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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #68830 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/68830)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of The nutrition of man, by Russell H.
-Chittenden
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: The nutrition of man
-
-Author: Russell H. Chittenden
-
-Release Date: August 24, 2022 [eBook #68830]
-
-Language: English
-
-Produced by: Thiers Halliwell, Mark C. Orton and the Online Distributed
- Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was
- produced from images generously made available by The
- Internet Archive)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE NUTRITION OF MAN ***
-
-[Transcriber's notes:
-
-The text of this e-book has been preserved in its original form
-apart from correction of the typographic errors listed below.
-Illustrations have been repositioned adjacent to relevant tabulated
-data, and the List of Illustrations adjusted accordingly. On
-p.72 an image of the Xanthin formula incorrectly shows a double
-bond between a carbon and nitrogen atom – the correct formula
-is shown on the next page – and there is a date discrepancy on
-p. 248 between the text and the illustration caption (November
-18/February 27). Footnotes have been repositioned below the
-relevant paragraphs.
-
-Typographic corrections:
-
- enyzmes → enzymes
- oxgyen → oxygen
- enyzme → enzyme
- Futher → Further
- mechancial → mechanical
- rythmical → rhythmical
- economcially → economically
- circulirinden → circulirenden
- SUBJECT → SUBJECTS
- equibrium → equilibrium
- availibility → availability
- (166) grams → (166 grams)
- accusstomed → accustomed
- Glassner → Glässner
- strach → starch
-]
-
-
-
-
-THE NUTRITION OF MAN
-
-
-
-
- THE
-
- NUTRITION OF MAN
-
- BY
-
- RUSSELL H. CHITTENDEN, Ph.D., LL.D., Sc.D.
-
- AUTHOR OF “PHYSIOLOGICAL ECONOMY IN NUTRITION,” ETC.
- PROFESSOR OF PHYSIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
- AND DIRECTOR OF THE SHEFFIELD
- SCIENTIFIC SCHOOL OF YALE UNIVERSITY
-
-
- WITH ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-
- NEW YORK
- FREDERICK A. STOKES COMPANY
- PUBLISHERS
-
-
-
-
- _Copyright, 1907_,
- BY FREDERICK A. STOKES COMPANY
-
- _All rights reserved_
-
-
- May, 1907
-
-
- _FIFTH PRINTING_
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE
-
-
-The present book is the outcome of a course of eight lectures delivered
-before the Lowell Institute of Boston in the early part of 1907.
-
-In this presentation of the subject the attempt has been made to
-give a systematic account of our knowledge regarding some of the
-more important processes of nutrition, with special reference to the
-needs of the body for food. In doing this, the facts accumulated by
-painstaking observations and experiments during recent years in our
-laboratory have been incorporated with data from other sources and
-brought into harmony, so far as possible, with the modern trend of
-physiological thought.
-
-Numerous experimental results, hitherto unpublished, have been
-introduced, notably in Chapter VII, in which a few of the data recently
-obtained in our laboratory with dogs are presented in some detail,
-since they afford evidence of the error of the current arguments
-concerning the necessity of a high proteid intake by man, as based on
-the results of earlier investigators with high proteid animals.
-
-It is hoped that the facts and arguments here presented will help to
-arouse a more general interest in the subject of human nutrition, as
-right methods of living promise so much for the health and happiness of
-the individual and of the community.
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
- CHAPTER I PAGE
-
- FOODS AND THEIR DIGESTION 1
-
- TOPICS: The purpose of nutrition. The food of man. Proteid foods.
- Carbohydrate foods. Fats. Food as fuel. Composition of foodstuffs.
- Availability of foods. Food as source of energy. Various factors in
- the nourishment of the body. Processes of digestion. Secretion of
- saliva. Function of saliva. Enzymes. Reversible action of enzymes.
- Specificity of enzymes. Mastication. Gastric secretion. Components
- of gastric juice. Action of gastric juice. Muscular movements
- of stomach. Time foods remain in stomach. Importance of stomach
- digestion. Processes of the small intestine. Secretion of pancreatic
- juice. Chemical changes in small intestine. Destruction of proteid
- food. Significance of the breaking down of proteid. Change of fatty
- foods and carbohydrates in intestine. Digestion practically complete
- at end of small intestine. Putrefaction held in check. Digestion a
- prelude to utilization of food.
-
-
- CHAPTER II
-
- ABSORPTION, ASSIMILATION, AND THE PROCESSES OF METABOLISM 39
-
- TOPICS: Physiological peculiarities in absorption. Chemical changes
- in epithelial walls of intestine. Two pathways for absorbed
- material. Function of the liver as a regulator of carbohydrate.
- Absorption of proteid products. Assimilation of food products.
- Anabolism. Katabolism. Metabolism. Processes of metabolism. Older
- views regarding oxidation. Discoveries of Lavoisier. The views of
- Liebig. Theory of luxus consumption. Oxidation in the body not simple
- combustion. Oxygen not the cause of the decompositions. Oxidation not
- confined to any one place. Intracellular enzymes. Living cells the
- guiding power in katabolism. Some intermediary products of tissue
- metabolism. Chemical structure of different proteids. Decomposition
- products of nucleoproteids. Relation to uric acid. Action of specific
- intracellular enzymes. Creatin and creatinin. Relation to urea.
- Proteid katabolism a series of progressive chemical decompositions.
- Intracellular enzymes as the active agents.
-
-
- CHAPTER III
-
- THE BALANCE OF NUTRITION 77
-
- TOPICS: Body equilibrium. Nitrogen equilibrium. Carbon equilibrium.
- Loss of nitrogen during fasting. Influence of previous diet on loss
- of nitrogen in fasting. Output of carbon during fasting. Influence
- of pure proteid diet on output of nitrogen. Influence of fat on
- proteid metabolism. Effect of carbohydrate on nitrogen metabolism.
- Storing up of proteid by the body. Transformation of energy in the
- body. Respiration calorimeter. Basal energy exchange of the body.
- Circumstances influencing energy exchange. Effect of food on heat
- production. Respiratory quotient and its significance. Influence of
- muscle work on energy exchange. Elimination of carbon dioxide during
- work and with different diets. Effect of excessive muscular work
- on energy exchange. Oxygen consumption under different conditions.
- Output of matter and energy subject to great variation. Body
- equilibrium and approximate nitrogen balance to be expected in health.
-
-
- CHAPTER IV
-
- SOURCE OF THE ENERGY OF MUSCLE WORK, WITH SOME THEORIES OF
- PROTEID METABOLISM 119
-
- TOPICS: Relation of muscle work to energy exchange. Views of Liebig.
- Experimental evidence. Relation of nitrogen excretion to muscle
- work. Significance of the respiratory quotient in determining
- nature of the material oxidized. Fats and carbohydrates as source
- of energy by muscles. Utilization of proteid as a source of energy.
- Formation of carbohydrate from proteid. Significance of proteid
- metabolism. Theories of Carl Voit. Morphotic proteid. Circulating
- proteid. General conception of proteid metabolism on the basis of
- Voit’s theories. Pflüger’s views of proteid metabolism. Rapidity of
- elimination of food nitrogen. Methods by which nitrogen is split off
- from proteid. Theories of Folin. Significance of creatinin and of the
- percentage distribution of excreted nitrogen. Endogenous or tissue
- metabolism. Exogenous or intermediate metabolism. Needs of the body
- for proteid food possibly satisfied by quantity sufficient to meet
- the demands of tissue or endogenous metabolism. Bearings of Folin’s
- views on current theories and general facts of proteid metabolism.
- Large proteid reserve and voluminous exogenous metabolism probably
- not needed. Importance of feeding experiments in determining the true
- value of different views.
-
-
- CHAPTER V
-
- DIETARY HABITS AND TRUE FOOD REQUIREMENTS 153
-
- TOPICS: Dietetic customs of mankind. Origin of dietary standards.
- True food requirements. Arguments based on custom and habit.
- Relationship between food consumption and prosperity. Erroneous
- ideas regarding nutrition. Commercial success and national wealth
- not the result of liberal dietary habits. Instinct and craving not
- wise guides to follow in choice and quantity of food. Physiological
- requirements and dietary standards not to be based on habits and
- cravings. Old-time views regarding temperate use of food. The sayings
- of Thomas Cogan. The teachings of Cornaro. Experimental results
- obtained by various physiologists. Work of the writer on true proteid
- requirements. Studies with professional men. Nitrogen equilibrium
- with small amounts of food. Sample dietaries. Simplicity in diet.
- Nitrogen requirement per kilogram of body-weight. Fuel value of the
- daily food. Experiments with University athletes. Nitrogen balance
- and food consumption. Sample dietaries. Adequacy of a simple diet.
-
-
- CHAPTER VI
-
- FURTHER EXPERIMENTS AND OBSERVATIONS BEARING ON TRUE FOOD
- REQUIREMENTS 191
-
- TOPICS: Dietary experiments with a detail of soldiers from the United
- States Army. General character of the army ration. Samples of the
- daily dietary adopted. Rate of nitrogen metabolism attained. Effect
- on body-weight. Nitrogen balance with lowered proteid consumption.
- Influence of low proteid on muscular strength of soldiers and
- athletes. Effect on fatigue. Effect on physical endurance. Fisher’s
- experiments on endurance. Dangers of underfeeding. Dietary
- observations on fruitarians. Observations on Japanese. Recent dietary
- changes in Japanese army and navy. Observations of Dr. Hunt on
- resistance of low proteid animals to poisons. Conclusions.
