The effect of birth asphyxia on plasma free amino acids in preterm newborn infants.
מילות מפתח
תַקצִיר
The postnatal plasma amino acid pattern was compared in 16 asphyxiated and 13 non-asphyxiated preterm newborn infants. The lactic acidosis induced by asphyxia was associated with a marked rise in the total amino acid content of the plasma. Among the 17 individual amino acids determined the concentrations of alanine, proline, taurine, glutamate, valine, methionine and lysine were significantly elevated. The accumulation of alanine was particulary marked and its concentration showed a significant linear correlation with that of lactate (p less 0.001). A similar relationship was observed between other potentially glucogenic amino acids and lactate. It is suggested that an impaired gluconeogenesis may be responsible for the accumulation of glucogenic amino acids. The response of the plasma aminogram to asphyxia resembles that associated with hypoglycaemia in the small-for-gestational-age infant, where a delay in the maturation of key gluconeogenic enzymes seems to account for the reduced hepatic disposal of glucose precursors.