Abstract

Background Age, race, and analytic method influence levels of blood amino acids, of which reference intervals are required for the diagnosis and management of inherited metabolic disorders. Objectives To establish age-specific reference intervals for blood amino acids in Thai pediatric population measured by liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS). Methods A cross-sectional study of 277 healthy children from birth to 12 years was conducted. Anthropometric, clinical, and dietary information were recorded. Dried blood spots on a filtered paper were used for measurement by derivatized LC-MS/MS. Factors that might affect amino acids such as fasting time and dietary intake were analyzed using quantile regression analysis. Results Levels of thirteen blood amino acids were reported as median and interval from 2.5th–97.5th percentiles. Compared with those of Caucasian, most blood amino acid levels of Thai children were higher. Compared with a previous study using HPLC in Thai children, many amino acid levels are different. Glycine, alanine, leucine/isoleucine, and glutamic acid sharply decreased after birth. Citrulline, arginine, and methionine stayed low from birth throughout childhood, whereas phenylalanine was at middle level and slightly increased during preadolescence. Conclusion Reference intervals of age-specific blood amino acids using LC-MS/MS were established in the Thai pediatric population. They diverge from previous studies, substantiating the recommendation that, for the optimal clinical practice, age-specific reference intervals of amino acids should be designated for the particular population and analysis method.

Highlights

  • Amino acids are the basic structural units of protein. e diversity of amino acids provides variability in the function and structure of proteins

  • Study Design. is cross-sectional descriptive study was conducted at the King Chulalongkorn Memorial Hospital (KCMH) from March 2016 to May 2017 with approval from the Institutional Review Board of the Faculty of Medicine, Chulalongkorn University, and informed consent was obtained from the parents

  • All subjects were in good nutritional state by WHO z-score criteria and had normal protein intake according to their age

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Summary

Introduction

Amino acids are the basic structural units of protein. e diversity of amino acids provides variability in the function and structure of proteins. Race, and analytic method influence levels of blood amino acids, of which reference intervals are required for the diagnosis and management of inherited metabolic disorders. To establish age-specific reference intervals for blood amino acids in ai pediatric population measured by liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS). Levels of thirteen blood amino acids were reported as median and interval from 2.5th–97.5th percentiles. Compared with a previous study using HPLC in ai children, many amino acid levels are different. Reference intervals of age-specific blood amino acids using LCMS/MS were established in the ai pediatric population. Ey diverge from previous studies, substantiating the recommendation that, for the optimal clinical practice, age-specific reference intervals of amino acids should be designated for the particular population and analysis method Reference intervals of age-specific blood amino acids using LCMS/MS were established in the ai pediatric population. ey diverge from previous studies, substantiating the recommendation that, for the optimal clinical practice, age-specific reference intervals of amino acids should be designated for the particular population and analysis method

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