-
-
- CHAPTER VII
-
- THE EFFECT OF LOW PROTEID DIET ON HIGH PROTEID ANIMALS 229
-
- TOPICS: A wide variety of foods quite consistent with temperance in
- diet. Safety of low proteid standards considered. Arguments based
- on the alleged effects of low proteid diet on high proteid animals.
- Experiments of Immanuel Munk with dogs. Experiments of Rosenheim.
- Experiments of Jägerroos. Comments on the above experiments. The
- experiments of Watson and Hunter on rats. The writer’s experiments
- with dogs. Details of the results obtained with six dogs. Comparison
- of the results with those of previous investigators. Effect of a
- purely vegetable diet on dogs. Different nutritive value of specific
- proteids considered. Possible influence of difference in chemical
- constitution of individual proteids. Effect of low proteid diet on
- the absorption and utilization of food materials in the intestine
- of dogs. General conclusions from the results of experiments with
- animals.
-
-
- CHAPTER VIII
-
- PRACTICAL APPLICATIONS WITH SOME ADDITIONAL DATA 266
-
- TOPICS: Proper application of the results of scientific research
- helpful to mankind. Dietary habits should be brought into conformity
- with the true needs of the body. The peculiar position of proteid
- foods emphasized. The evil effects of overeating. What the new
- dietary standards really involve. The actual amounts of foodstuffs
- required. Relation of nutritive value to cost of foods. The
- advantages of simplicity in diet. A sample dietary for a man of
- 70 kilograms body-weight. A new method of indicating food values.
- Moderation in the daily dietary leads toward vegetable foods. The
- experiments of Dr. Neumann. The value of fruits as food. The merits
- of animal and vegetable proteids considered in relation to the
- bacterial processes in the intestine. A notable case of simplicity
- in diet. Intelligent modification of diet to the temporary needs of
- the body. Diet in summer and winter contrasted. Value of greater
- protection to the kidneys. Conclusion.
-
-
- INDEX 303
-
-
-
-
-LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-
- FACING PAGE
-
- Photograph of one of the athletes 190
-
- Photograph of soldiers taken at the close of the experiment 194
-
- Photograph of soldiers taken at the close of the experiment 195
-
- Photograph of Fritz at the close of the experiment 200
-
- Photographs of the dogs experimented with
-
- Subject No. 5 August 19, 1905 248
- Subject No. 5 November 18, 1905 248
- Subject No. 5 April 24, 1906 248
- Subject No. 5 June 27, 1906 248
-
- Subject No. 3 August 19, 1905 251
- Subject No. 3 November 18, 1905 251
- Subject No. 3 April 24, 1906 251
- Subject No. 3 June 27, 1906 251
-
- Subject No. 13 January 2, 1906 252
- Subject No. 13 February 27,1906 252
- Subject No. 13 April 24, 1906 252
- Subject No. 13 June 19, 1906 252
-
- Subject No. 15 January 2, 1906 252
- Subject No. 15 February 27, 1906 252
- Subject No. 15 April 24, 1906 253
- Subject No. 15 June 19, 1906 252
-
- Subject No. 20 January 2, 1906 252
- Subject No. 20 February 27, 1906 252
- Subject No. 20 April 24, 1906 252
- Subject No. 20 June 19, 1906 252
-
- Subject No. 17 January 2, 1906 256
- Subject No. 17 February 27, 1906 256
- Subject No. 17 April 24, 1906 252
- Subject No. 17 June 27, 1906 252
-
-
-
-
-THE NUTRITION OF MAN
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-FOODS AND THEIR DIGESTION
-
- TOPICS: The purpose of nutrition. The food of man. Proteid foods.
- Carbohydrate foods. Fats. Food as fuel. Composition of foodstuffs.
- Availability of foods. Food as source of energy. Various factors in
- the nourishment of the body. Processes of digestion. Secretion of
- saliva. Function of saliva. Enzymes. Reversible action of enzymes.
- Specificity of enzymes. Mastication. Gastric secretion. Components
- of gastric juice. Action of gastric juice. Muscular movements
- of stomach. Time foods remain in stomach. Importance of stomach
- digestion. Processes of the small intestine. Secretion of pancreatic
- juice. Chemical changes in small intestine. Destruction of proteid
- food. Significance of the breaking down of proteid. Change of fatty
- foods and carbohydrates in intestine. Digestion practically complete
- at end of small intestine. Putrefaction held in check. Digestion a
- prelude to utilization of food.
-
-
-One of the great mysteries of life is the power of growth, that
-harmonious development of composite organs and tissues from simple
-protoplasmic cells, with the ultimate formation of a complex organism
-with its orderly adjustment of structure and function. Equally
-mysterious is that wonderful power of rehabilitation by which the cells
-of the body are able to renew their living substance and to maintain
-their ceaseless activity through a period, it may be of fourscore
-years, before succumbing to the inevitable fate that awaits all organic
-structures. This bodily activity, visible and invisible, is the result
-of a third mysterious process, more or less continuous as long as life
-endures, of chemical disintegration, decomposition, and oxidation, by
-which arises the evolution of energy to maintain the heat of the body
-and the power for mental and physical work.
-
-These three main functions constitute the purpose of nutrition. The
-growth of the adult man from the tiny cell or germ that marks his
-simple beginning is at the expense of the food material he absorbs and
-assimilates. The rehabilitation of the cells, or the composite tissues
-of the fully developed organism, is accomplished through utilization
-of the daily food, whereby cell substance is renewed and all losses
-made good. The energy which manifests itself in the form of heat and
-mechanical or mental work, _i. e._, the energy by which the vital
-machinery is maintained in ceaseless activity, comes from the breaking
-down of the food materials by means of which, as the saying goes, the
-body is nourished. The body thus becomes the centre of different lines
-of activity, the food serving as the material out of which new cells
-and tissues are constructed, old cells revivified, and energy for
-running the bodily machinery derived. Development, growth, and vital
-activity all depend upon the availability of food in proper amounts and
-proper quality.
-
-The food of man is composed mainly of organic materials, for while,
-as Dr. Curtis[1] has expressed it, “the plant can make organic matter
-out of inorganic elements, just this the animal cannot do at all.
-The thing of legs and locomotion, of spine and speech, can build
-his organic walls only out of organic bricks ruthlessly ripped from
-existing walls of other animals or plants.” It is true that man has
-need of certain inorganic salts in his daily diet, but they are in
-the nature of aids to nutrition (aside from such as are necessary for
-the formation of bone and teeth), contributing in some measure toward
-regulation and control of nutritive processes rather than as a source
-of energy to the body. Inorganic substances, however, are an integral
-part of the essential tissues and organs of the body, being combined
-with the organic constituents of the living cells. Indeed, electrolytes
-are perhaps the substances that put life into the proteids of the
-protoplasm, and it is truly important for the integrity and functional
-power of living cells that the proportion of inorganic constituents
-therein be kept in a constant condition of quality and quantity.
-Still, the food of mankind is essentially organic in nature, and while
-it may be exceedingly varied in character, ranging from the simple
-vegetable dietary of the natives of India and the Far East to the
-voluminous admixture of varied forms of animal and vegetable foodstuffs
-so acceptable to the _bon vivant_ of our western civilization, the
-principles contained therein are few in number.
-
- [1] Edward Curtis, M.D. Nature and Health: Henry Holt & Co., New
- York. 1906. p. 39.
-
-The organic foodstuffs are of three distinct types and are classified
-under three heads, viz.: Proteids or Albuminous foodstuffs,
-Carbohydrates, and Fats. All animal and vegetable foods, whatever
-their nature and whatever their origin, are composed simply of
-representatives of one or more of these three classes of food
-principles.
-
-Proteid substances are characterized by containing about 16 per cent
-of nitrogen. In addition, they contain on an average 52 per cent of
-carbon, 7 per cent of hydrogen, 23 per cent of oxygen, and 0.5–2.0 per
-cent of sulphur. A certain class of proteids, known as nucleoproteids
-because of their occurrence in the nuclei of cells, contain likewise
-a small amount of phosphorus in organic combination. Proteid or
-albuminous substances constitute the chemical basis of all living
-cells, whether animal or vegetable. This means, expressed in different
-language, that the organic substance of all organs and tissues, whether
-of animals or plants, is made up principally of proteid matter. Proteid
-substances occupy, therefore, a peculiar position in the nutrition of
-man and of animals in general. They constitute the class of essential
-foodstuffs without which life is impossible. For tissue-building and
-for the renewal of tissues and organs, or their component cells,
-proteid or albuminous foodstuffs are an absolute requirement. The
-vital part of all tissue is proteid, and only proteid food can serve
-for its growth or renewal. Hence, no matter how generous the supply
-of carbohydrates and fats, without some admixture of proteid food the
-body will weaken and undergo “nitrogen starvation.” It is to be noted,
-however, that while the element nitrogen (16 per cent) gives character
-to the proteid or albuminous foodstuffs, so that they are frequently
-spoken of or classified as the “nitrogenous foodstuffs,” it is not the
-nitrogen _per se_ that is so essential for the nutrition of the body.
-Man lives in an atmosphere of oxygen and nitrogen. He can and does
-absorb and utilize the free oxygen of the air he breathes; indeed,
-it is absolutely essential for his existence, but the free nitrogen
-likewise drawn into the lungs at each inspiration is of no avail for
-the needs of the body. Further, there are many compounds of nitrogen,
-some of them closely allied to the proteid foodstuffs in chemical
-composition, which are just as useless as free nitrogen in meeting the
-wants of the body for nitrogenous foods.
