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Failure of d-psicose absorbed in the small intestine to metabolize into energy and its low large intestinal fermentability in humans

Authors :
Masaaki Tokuda
Shoko Miyazato
Ken Izumori
Yuko Yoshikawa
Tetsuo Iida
Noriko Hayashi
Yuka Kishimoto
Takako Yamada
Kazuhiro Okuma
Source :
Metabolism. 59:206-214
Publication Year :
2010
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2010.

Abstract

Experiments with rats have produced data on the metabolism and energy value of d-psicose; however, no such data have been obtained in humans. The authors assessed the availability of d-psicose absorbed in the small intestine by measuring carbohydrate energy expenditure (CEE) by indirect calorimetry. They measured the urinary excretion rate by quantifying d-psicose in urine for 48 hours. To examine d-psicose fermentation in the large intestine, the authors measured breath hydrogen gas and fermentability using 35 strains of intestinal bacteria. Six healthy subjects participated in the CEE test, and 14 participated in breath hydrogen gas and urine tests. d-Psicose fermentation subsequent to an 8-week adaptation period was also assessed by measuring hydrogen gas in 8 subjects. d-Psicose absorbed in the small intestine was not metabolized into energy, unlike glucose, because CEE did not increase within 3 hours of d-psicose ingestion (0.35 g/kg body weight [BW]). The accumulated d-psicose urinary excretion rates were around 70% for 0.34, 0.17, and 0.08 g/kg BW of ingested d-psicose. Low d-psicose fermentability was observed in intestinal bacteria and breath hydrogen gas tests, in which fructooligosaccharide (0.34, 0.17, and 0.08 g/kg BW) was used as a positive control because its available energy is known to be 8.4 kJ/g. Based on the results of the plot of breath hydrogen concentration vs calories ingested, the energy value of d-psicose was expected to be less than 1.6 kJ/g. Incremental d-psicose fermentability subsequent to an adaptation period was not observed.

Details

ISSN :
00260495
Volume :
59
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Metabolism
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....77a6fd85fddffae3cc31d37f4f248095