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Vol.24 No.1 1991 January [Table of Contents] [Full text ( PDF 590KB)]
ORIGINAL ARTICLE

Hepatic Function Measured by Amino Acid Utility Index (AAUI) and Surgical Stress

Takesada Goto, Takehide Asano, Kazuo Watanabe*, Toshio Nakagohri, Takashi Kenmochi, Takeshi Uematsu, Kazuo Enomoto, Kaoru Sakamoto, Takenori Ochiai, Kaichi Isono

Second Department of Surgery, Chiba University School of Medicine
*Department of Surgery, Chiba Cancer Center

Surgical tissue injury accelerates the transfer of amino acids from skeletal muscle to the liver for protein synthesis required for the maintenance of immunocompetence and wound healing. For clinical measurement of this function, we developed a new indicator, the amino acid utility index (AAUI), by using the rate of muscle release of amino acid (m-RR) and the rate of central plasma clearance of amino acids (CPCR-AA) reported by Clowes et al in 1984. They are the indexes of muscle proteolysis and whole body protein turnover, and AAUI is expressed by the formula.
AAUI (ml/µmol)=CPCR-AA/m-RR
Thirty patients were studied before and after recovery from surgical stress and were divided into four groups. In group 1, the control, seven patients with normal liver function had received esophagectomy. In group 2, nine patients had received hepatectomy of one segmentectomy or smaller resection. In group 3, ten patients had received hepatectomy of 2 or 3 segmentecotmies. In group 4, four patients had died of liver failure after hepatecotmy. According to the degree of surgical stress, the values of m-RR as well as CPCR-AA were increased in each group on the 2nd post-operative day. But the values of AAUI were 7.8±0.9 (group 1), 8.2&piusmn;2.1 (group 2), 4.7±2.1 (group 3) and in group 4 marked decrease below 3.0 was noted during the immediate postoperative period. This finding suggests that AAUI can be a clinical prognostic index for estimating hepatic function without the influence of surgical stress.

Key words
hepatic functional reserve, surgical stress, amino acids, protein synthesis

Jpn J Gastroenterol Surg 24: 38-44, 1991

Reprint requests
Takesada Goto Second Department of Surgery, Chiba University School of Medicine
1-8-1 Inohana, Chiba, 280 JAPAN

Accepted
October 11, 1990

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