-
-Dame Nature is very discriminating; she demands a definite form of
-nitrogenous compound, some peculiar or specific grouping of the
-nitrogen element with other elements in the food that can make good
-the waste of proteid tissue. In the inactive and fibrous tissues of
-animals, such as are found in bones, tendons, and ligaments, there is
-present a substance known as collagen, which, when boiled with water,
-as in the making of soups, is transformed into gelatin. This body,
-because of its close chemical relationship to proteid or albuminous
-substances, is known as an albuminoid. Yet, though it has essentially
-the same chemical composition as ordinary albuminous substances and
-shows many of the reactions characteristic of the latter, it cannot
-take the place of true proteid in building up or repairing the tissues
-of the body. To quote again from Dr. Curtis: “Tissue is nitrogenous, so
-that, of course, only nitrogenous food can serve for its making; but
-of the two kinds of nitrogenous principles, proteids and albuminoids,
-behold, proteids only are of avail! Why this is so is unknown, since
-albuminoid is equally nitrogenous with proteid; but so it is--proteid
-and proteid alone can fulfil the high function of furnishing the
-material basis of life. Gelatin cannot even go to make the very kind
-of tissue of which itself is a derivative. Alongside of its brother
-proteid, gelatin stands as a prince of the blood whose escutcheon bears
-the ‘bend sinister.’ Such a one, though of royal lineage, may never
-aspire to the throne.” It is thus quite clear that the true proteid
-foods are tissue builders in the broadest sense of the term, and it is
-equally evident that they are absolutely essential for life, since no
-other kind or form of foodstuff can take their place in supplying the
-needs of the body. Every living cell, whether of heart, muscle, brain,
-or nerve, requires its due allowance of proteid material to maintain
-its physiological rhythm. No other foodstuff stands in such intimate
-relationship to the vital processes, but so far as we know at present
-any form of true proteid, whether animal or vegetable, will serve the
-purpose.
-
-Carbohydrates include two closely related classes of compounds, viz.,
-sugars and starches. They are entirely free from nitrogen, containing
-only carbon (44.4 per cent), hydrogen (6.2 per cent), and oxygen
-(49.4 per cent), and hence are classified as non-nitrogenous foods.
-Obviously, they cannot serve as tissue builders, but by oxidation they
-yield energy for heat and work. They constitute an easily oxidizable
-form of fuel, and when supplied in undue amounts they may undergo
-transformation within the body into fat, which is temporarily
-deposited in tissues and organs for future needs.
-
-Fats, like carbohydrates, are free from nitrogen, but differ from
-them in containing a much larger percentage of carbon, and hence have
-greater fuel value per pound. Fats contain on an average 76.5 per cent
-of carbon, 11.9 per cent of hydrogen, and 11.5 per cent of oxygen. With
-their larger content of carbon and smaller proportion of oxygen, fats
-are less easily oxidizable than sugars, requiring a larger intake of
-oxygen for their combustion, but when oxidized they yield more heat per
-pound than carbohydrates.
-
-Fats and carbohydrates are thus seen to be the natural fuel foodstuffs
-of the body. They cannot serve for the upbuilding or renewal of tissue,
-but by oxidation they constitute an economical fuel for maintaining
-body temperature and for power to run the bodily machinery. It should
-be remembered, however, that anything capable of being burned in
-the body may serve as fuel material; hence proteid food, though of
-specific value as a tissue builder, may likewise by its oxidation yield
-energy for heat and work, but its combustion, owing to the content of
-nitrogen, is never complete. Further, its use as fuel is uneconomical
-and undesirable for reasons to be discussed later, but it is well to
-know that its oxidation, though incomplete, is accompanied by the
-liberation of energy, as in the oxidation of non-nitrogenous foods. A
-portion of the carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen of the proteid molecule
-will burn within the body to gaseous products, as do sugars and fats,
-but there remains a nucleus of nitrogen, with some carbon, hydrogen,
-and oxygen, which resists combustion and must be gotten rid of by the
-combined labors of liver and kidneys. Fats and carbohydrates, on the
-other hand, undergo complete combustion to simple gaseous products,
-carbon dioxide and water, which are easily removed by the lungs, skin,
-etc.
-
-These three classes of foodstuffs exist in a great variety of
-combinations or admixtures in nature. In many cases, noticeably in
-milk, all three occur together in fairly large quantities. In animal
-foods, such as meats, fish, etc., proteid and fat alone are found,
-while in perfectly lean meat proteid only is present, excepting a
-small amount of fat. Again, the white of the egg contains proteid
-alone. Hence, a meat and egg diet would be essentially a proteid diet.
-In vegetable foods, as in the cereals, there is found an admixture
-of proteid and starch, the latter predominating in many cases, as in
-wheat flour. The following table,[2] showing the chemical composition
-of various food materials, may be of service in throwing light on the
-relative distribution of the three classes of foodstuffs in natural
-products.
-
- [2] The data composing this table are taken from Bulletin 28 (Revised
- Edition), United States Department of Agriculture, Office of
- Experiment Stations.
-
-
-THE CHEMICAL COMPOSITION OF SOME COMMON FOOD MATERIALS
-
- +----------------------+--------+--------+--------+--------+--------+----------+
- | Food Materials. |Proteid.| Carbo- | Fat. | Water. |Mineral |Fuel Value|
- | | |hydrate.| | | Matter.|per pound.|
- +----------------------+--------+--------+--------+--------+--------+----------+
- | |per cent|per cent|per cent|per cent|per cent| calories |
- |Fresh beef, loin, | | | | | | |
- | lean, edible portion | 24.2 | 0 | 3.7 | 70.8 | 1.3 | 615 |
- |Fresh beef, round, | | | | | | |
- | lean, edible portion | 22.3 | 0 | 2.8 | 73.6 | 1.3 | 540 |
- |Fresh Porterhouse | | | | | | |
- | steak, edible portion| 21.9 | 0 | 20.4 | 60.0 | 1.0 | 1270 |
- |Fresh beef liver | 21.0 | 1.7 | 4.5 | 71.2 | 1.6 | 605 |
- |Fresh beef tongue | 19.0 | 0 | 9.2 | 70.8 | 1.0 | 740 |
- |Fresh sweetbreads | 16.8 | 0 | 12.1 | 70.9 | 1.6 | 825 |
- |Fresh beef kidney | 16.9 | 0.4 | 4.8 | 76.7 | 1.2 | 520 |
- |Cooked beef, roasted | 22.3 | 0 | 28.6 | 48.2 | 1.3 | 1620 |
- |Cooked round steak | 27.6 | 0 | 7.7 | 63.0 | 1.8 | 840 |
- |Broiled tenderloin | | | | | | |
- | steak | 23.5 | 0 | 20.4 | 54.8 | 1.2 | 1300 |
- |Dried beef, canned | 39.2 | 0 | 5.4 | 44.8 | 11.2 | 960 |
- |Stewed kidneys, | | | | | | |
- | canned | 18.4 | 2.1 | 5.1 | 71.9 | 2.5 | 600 |
- |Fresh corned beef, | | | | | | |
- | edible portion | 15.3 | 0 | 26.2 | 53.6 | 4.9 | 1395 |
- |Fresh breast of veal, | | | | | | |
- | lean | 21.2 | 0 | 8.0 | 70.3 | 1.0 | 730 |
- |Fresh leg of lamb, | | | | | | |
- | edible portion | 19.2 | 0 | 16.5 | 63.9 | 1.1 | 1055 |
- |Lamb chops, broiled | 21.7 | 0 | 29.9 | 47.6 | 1.3 | 1665 |
- |Roast leg of lamb, | | | | | | |
- | edible portion | 19.4 | 0 | 12.7 | 67.1 | 0.8 | 900 |
- |Roast leg of mutton, | | | | | | |
- | edible portion | 25.9 | 0 | 22.6 | 50.9 | 1.2 | 1420 |
- |Fresh lean ham | 25.0 | 0 | 14.4 | 60.0 | 1.3 | 1075 |
- |Smoked ham, fat, | | | | | | |
- | edible portion | 14.8 | 0 | 52.3 | 27.9 | 3.7 | 2485 |
- |Chicken, broilers, | | | | | | |
