4g}$ (accounts for non-urea losses: fecal, skin, sweat)
    • $N_{Balance} = N_{Intake} - N_{Output}$
  • Clinical Significance:
    • Assesses adequacy of protein intake and overall nutritional status.
    • Monitors metabolic response to stress (e.g., surgery, trauma, sepsis).
    • Guides nutritional support therapy, especially in critically ill patients.
    • Persistent negative balance indicates ongoing tissue breakdown and requires intervention.

High-Yield Fact: In severe stress conditions like major burns or trauma, nitrogen loss can exceed 20-30g/day, signifying massive protein catabolism and necessitating aggressive nutritional support to prevent severe muscle wasting and impaired recovery.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Protein quality: determined by Essential Amino Acid (EAA) profile and digestibility.
  • Biological Value (BV): measures absorbed protein incorporated; egg protein has highest BV (approx. 100).
  • Net Protein Utilization (NPU) reflects both BV and digestibility (NPU = BV × Digestibility).
  • Positive nitrogen balance (Intake > Output): crucial for growth, pregnancy, convalescence.
  • Negative nitrogen balance (Intake < Output): occurs in starvation, trauma, burns, Kwashiorkor.
  • Limiting amino acids: Lysine in cereals, methionine in pulses.
  • Obligatory nitrogen loss: minimum N excreted daily, approx. 3.5g.

Practice Questions: Protein Quality and Nitrogen Balance

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Protein metabolism after trauma is characterized by the following except:

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Flashcards: Protein Quality and Nitrogen Balance

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In starvation, there is reduction in weight and size of all organs except _____.

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In starvation, there is reduction in weight and size of all organs except _____.

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