Abstract
Seven healthy, normal-weight subjects were fed breakfasts of 50 g protein, 50 g glucose, and 10, 30, or 50 g protein plus 50 g glucose in random sequence. Plasma glucose, insulin, C peptide, glucagon, nonesterified fatty acids, and α-amino nitrogen were then measured from samples obtained over 4 h. The postmeal net area of each response curve was calculated. Ingestion of 50 g protein alone did not change the serum glucose concentration. The various amounts of protein ingested with 50 g glucose also did not alter the serum glucose response compared with that observed with 50 g glucose alone. Ingestion of the various amounts of protein also did not result in a further increase in insulin concentration when ingested with glucose, except with the 50-g-protein dose. This increase was modest. Ingestion of glucose resulted in a decrease in α-amino nitrogen and glucagon concentrations whereas ingestion of protein increased them as expected. Additions of progressively larger amounts of protein to the glucose meal resulted in a progressive increase in the α-amino-nitrogen- and glucagon-area responses. The relationship was curvilinear for both the α-amino-nitrogen response and the glucagon response. The null point, that is, the protein dose ingested with 50 g glucose at which there would be no change in area response, was estimated to be 9 g protein for α-amino nitrogen and 5 g protein for glucagon.
Original language | English (US) |
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Pages (from-to) | 267-272 |
Number of pages | 6 |
Journal | American Journal of Clinical Nutrition |
Volume | 52 |
Issue number | 2 |
DOIs | |
State | Published - Aug 1990 |
Externally published | Yes |
Keywords
- C peptide
- Diet
- Dietary protein
- Glucagon
- Glycemic index
- Insulin
- Relative glucose area
- α-amine nitrogen