- | edible portion | 21.5 | 0 | 2.5 | 74.8 | 1.1 | 505 |
- |Turkey, edible portion| 21.1 | 0 | 22.9 | 55.5 | 1.0 | 1360 |
- |Roast turkey, edible | | | | | | |
- | portion | 27.8 | 0 | 18.4 | 52.0 | 1.2 | 1295 |
- |Fricasseed chicken, | | | | | | |
- | edible portion | 17.6 | 2.4 | 11.5 | 67.5 | 1.0 | 855 |
- |Fresh cod, dressed | 11.1 | 0 | 0.2 | 58.5 | 0.8 | 215 |
- |Fresh mackerel, edible| | | | | | |
- | portion | 18.7 | 0 | 7.1 | 73.4 | 1.2 | 645 |
- |Fresh halibut, steaks | 18.6 | 0 | 5.2 | 75.4 | 1.0 | 565 |
- |Fresh shad, edible | | | | | | |
- | portion | 18.8 | 0 | 9.5 | 70.6 | 1.3 | 750 |
- |Fresh smelt, edible | | | | | | |
- | portion | 17.6 | 0 | 1.8 | 79.2 | 1.7 | 405 |
- |Cooked bluefish, | | | | | | |
- | edible portion | 26.1 | 0 | 4.5 | 68.2 | 1.2 | 670 |
- |Broiled Spanish | | | | | | |
- | mackerel, edible | | | | | | |
- | portion | 23.2 | 0 | 6.5 | 68.9 | 1.4 | 715 |
- |Salt codfish, edible | | | | | | |
- | portion | 25.4 | 0 | 0.3 | 53.5 | 24.7 | 410 |
- |Salt mackerel, edible | | | | | | |
- | portion | 22.0 | 0 | 22.6 | 42.2 | 13.2 | 1345 |
- |Canned salmon, edible | | | | | | |
- | portion | 21.8 | 0 | 12.1 | 63.5 | 2.6 | 915 |
- |Canned sardines, | | | | | | |
- | edible portion | 23.0 | 0 | 19.7 | 52.3 | 5.6 | 162 |
- |Fresh round clams | 6.5 | 4.2 | 0.4 | 86.2 | 2.7 | 215 |
- |Fresh oysters, solid | 6.0 | 3.3 | 1.3 | 88.3 | 1.1 | 230 |
- |Fresh hen’s eggs | 13.4 | 0 | 10.5 | 73.7 | 1.0 | 720 |
- |Boiled hen’s eggs | 13.2 | 0 | 12.0 | 73.2 | 0.8 | 765 |
- |Butter | 1.0 | 0 | 85.0 | 11.0 | 3.0 | 3605 |
- |Full cream cheese | 25.9 | 2.4 | 33.7 | 34.2 | 3.8 | 1950 |
- |Whole cow’s milk | 3.3 | 5.0 | 4.0 | 87.0 | 0.7 | 325 |
- |Corn meal, unbolted | 8.4 | 74.0 | 4.7 | 11.6 | 1.3 | 1730 |
- |Oatmeal | 16.1 | 67.5 | 7.2 | 7.3 | 1.9 | 1860 |
- |Rice | 8.0 | 79.0 | 0.3 | 12.3 | 0.4 | 1630 |
- |Wheat flour, entire | | | | | | |
- | wheat | 13.8 | 71.9 | 1.9 | 11.4 | 1.0 | 1675 |
- |Boiled rice | 2.8 | 24.4 | 0.1 | 72.5 | 0.2 | 525 |
- |Shredded wheat | 10.5 | 77.9 | 1.4 | 8.1 | 2.1 | 1700 |
- |Macaroni | 13.4 | 74.1 | 0.9 | 10.3 | 1.3 | 1665 |
- |Brown bread | 5.4 | 47.1 | 1.8 | 43.6 | 2.1 | 1050 |
- |Wheat bread or rolls | 8.9 | 56.7 | 4.1 | 29.2 | 1.1 | 1395 |
- |Whole wheat bread | 9.4 | 49.7 | 0.9 | 38.4 | 1.3 | 1140 |
- |Soda crackers | 9.8 | 73.1 | 9.1 | 5.9 | 2.1 | 1925 |
- |Oyster crackers | 11.3 | 70.5 | 10.5 | 4.8 | 2.9 | 1965 |
- |Ginger bread | 5.8 | 63.5 | 9.0 | 18.8 | 2.9 | 1670 |
- |Sponge cake | 6.3 | 65.9 | 10.7 | 15.3 | 1.8 | 1795 |
- |Lady fingers | 8.8 | 70.6 | 5.0 | 15.0 | 0.6 | 1685 |
- |Apple pie | 3.1 | 42.8 | 9.8 | 42.5 | 1.8 | 1270 |
- |Custard pie | 4.2 | 26.1 | 6.3 | 62.4 | 1.0 | 830 |
- |Squash pie | 4.4 | 21.7 | 8.4 | 64.2 | 1.3 | 840 |
- |Indian meal pudding | 5.5 | 27.5 | 4.8 | 60.7 | 1.5 | 815 |
- |Tapioca pudding | 3.3 | 28.2 | 3.2 | 64.5 | 0.8 | 720 |
- |Fresh asparagus | 1.8 | 3.3 | 0.2 | 94.0 | 0.7 | 105 |
- |Fresh lima beans | 7.1 | 22.0 | 0.7 | 68.5 | 1.7 | 570 |
- |Dried lima beans | 18.1 | 65.9 | 1.5 | 10.4 | 4.1 | 1625 |
- |Dried beans | 22.5 | 59.6 | 1.8 | 12.6 | 3.5 | 1605 |
- |Cooked beets | 2.3 | 7.4 | 0.1 | 88.6 | 1.6 | 185 |
- |Fresh cabbage, edible | | | | | | |
- | portion | 1.6 | 5.6 | 0.3 | 91.5 | 1.0 | 145 |
- |Green corn, edible | | | | | | |
- | portion | 3.1 | 19.7 | 1.1 | 75.4 | 0.7 | 470 |
- |Dried peas | 24.6 | 62.0 | 1.0 | 9.5 | 2.9 | 1655 |
- |Green peas | 7.7 | 16.9 | 0.5 | 74.6 | 1.0 | 465 |
- |Raw potatoes, edible | | | | | | |
- | portion | 2.2 | 18.4 | 0.1 | 78.3 | 1.0 | 385 |
- |Boiled potatoes | 2.5 | 20.9 | 0.1 | 75.5 | 1.0 | 440 |
- |Fresh tomatoes | 0.9 | 3.9 | 0.4 | 94.3 | 0.5 | 105 |
- |Baked beans, canned | 6.9 | 19.6 | 2.5 | 68.9 | 2.1 | 600 |
- |Apples, edible portion| | | | | | |
- | steak | 0.4 | 14.2 | 0.5 | 84.6 | 3.0 | 290 |
- |Bananas, yellow, | | | | | | |
- | edible portion | 1.3 | 22.0 | 0.6 | 75.3 | 0.8 | 460 |
- |Fresh cranberries | 0.4 | 9.9 | 0.6 | 88.9 | 0.2 | 215 |
- |Oranges, edible | | | | | | |
- | portion | 0.8 | 11.6 | 0.2 | 86.9 | 0.5 | 240 |
- |Peaches, edible | | | | | | |
- | portion | 0.7 | 9.4 | 0.1 | 89.4 | 0.4 | 190 |
- |Fresh strawberries | 1.0 | 7.4 | 0.6 | 90.4 | 0.6 | 180 |
- |Dried prunes, edible | | | | | | |
- | portion | 2.1 | 73.3 | 0.0 | 22.3 | 2.3 | 1400 |
- |Almonds, edible | | | | | | |
- | portion | 21.0 | 17.3 | 54.9 | 4.8 | 2.0 | 3030 |
- |Peanuts, edible | | | | | | |
- | portion | 25.8 | 24.4 | 38.6 | 9.2 | 2.0 | 2560 |
- |Pine nuts, edible | | | | | | |
- | portion | 33.9 | 6.9 | 49.4 | 6.4 | 3.4 | 2845 |
- |Brazil nuts, edible | | | | | | |
- | portion | 17.0 | 7.0 | 66.8 | 5.3 | 3.9 | 3265 |
- |Soft-shell walnuts, | | | | | | |
- | edible portion | 16.6 | 16.1 | 63.4 | 2.5 | 1.4 | 3285 |
- +----------------------+--------+--------+--------+--------+--------+----------+
-
-In commenting on these figures, reference to which will be made from
-time to time in other connections, it may be wise to emphasize the
-large amount of water almost invariably present in natural foodstuffs.
-Further, it is to be noted that, in animal products especially, the
-variations in proteid-content are in large measure coincident with
-variations in the amount of water present. In other words, foods
-of animal origin if freed entirely of water would, as a rule, show
-essentially the same percentage of proteid matter. Fat is naturally
-variable, according to the condition of the animal at the time it was
-slaughtered. Among the vegetable products, carbohydrate, mainly in the
-form of starch, becomes exceedingly conspicuous, though proteid is by
-no means lacking. Indeed, in some cereals, as in oatmeal, in dried peas
-and beans, the content of proteid will average as high as in fresh
-beef, while in addition 50–70 per cent of the entire substance is made
-up of carbohydrate. Again, in the edible nuts, the content of proteid
-runs high, in some cases higher than in fresh beef, while at the same
-time carbohydrate and fat are noticeably large. Further, it is to be
-noted that in nuts there is here and there some striking individuality,
-as in pine nuts and Brazil nuts, both of which show a noticeable lack
-of carbohydrate as contrasted with peanuts, almonds, and walnuts; a
-fact of some importance in cases where a vegetable food rich in proteid
-is desired, but with freedom from starch.
-
-Another generality, to be thoroughly understood, is that while the
-figures given for proteid express quite clearly and with reasonable
-degree of accuracy the relative amounts of proteid matter present in
-the foodstuffs in question, there may be important differences in
-availability of which the percentage figures give no suggestion. In
-other words, the analytical data deal solely with the total content
-of proteid, while there is needed in addition information as to the
-relative digestibility, or availability by the body, of the different
-kinds of proteid food. For example, roast mutton, cream cheese, and
-dried peas contain approximately the same amount of proteid. Are we
-then to infer that these three foods have the same nutritive value so
-far as proteid is concerned? Surely not, since no account is taken of
-the relative digestibility of the three foods. It is one of the axioms
-of physiology that the true nutritive value of any proteid food is
-dependent not alone upon the amount of proteid contained therein, but
-upon the quantity of proteid that can be digested and absorbed; or,
-in other words, made available for the needs of the body. The same
-rule holds good for both fats and carbohydrates, but as proteid is the
-more important foodstuff, and is as a rule taken more sparingly, the
-question of availability has greater import with the proteid foods.
