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Clinical Pediatrics
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Effect of Dietary Aspartame on Plasma Concentrations of Phenylalanine and Tyrosine in Normal and Homozygous Phenylketonuric Patients

Stephanie A. Mackey, B.S.

Department of Pediatrics, Milton S. Hershey Medical Center, Pennsylvania State University, Hershey

Cheston M. Berlin, JR, M.D.

Department of Pediatrics, Milton S. Hershey Medical Center, Pennsylvania State University, Hershey

Six normal subjects each ingested a single 12 - oz can of a diet cola (Diet Coke) providing 184 mg aspartame (APM), of which 104 mg is phenylalanine (Phe), and, on another occasion, a single 12 - oz can of regular cola (Coke Classic). Neither cola significantly affected plasma concentrations of Phe or tyrosine over the three-hour postingestion study period. Each of five homozygous phenylketonuric (PKU) subjects (ages 11, 16, 17, 21, and 23 years) ingested a single 12 - oz can of the same diet cola. In these five subjects (three with classic PKU and two with hyperphenylalinemia), the increase in plasma Phe concentrations varied from 0.26 mg/dL to 1.77 mg/dL two or three hours after ingestion (baseline levels, 5.04 to 17.2 mg/dL) . Tyrosine concentrations did not differ significantly from baseline levels. The data indicate that ingestion of dietary Phe, as supplied in a single can of diet cola, is readily handled in both normal and PKU subjects. The small increases in plasma Phe concentrations in the homozygous PKU patients are not considered clinically significant.

Clinical Pediatrics, Vol. 31, No. 7, 394-399 (1992)
DOI: 10.1177/000992289203100703


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