Dietary amino acid intakes associated with a low-phenylalanine diet combined with amino acid medical foods and glycomacropeptide medical foods and neuropsychological outcomes in subjects with phenylketonuria

Bridget M Stroup, Sangita G Murali, Nivedita Nair, Emily A Sawin, Fran Rohr, Harvey L Levy, Denise M Ney, Bridget M Stroup, Sangita G Murali, Nivedita Nair, Emily A Sawin, Fran Rohr, Harvey L Levy, Denise M Ney

Abstract

This article provides original data on median dietary intake of 18 amino acids from amino acid medical foods, glycomacropeptide medical foods, and natural foods based on 3-day food records obtained from subjects with phenylketonuria who consumed low-phenylalanine diets in combination with amino acid medical foods and glycomacropeptide medical foods for 3 weeks each in a crossover design. The sample size of 30 subjects included 20 subjects with classical phenylketonuria and 10 with a milder or variant form of phenylketonuria. Results are presented for the Delis-Kaplan Executive Function System and the Cambridge Neuropsychological Test Automated Battery; the tests were administered at the end of each 3-week dietary treatment with amino acid medical foods and glycomacropeptide medical foods. The data are supplemental to our clinical trial, entitled "Glycomacropetide for nutritional management of phenylketonuria: a randomized, controlled, crossover trial, 2016 (1) and "Metabolomic changes demonstrate reduced bioavailability of tyrosine and altered metabolism of tryptophan via the kynurenine pathway with ingestion of medical foods in phenylketonuria, 2017 (2). This data has been made public and has utility to clinicians and researchers due to the following: 1) This provides the first comprehensive report of typical intakes of 18 amino acids from natural foods, as well as amino acid and glycomacropeptide medical foods in adolescents and adults with phenylketonuria; and 2) This is the first evidence of similar standardized neuropsychological testing data in adolescents and adults with early-treated phenylketonuria who consumed amino acid and glycomacropeptide medical foods.

Keywords: Arginine; Cambridge Neuropsychological Test Automated Battery; Delis-Kaplan Executive Function System; Executive function; Leucine; Tyrosine.

Figures

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Fig. 1
Experimental design.

References

    1. Ney D.M., Stroup B.M., Clayton M.K., Murali S.G., Rice G.M., Rohr F., Levy H.L. Glycomacropeptide for nutritional management of phenylketonuria: a randomized, controlled, crossover trial. Am. J. Clin. Nutr. 2016;104:334–345.
    1. Ney D.M., Murali S.G., Stroup B.M., Nair N., Sawin E.A., Rohr F., Levy H.L. Metabolomic changes demonstrate reduced bioavailability of tyrosine and altered metabolism of tryptophan via the kynurenine pathway with ingestion of medical foods in phenylketonuria. Mol. Genet. Metab. 2017
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Source: PubMed

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