-
-The availability or digestibility of foods can be determined only by
-physiological experiment. By making a comparison for a definite period
-of time of the amount of a given food ingredient consumed and the
-amount that passes unchanged through the intestine, an estimate of its
-digestibility can be made. The result, to be sure, is not wholly free
-from error, since we cannot always distinguish between the undigested
-food and so-called metabolic products coming from the digestive juices
-and from the walls of the intestine; but the errors are not large, and
-results so obtained are full of meaning. In a general way it may be
-stated that with animal foods, such as meats, eggs, and milk, about
-97 per cent of the contained proteid is digested and thereby rendered
-available for the body. With ordinary vegetable foods, on the other
-hand, as they are usually prepared for consumption, only about 85 per
-cent of the proteid is made available. This is partially due to the
-presence in the vegetable tissue of cellulose, which in some measure
-prevents that thorough attack of the proteid by the digestive juices
-which occurs with animal foods. With a mixed diet, _i. e._, with
-a variable admixture of animal and vegetable foods, it is usually
-considered that about 92 per cent of the proteid contained therein will
-undergo digestion.
-
-Regarding differences in the availability of fats, it may be stated
-that, as a rule, the fatty matter contained in vegetable foods is less
-readily, or less thoroughly, digested than that present in foods of
-animal origin. In the latter, about 95 per cent of the fat is digested
-and absorbed. This figure, however, is generally taken as representing
-approximately the digestibility or availability of the fat contained
-in man’s daily dietary, since by far the larger proportion of the fat
-consumed is of animal origin. Carbohydrates, on the other hand, are
-much more easily utilized by the body. Naturally, sugars, owing to
-their great solubility and ready diffusibility, offer little difficulty
-in the way of easy digestion; but starches likewise, though not so
-readily assimilable, are digested, as a rule, to the extent of 98 per
-cent or more of the amount consumed. It is thus evident that in any
-estimate of the food value of a given diet, chemical composition is to
-be checked by the digestibility or availability of the food ingredients.
-
-As has been stated several times, the proteid foodstuffs are the more
-important, since proteid matter is essential to animal life. Man
-must have a certain amount of proteid food to maintain the body in a
-condition of strength and vigor. The other essential is that the daily
-food furnish sufficient energy to meet the needs of the body for heat
-and power. This means that in addition to proteid, which primarily
-serves a particular purpose, there must be enough non-nitrogenous food
-(either carbohydrate or fat or both) to provide the requisite fuel
-for oxidation or combustion to meet the demands of the body for heat
-and for work; both of which are subject to great variation owing to
-differences in the temperature of the surrounding air, and especially
-because of variations in the degree of bodily activity. The energy
-which a given foodstuff will yield can be ascertained by laboratory
-experiment, in which a definite weight of the substance is burned or
-oxidized in a calorimetric bomb under conditions where the exact amount
-of heat liberated can be accurately measured. The fuel, or energy,
-value so obtained is expressed in calories or heat units. A calorie may
-be defined as the amount of heat required to raise 1 gram of water 1°
-C., or, to be more exact, the amount of heat required to raise 1 gram
-of water from 15° to 16° C. This unit is usually spoken of as the small
-calorie, to distinguish it from the large calorie, which represents
-the amount of heat required to raise 1 kilogram of water 1° C. Hence,
-the large calorie is equal to one thousand small calories. When burned
-in a calorimeter, 1 gram of carbohydrate yields on an average 4100
-gram-degree units of heat, or small calories; 1 gram of fat yields 9300
-small calories. Both of these non-nitrogenous foods burn or oxidize to
-the same products--viz., carbon dioxide and water--when utilized in
-the body as when burned in the calorimeter; hence, the figures given
-represent the physiological heat of combustion, per gram, of the two
-classes of foodstuffs. Obviously, the fuel values of different foods
-belonging to the same group or class will show slight variation, but
-the above figures represent average values.
-
-Unlike fats and carbohydrates, proteids are not burned completely
-in the body; hence, the physiological fuel value of a proteid is
-less than the value obtained by oxidation in a bomb calorimeter. In
-the body, proteids yield certain decomposition products which are
-removed through the excreta, and which represent a certain quantity of
-potential energy thus lost to the economy. The average fuel value of
-proteids burned outside of the body is placed at 5711 calories per
-gram,[3] or 5.7 large calories. Deducting the heat value of the proteid
-decomposition products contained in the excreta, the physiological fuel
-value of proteids is reduced on an average to about 4.1 large calories
-per gram.[4] Rubner considers that the physiological fuel value of
-vegetable proteids is somewhat less than that of animal proteids;
-conglutin, for example, yielding 3.96 calories, as contrasted with 4.3
-calories furnished by egg-albumin, or 4.40 calories from casein. On a
-mixed diet, where 60 per cent of the ingested proteid food is of animal
-origin and 40 per cent vegetable, the fuel value available to the body
-would be about 4.1 calories per gram of proteid, on the assumption
-that the physiological heat value of vegetable proteids averages 3.96
-calories per gram and that of animal proteids 4.23 calories per gram
-(Rubner).
-
- [3] Stohmann: Ueber den Wärmewerth der Bestandtheile der
- Nahrungsmittel. Zeitschr. f. Biol., Band 31, p. 373.
-
- [4] See Rubner: Calorimetrische Untersuchungen. Zeitschr. f. Biol.,
- Band 21, p. 250. Also, Rubner: Die Quelle der thierischen Wärme.
- Ibid., Band 30, p. 73.
-
-At present, we accept for all purposes of computation the following
-figures as representing the physiological or available (to the body)
-fuel value of the three classes of organic foodstuffs:
-
- 1 gram of proteid 4.1 Large Calories
- 1 gram of fat 9.3 " "
- 1 gram of carbohydrate 4.1 " "
-
-From these data, it is evident at a glance that 1 gram of fat is
-isodynamic with 2.27 grams of either carbohydrate or proteid; and
-since carbohydrate and fat are of use to the body mainly because
-of their energy value, it is obvious that 50 grams of fat taken as
-food will be of as much service to the body as 113 grams of starch.
-In view of the relatively high fuel value of fats, it follows that
-the physiological heat of combustion of any given food material will
-correspond largely with the content of fat therein. This is quite
-apparent from the data given in the table showing chemical composition
-of food materials, where the fuel value per pound is seen to run more
-or less closely parallel with the percentage of fat. Experience, as
-well as direct physiological experiment, teaches us, however, that fat
-and carbohydrate cannot be interchanged indefinitely, because of the
-difficulty in utilization of fat when the amount is increased beyond
-a certain point. Personal experience provides ample evidence of the
-difference in availability between the two classes of foodstuffs.
-Carbohydrates are easily utilizable, fats with more difficulty. Palate,
-as well as stomach, rebels at large quantities of fat; a statement that
-certainly holds good for most civilized people, though exceptions may
-be found, as in the Esquimeaux and certain savage races.
-
-In the nourishment of the body, the various factors that aid in the
-utilization of food are of great moment and must not be overlooked. It
-is not enough that the body be supplied with the proper proportion of
-nutrients, with sufficient proteid to meet the demand for nitrogen, and
-with carbohydrate and fat adequate to yield the needed energy; but all
-those physiological processes which have to do with the preparation
-of the foodstuffs for absorption into the circulating blood and lymph
-must be in effective working order. There is an intricacy of detail
-here which calls for careful oversight, and it is one of the functions
-of the nervous system to control and regulate both the mechanical and
-the chemical processes that are concerned in this seemingly automatic
-progression of foodstuffs from their entry into the mouth cavity to
-their final discharge from the alimentary tract, after removal of the
-last vestige of true nutritive material.
-
-Mastication; deglutition; secretion of the various digestive juices,
-saliva, gastric juice, pancreatic juice, bile, intestinal juice, etc.;
-peristalsis, or the rhythmical movements of the muscular walls of the
-gastro-intestinal tract; the solvent action of the several digestive
-fluids on the different types of foodstuffs; the absorption of the
-products formed as a preliminary step in their transportation to the
-tissues and organs of the body, where they are to serve their ultimate
-purpose in nutrition; the interaction of these several processes one on
-the other; and, finally, the influence of the various nerve fibres and
-nerve centres concerned in the control of these varied activities,--all
-must work together in harmony and precision if the full measure of
-available nitrogen and energy-yielding material is to be extracted
-and absorbed from the ingested food, without undue expenditure of
-physiological labor. Further, the various processes of cell and tissue
-metabolism, by which the absorbed food material is built up into living
-protoplasm, and the chemical processes of oxidation, hydrolysis,
-reduction, etc., by which the intra and extra cellular material is
-broken down progressively into varied katabolic or excretory products,
-with liberation of energy; all these must move forward harmoniously
-and with due regard to the preservation of an even balance between
-intake and outgo, if the nutrition of the body is to be maintained at
-a proper level, and with that degree of physiological economy which is
-coincident with good health and high efficiency.
-
-We may well pause here and consider briefly some of these processes
-which play so prominent a part in the proper utilization of the three
-classes of organic foodstuffs. The first digestive fluid which the
-ingested food comes in contact with is the saliva. Sensory nerve
-fibres, chiefly of the glossopharyngeal and lingual nerves which supply
-the mouth and tongue, are stimulated by the sapid substances of the
-food, and likewise by mere contact of the food particles with the
-mucous membrane lining the mouth cavity as the food is masticated and
-rolled about prior to deglutition. Impulses communicated in this way
-to the above sensory nerves are transmitted to certain nerve centres
-in the medulla oblongata, whence impulses are reflected back through
-secretory nerves going to the individual salivary glands, thereby
-calling forth a secretion. The production of saliva is thus a simple
-reflex act, in which the food consumed serves as a true stimulant or
-excitant. Pawlow,[5] indeed, claims a certain degree of adaptability
-of the secretion to the character of the food taken into the mouth.
-Thus, he finds that dry, solid food excites a large flow of saliva,
-such as would be needed to masticate it properly and bring it into a
-suitable condition for swallowing. On the other hand, foods containing
-an abundance of water cause only a scanty flow of saliva. The situation
-of this secretory centre in the medulla, and the many branchings of
-nerve cells in this locality would naturally suggest the possibility
-of salivary secretion being incited by stimuli from a variety of
-sources. This is indeed the case, and it is worthy of note that a flow
-of saliva may result from stimulation of the sensory fibres of the
-vagus nerves as well as of the splanchnic and sciatic, thus indicating
-how a given secreting gland may be called into activity by impulses
-or stimuli which come to the centre through very indirect and devious
-pathways. Further, the secretory centre may be stimulated, and likewise
-inhibited, by impulses which have their origin in higher nerve centres
-in the brain. These facts are of great importance in throwing light
-upon the ways in which a secretion like saliva is called forth and its
-digestive action thus made possible. The thought and the odor of savory
-food cause the mouth to water, the flow of saliva so incited being
-the result of psychical stimulation. Similarly, fear, embarrassment,
-and anxiety frequently cause a dry mouth and parched throat through
-inhibition of the secretory centre by impulses which have their origin
-in higher centres in the brain.
-
- [5] Pawlow: The Work of the Digestive Glands. Translated by Thompson.
- London, 1902.
-
-The application of these facts to our subject is perfectly obvious,
-since they suggest at once how the production or secretion of an
-important digestive fluid--upon which the utilization of a given class
-of foodstuffs may be quite dependent--is controlled and modified
-through the nervous system by a variety of circumstances. We might
-reason that the appearance, odor, and palatability of food are factors
-of prime importance in its utilization by the body; that the æsthetics
-of eating are not to be ignored, since they have an important influence
-upon the flow of the digestive secretions. A peaceful mind, pleasurable
-anticipation, freedom from care and anxiety, cheerful companionship,
-all form desirable table accessories which play the part of true
-psychical stimuli in accelerating the flow of the digestive juices
-and thus pave the way for easy and thorough digestion. Further, it is
-easy to see how thorough mastication of food may prolong mechanical
-stimulation of the salivary glands and thus increase the flow of the
-secretion, while the longer stay of sapid substances in the mouth
-cavity increases the duration of the chemical stimulation of the
-sensory fibres of the lingual and glossopharyngeal nerves. In this
-connection, we may cite the view recently advanced by Pawlow that the
-individual salivary glands respond normally to different stimuli. Thus,
-there are three pairs of salivary glands concerned in the production
-of saliva,--the submaxillary, parotid, and sublingual,--all of which
-pour their secretions through separate ducts into the mouth cavity. By
-experiment, Pawlow has found that in the dog the submaxillary gland
-yields a copious flow of saliva when stimulated by acids, the chewing
-of meats, the sight of food, etc., while the parotid gland fails to
-respond. On the other hand, the latter gland responds with an abundant
-secretion when dry food, such as dry powdered meat, dried bread, etc.,
-is placed in the mouth. With this gland, the inference is that dryness
-is the active stimulus.
-
-As a digestive secretion, saliva serves several important purposes. By
-moistening the food it renders mastication and deglutition possible;
-its natural alkalinity tends to neutralize somewhat such acidity as may
-be present in the food; it dissolves various solid substances, thus
-making a solution capable of stimulating the taste nerves; lastly,
-and most important, it has a marked digestive and solvent action on
-starchy foods. A large proportion of the non-nitrogenous food consumed
-by man--in most countries--is composed of some form of starch, and this
-the body cannot use until it has undergone conversion into soluble
-forms, such as dextrins and sugar. This it is the function of saliva to
-accomplish, and it owes its activity in this direction to the presence
-of a soluble ferment or enzyme known as ptyalin.
-
-Enzymes, which play so important a part in all digestive processes,
-are a peculiar class of substances produced by the living cells
-which constitute the various secreting glands. They are of unknown
-composition, and are peculiar in that the chemical changes they induce
-are the result of what is termed catalysis, _i. e._, contact. That
-is, the enzyme or catalyzer does not enter into the reaction, it is
-not destroyed or used up, but by its mere presence sets in motion or
-accelerates a reaction between two other substances. The ordinary
-illustration from the inorganic world is spongy platinum, which, if
-placed in contact with a mixture of oxygen and hydrogen, causes the two
-gases to unite with formation of water, although the two gases alone at
-ordinary temperature will not so combine. In this reaction the platinum
-is not altered, neither does it apparently enter into the reaction; it
-is a simple catalyzer. The chemical nature of the change which most
-digestive enzymes produce is usually defined as hydrolytic, in which
-the substance undergoing transformation is made to combine with water,
-thus becoming hydrolyzed, this reaction generally being accompanied
-by a cleavage or splitting of the molecule into simpler substances.
-It is to be noted further that enzymes are specific in their action.
-An enzyme that acts upon starch, for example, cannot act on proteids
-or fats. Some digestive fluids have the power of producing changes
-in different classes of foodstuffs, but such diversity of action is
-always assumed to be due to the presence in the same fluid of different
-enzymes. Emil Fischer[6] has advanced the theory that the specificity
-of an enzyme is related to the geometrical structure of the substance
-undergoing change; _i. e._, that each enzyme is capable of acting upon
-or attaching itself only to such molecules as have a definite structure
-with which the enzyme is in harmony. Or, the enzyme may be considered
-as a key which will fit only into the lock (structure) of the molecule
-it acts upon.
-
- [6] Emil Fischer: Bedeutung der Stereochemie für die Physiologie.
- Zeitschr. für physiologische Chemie, Band 26, p. 60.
-
-One characteristic feature of enzymes is the incompleteness of their
-action. Thus, the enzyme of saliva transforms starch by a series of
-progressive changes into soluble starch, two or more dextrins, and
-the sugar maltose as the chief end-product. A mixture of starch paste
-and saliva under ordinary conditions, however, never results in the
-formation of a hundred per cent of maltose, but there always remains
-a variable amount of dextrin which appears to resist further change.
-This is apparently due to what is known as the reversible action of
-enzymes. Thus, the chemical reactions involved here are reversible
-actions, _i. e._, they take place in opposite directions. The catalyzer
-not only accelerates or incites a reaction in the direction of breaking
-down the substance acted upon, but it also aids in the recomposition
-of the products so formed into the original or kindred substance. With
-reversible reactions of this sort the opposite changes sooner or later
-strike an equilibrium, which remains constant until some alteration in
-the conditions brings about an inequality and the reactions proceed
-until a new equilibrium is established. In the body, however, where
-the circulating blood and lymph provide facilities for the speedy
-removal by absorption of the soluble products formed, the reaction may
-proceed until the original substance undergoing change is completely
-transformed into the characteristic end-product. This reversible
-action of enzymes is an important feature, and helps explain certain
-nutritional changes to be referred to later. Whether all enzymes behave
-in this way is not as yet determined.
-
-Another peculiarity of digestive enzymes is their extreme sensitiveness
-to changes in their environment. Powerful in their ability to transform
-relatively large quantities of a given foodstuff into simple products
-better adapted for absorption and utilization by the body, they are,
-however, quickly checked in their action, and even destroyed, when
-the conditions surrounding them are slightly interfered with. They
-require for their best action a temperature closely akin to that of the
-healthy body, and any great deviation therefrom will result at once
-in an inhibition of their activity. Further, they demand a certain
-definite reaction of the fluid or mixture, if their working power
-is to be maintained at the maximum. Indeed, many enzymes, like the
-ptyalin of saliva, are quickly destroyed if the reaction is greatly
-changed. Enzymes are thus seen to be more or less unstable substances,
-endowed with great power as digestive agents, but sensitive to a high
-degree and working advantageously only under definite conditions. Many
-perversions of digestion and of nutrition are connected not only with
-a lack of the proper secretion of some one or more digestive enzyme,
-but also with the lack of proper surroundings for the manifestation of
-normal or maximum activity.
-
-With these statements before us, we can readily picture for ourselves
-the initial results following the ingestion of starch-containing foods
-properly cooked; and it may be mentioned here that the cooking is an
-essential preliminary, for uncooked starch cannot be utilized in any
-degree by man. With the mind in a state of pleasurable anticipation,
-with freedom from care and worry, which are so liable to act as
-deterrents to free secretion, and with the food in a form which appeals
-to the eye as well as to the olfactories, its thorough mastication
-calls forth and prolongs vigorous salivary secretion, with which the
-food becomes intimately intermingled. Salivary digestion is thus at
-once incited, and the starch very quickly commences to undergo the
-characteristic change into soluble products. As mouthful follows
-mouthful, deglutition alternates with mastication, and the mixture
-passes into the stomach, where salivary digestion can continue for a
-limited time only, until the secretion of gastric juice eventually
-establishes in the stomach-contents a distinct acid reaction, when
-salivary digestion ceases through destruction of the starch-converting
-enzyme. Need we comment, in view of the natural brevity of this
-process, upon the desirability for purely physiological reasons of
-prolonging within reasonable limits the interval of time the food
-and saliva are commingled in the mouth cavity? It seems obvious, in
-view of the relatively large bulk of starch-containing foods consumed
-daily, that habits of thorough mastication should be fostered, with
-the purpose of increasing greatly the digestion of starch at the very
-gateway of the alimentary tract. It is true that in the small intestine
-there comes later another opportunity for the digestion of starch; but
-it is unphysiological, as it is undesirable, for various reasons, not
-to take full advantage of the first opportunity which Nature gives for
-the preparation of this important foodstuff for future utilization.
-Further, thorough mastication, by a fine comminution of the food
-particles, is a material aid in the digestion which is to take place in
-the stomach and intestine. Under normal conditions, therefore, and with
-proper observance of physiological good sense, a large proportion of
-the ingested starchy foods can be made ready for speedy absorption and
-consequent utilization through the agency of salivary digestion.
-
-Nowhere in the body do we find a more forcible illustration of
-economical method in physiological processes than in the mechanism
-of gastric secretion. Years ago, it was thought that the flow of
-gastric juice was due mainly to mechanical stimulation of the gastric
-glands by contact of the food material with the lining membrane of the
-stomach. This, however, is not the case, as Pawlow has clearly shown,
-and it is now understood that the flow of gastric juice is started
-by impulses which have their origin in the mouth and nostrils; the
-sensations of eating, the smell, sight, and taste of food serving
-as psychical stimuli, which call forth a secretion from the stomach
-glands, just as the same stimuli may induce an outpouring of saliva.
-These sensations, as Pawlow has ascertained, affect secretory centres
-in the brain, and impulses are thus started which travel downward to
-the stomach through the vagus nerves, and as a result gastric juice
-begins to flow. This process, however, is supplemented by other forms
-of secretion, likewise reflex, which are incited by substances, ready
-formed in the food, and by substances--products of digestion--which
-are manufactured from the food in the stomach. Soups, meat juice, and
-the extractives of meat, likewise dextrin and kindred products, when
-present in the stomach, are especially active in provoking secretion.
-Substances which in themselves have less flavor, as water, milk, etc.,
-are far less effective in this direction, while the white of eggs and
-bread are entirely without action in directly stimulating secretion.
-When the latter foods have been in the stomach for a time, however,
-and the proteid material has undergone partial digestion, then
-absorption of the products so formed calls forth energetic secretion of
-gastric juice. It is thus seen that there are three distinct ways--all
-reflex--by which gastric juice is caused to flow into the stomach as a
-prelude to gastric digestion. Further, it has been shown by Pawlow that
-there is a relationship between the volume and character of the gastric
-juice secreted and the amount and composition of the food ingested,
-thus suggesting a certain adjustment in the direction of physiological
-economy well worthy of note. A diet of bread, for example, leads to the
-secretion of a smaller volume of gastric juice than a corresponding
-weight of meat produces, but the juice secreted under the influence of
-bread is richer in pepsin and acid, _i. e._, it has a greater digestive
-action than the juice produced by meat. The suggestion is that gastric
-juice assumes different degrees of concentration, with different
-proportions of acid and pepsin, to meet the varying requirements of a
-changing dietary.
-
-As has been indicated, pepsin and hydrochloric acid are the important
-constituents of gastric juice. It is noteworthy, however, that it is
-the combination of the two that is effective in digestion. Pepsin
-without acid is of no avail, and acid without pepsin can accomplish
-little in the digestion of food. Pepsin and acid are secreted by
-different gland cells in the stomach, and gastric insufficiency, or
-so-called indigestion, may arise from either a condition of apepsia
-or from hypoacidity. It is worthy of comment that the amount of
-hydrochloric acid secreted during 24 hours by the normal individual,
-under ordinary conditions of diet, amounts to what would constitute
-a fatal dose of acid if taken at one time in concentrated form. At
-the outset of gastric secretion, the fluid shows only a slight degree
-of acidity, but as secretion proceeds, the acidity rises to 0.2–0.3
-per cent of hydrochloric acid. The main action of gastric juice is
-exerted on proteid foods, which under its influence are gradually
-dissolved and converted into soluble products known as proteoses and
-peptones. It is a process of peptonization, in which the proteid of
-the food is gradually broken down into so-called hydrolytic cleavage
-products. The enzyme, like the ptyalin of saliva, is influenced by
-temperature, maximum digestive action being manifested at about 38° C.,
-the temperature of the body. Further, a certain degree of acidity is
-essential for procuring the highest degree of efficiency. Ordinarily,
-it is stated that digestive action proceeds best in the presence of 0.2
-per cent hydrochloric acid, but what is more essential for vigorous
-digestion is a certain relationship between the acid, pepsin, and
-proteid undergoing digestion. As pepsin and the amount of proteid
-are increased, the amount of acid, and its percentage somewhat, must
-be correspondingly increased if digestion is to be maintained at the
-maximum.
-
-Another important function of gastric juice is that of curdling milk,
-due to the presence in the secretion of a peculiar enzyme known as
-rennin. The latter ferment acts upon the casein of milk,--the chief
-proteid constituent,--transforming it into a related substance commonly
-called paracasein. This then reacts with the calcium salts present in
-milk, forming an insoluble curd or calcium compound. From this point
-on, the digestion of milk-casein by gastric juice is the same as that
-of any other solid proteid, it being gradually transformed by the
-pepsin-acid into soluble cleavage products. Why gastric juice should
-be provided with this special enzyme, capable of acting solely on
-the casein of milk, can only be conjectured, but we may assume that
-it has to do with the economical use of this important food. As the
-sole nutriment of the young, milk occupies a peculiar position as a
-foodstuff, and being a liquid, its proteid constituent might easily
-escape complete digestion were it to pass on too hastily through the
-gastro-intestinal tract. Experiment has shown that when liquid food
-alone is taken into the stomach it is pushed forward into the small
-intestine in a comparatively short time. Curdled as it is by rennin,
-however, casein must stay for a longer period in the stomach, like any
-other solid food, and its partial digestion by gastric juice thereby
-made certain. For the reasons above stated, it is apparent why milk
-should not be treated as a drink in our daily diet. Remembering that
-when milk reaches the stomach it is converted into a solid clot or
-curd, there is obvious reason for sipping it, instead of taking it by
-the glassful, thereby favoring the formation of small, individual clots
-instead of one large curd, and thus facilitating instead of retarding
-digestion.
-
-Among other factors in gastric digestion, the muscular movements of the
-stomach walls are to be emphasized, since we have here a mechanical aid
-to digestion of no small moment, and likewise a means of accomplishing
-the onward movement of the stomach contents. The outer walls of the
-stomach are composed of a thick layer of circular muscular fibres,
-especially conspicuous at the pyloric end of the organ, where the
-latter is joined on to the intestine; a smaller, less conspicuous
-layer of longitudinal muscle fibres, and some oblique fibres. At the
-pylorus, the circular fibres are so arranged as to form a structure
-which, aided by a peculiar folding of the inner mucous membrane,
-serves as a sphincter, closing off the stomach from the duodenum, the
-beginning of the small intestine. The movements of the stomach were
-first made the subject of careful investigation by Dr. Beaumont in his
-study of the celebrated case of Alexis St. Martin, a French Canadian,
-who, in 1822, was accidentally wounded by the discharge of a musket,
-with the resultant formation of a permanent fistulous opening in the
-stomach. Dr. Beaumont, in the description[7] of his observations,
-writes that “by the alternate contractions and relaxations of these
-bands (of muscle) a great variety of motion is induced on this
-organ (the stomach), sometimes transversely, and at other times
-longitudinally. These alternate contractions and relaxations, when
-affecting the transverse diameter, produce what are called _vermicular_
-or _peristaltic_ motions.... When they all act together, the effect is
-to lessen the cavity of the stomach, and to press upon the contained
-aliment, if there be any in the stomach. These motions not only produce
-a constant disturbance, or _churning_ of the contents of this organ,
-but they compel them, at the same time, to revolve around the interior,
-from point to point, and from one extremity to the other.” Of more
-recent investigations, the most important are those made by Cannon,[8]
-with the X-ray apparatus. From these later studies, it is evident
-that Dr. Beaumont’s view of the entire stomach being involved in a
-general rotary movement is not correct, since in reality the movements
-are confined mainly to the pyloric end of the stomach, the fundus or
-portion nearer the œsophagus not being directly involved. This means
-that when food material passes into the stomach, it may remain at the
-fundic end for some time more or less undisturbed before admixture with
-the gastric juice occurs, and under such conditions, until acidity
-creeps in, the salivary digestion of starch can continue.
-
- [7] The Physiology of Digestion. By William Beaumont, M.D. Second
- Edition, 1847, p. 100.
-
- [8] W. B. Cannon: The Movements of the Stomach studied by means of
- the Röntgen Rays. American Journal of Physiology, vol. 1, p. 359.
-
-According to the observations of Cannon, the contractile movements
-of the stomach commence shortly after the entrance of food, the
-contractions starting from about the middle of the stomach and passing
-on toward the pylorus. These waves of contraction follow each other
-very closely, certainly not more than one or two minutes apart, and
-perhaps less, while the resulting movements bring about an intimate
-commingling of food and gastric juice in the pyloric portion of the
-stomach; followed by a gradual diffusion of the semi-fluid mixture into
-the fundus accompanied by a gradual displacement of the more solid
-food in the latter region. These movements of the stomach are more or
-less automatic, arising from stimuli--the acid secreted--originating
-in the stomach itself, although it is considered that the movements
-are subject to some regulation from extrinsic nerve fibres, such as
-the vagi and the splanchnics. As digestion proceeds and the mass in
-the stomach becomes more fluid, the pyloric sphincter relaxes and a
-certain amount of the fluid material is forced into the intestine by
-the pressure of the contraction wave. This is repeated at varying
-intervals, depending presumably in some measure upon the consistency
-of the mass in the stomach, until after some hours of digestion the
-stomach is completely emptied.
-
-Especially interesting and suggestive are the experiments made by
-Cannon[9] on the length of time the different types of foodstuffs
-remain in the stomach. Using cats as subjects, he found that fats
-remain for a long period in the stomach; they leave that organ slowly,
-the discharge into the intestine being at about the same rate as the
-absorption of fat from the small intestine or its passage into the
-large intestine. Carbohydrate foods, on the other hand, begin to leave
-the stomach soon after their ingestion. They pass out rapidly, and at
-the end of two hours reach a maximum amount in the small intestine
-almost twice the maximum for proteids, and two and a half times the
-maximum for fats, both of which maxima are reached only at the end of
-four hours. Carbohydrates remain in the stomach about half as long as
-proteids. Proteids, Cannon finds, frequently do not leave the stomach
-at all during the first half-hour after they are eaten. After two
-hours, they accumulate in the small intestine to a degree only slightly
-greater than that reached by carbohydrates an hour and a half earlier.
-The departure of proteids from the stomach is therefore slower at
-first than that of either fats or carbohydrates. When a mixture of
-equal parts of carbohydrates and proteids is fed, the discharge from
-the stomach is intermediate in rapidity. When fat is added to either
-carbohydrates or proteids it retards the passage of both foodstuffs
-through the pylorus.
-
- [9] W. B. Cannon: The Passage of different Food-stuffs from the
- Stomach and through the Small Intestine. American Journal of
- Physiology, vol. 12, p. 387.
-
-It is evident from what has been stated that the gastric digestion of
-proteid foods is a comparatively slow process, involving several hours
-of time; and further, that food material in general remains in the
-stomach for varying periods, dependent upon its chemical composition.
-It would appear further, that relaxation of the pyloric sphincter,
-allowing passage of chyme into the intestine, must depend somewhat upon
-chemical stimulation, as this offers the most plausible explanation
-of the diversity of action seen with the different foodstuffs. As
-has been pointed out, gastric digestion is primarily a process for
-the conversion of proteid food into soluble products. It would be
-a mistake, however, to assume that the digestion of proteid foods
-is complete in the stomach. Stomach digestion is to be considered
-more as a preliminary step, paving the way for further changes to be
-carried forward by the combined action of intestinal and pancreatic
-juice in the small intestine. The importance of gastric digestion
-is frequently overrated. It is unquestionably an important process,
-but not absolutely essential for the maintenance of life. Dogs have
-lived and flourished with their stomachs removed, the intestine being
-joined to the œsophagus. The intestine is a much more important part
-of the alimentary tract; it is likewise far more sensitive to changing
-conditions than the stomach, and undoubtedly one function of the
-latter organ is to protect the intestine and preserve it from insult.
-The stomach may be compared to a vestibule or reservoir, capable of
-receiving without detriment moderately large amounts of food, together
-with fluid, in different forms and combinations, with the power to hold
-them there until by action of the gastric juice they are so transformed
-that their onward passage into the intestine can be permitted with
-perfect safety. Then, small portions of the properly prepared material
-may be discharged from time to time through the pylorus without danger
-of overloading the intestine, and in a form capable of undergoing rapid
-and complete digestion. Further, the stomach as a reservoir is very
-useful in bringing everything to a proper and constant temperature
-before allowing its entry into the intestine. Another fact of some
-importance is that, contrary to the general view, absorption from
-the stomach of the products of digestion is not very rapid under
-ordinary conditions. Even water and soluble salts pass very slowly into
-the circulation from the stomach. Like the partially digested food
-material, they are carried forward through the pyloric sphincter into
-the intestine, where absorption of all classes of material is most
-marked.
-
-It is in the small intestine that both digestion and absorption are
-seen at their best. It is here that all three classes of foodstuffs
-are acted upon simultaneously through the agency of the pancreatic
-juice, intestinal juice, and bile. Here, too, are witnessed some of the
-most complicated and interesting reactions and changes occurring in
-the whole range of digestive functions. Especially noteworthy is the
-peculiar mechanism by which the secretion of pancreatic juice is set
-up and maintained. On demand, pancreatic juice is manufactured in the
-pancreas and poured into the intestine just beyond the pylorus through
-a small duct--the duct of Wirsung. Secretion is started by contact of
-the acid contents of the stomach with the mucous membrane of the small
-intestine, so that as soon as the acid chyme passes through the pyloric
-sphincter there commences an outflow of pancreatic juice into the
-intestine. While acid is plainly the inciting agent in this secretory
-process, its action is indirect. It does not cause secretion through
-reflex action on nerve fibres, but it acts upon a substance formed in
-the mucous membrane of the intestine, transforming it into _secretin_,
-which is absorbed by the blood and carried to the pancreas, where it
-excites secretory activity. As would be expected from the foregoing
-statements, the secretion of pancreatic juice commences very soon after
-food finds its way into the stomach, and naturally increases in amount
-with the onward passage of acid chyme into the intestine, the maximum
-flow being obtained in the neighborhood of the third or fourth hour,
-after which the secretion gradually decreases. In man, it is estimated
-on the basis of one or two observations that the amount secreted during
-24 hours is about 700 cc., or a pint and a half. Careful experiments,
-however, tend to show that the quantity of secretion depends in some
-measure at least upon the character of the food, and also that the
-composition of the secretion varies with the character of the food.
-Thus, on a diet composed mainly of meat, the proteid-digesting enzyme
-is especially conspicuous, while on a bread diet, with its large
-content of starch, the starch-digesting enzyme is increased in amount.
-In other words, there is suggested the possibility of an adaptation in
-the composition of the secretion to the character of the food to be
-digested.
-
-Pancreatic juice is an alkaline fluid, rather strongly alkaline
-in fact, from its content of sodium carbonate, and is especially
-characterized by the presence of at least three distinct enzymes;
-viz., trypsin, a proteid-digesting ferment; lipase, a fat-splitting
-enzyme; and amylopsin, a starch-digesting enzyme. It has already been
-pointed out how dependent the secretion of pancreatic juice is upon the
-co-operation of the intestinal mucous membrane. A similar dependence
-is found when the digestive activity of the secretion is studied. As
-just stated, pancreatic juice contains a proteid-digesting enzyme.
-This statement, however, is not strictly correct, for if the secretion
-is collected through a cannula so that it does not come in contact
-with the mucous membrane of the intestine, it is found free from any
-digestive action on proteids. The secretion is activated, however, by
-contact with the duodenal membrane. Expressed in different language,
-pancreatic juice as it is secreted by the gland does not contain
-ready-formed trypsin; it does contain, however, an inactive pro-enzyme,
-which, under the influence of a specific substance contained in the
-intestinal mucous membrane, known as enterokinase, is transformed
-into the active enzyme trypsin. There is thus seen another suggestive
-example of the close physiological relationship between the small
-intestine and the activity of the pancreatic gland, or its secretion.
-
-The chemical changes taking place in the small intestine are many
-and varied. The acid chyme, with its admixture of semi-digested food
-material, as it passes through the pyloric sphincter into the small
-intestine, is at once brought into immediate contact with bile,
-pancreatic juice, and intestinal juice, all of which are more or less
-alkaline in reaction. As a result, the acidity of the gastric juice
-is rapidly overcome, and the enzyme pepsin, which up to this point
-could exert its characteristic digestive action, is quickly destroyed
-by the accumulating alkaline salts. Pepsin digestion thus gives way
-to trypsin digestion,--most effective in an alkaline medium,--and the
-proteids of the food, already semi-digested by pepsin-acid, are further
-transformed by trypsin; aided and abetted by another enzyme, known as
-erepsin, secreted by the mucous membrane of the intestine. These two
-enzymes are much more powerful agents than pepsin. It is true that they
-begin work where pepsin left off, but most striking is the character
-of the end-products which result from their combined action, since they
-are small molecules and there is a surprising diversity of them. In
-other words, while gastric digestion breaks down the proteid foodstuffs
-into soluble bodies, such as proteoses and peptones closely related
-to the original proteids, in pancreatic digestion as it takes place
-in the intestine there is a profound breaking down, or disruption of
-the proteid molecule into a row of comparatively simple nitrogenous
-fragments, many of them crystalline bodies; such as leucin, tyrosin,
-glutaminic acid, aspartic acid, arginin, lysin, histidin, etc., known
-chemically as monoamino-acids and diamino-acids. We have no means
-of knowing to how great an extent these more profound disruptive
-changes of the proteid molecule take place in the intestine. Whether
-practically all of the ingested proteid food is broken down into these
-relatively simple compounds prior to absorption, or whether only a
-small fraction suffers this change, cannot be definitely stated.
-
-A few years ago, the majority of physiologists held to the view that
-in the digestion of proteid food all that was essential was its
-conversion into soluble and diffusible forms which would permit of
-ready absorption into the blood. The belief was prevalent that, since
-the proteid of the food was destined to make good the proteid of the
-blood and through the latter the proteids of the tissues, any change
-beyond what was really necessary for absorption of the proteid would
-be uneconomical and indeed wasteful. On the other hand, due weight
-must be given to the fact that in trypsin digestion, proteid can be
-quickly broken down into simple nitrogenous compounds, and that in the
-enzyme erepsin, present in the mucous membrane of the intestine, we
-have an additional ferment very efficient in bringing about cleavage
-of proteoses and peptone into amino-acids. From these latter facts it
-might be argued that, in the digestion of proteid foodstuffs by the
-combined action of gastric and pancreatic juice in the alimentary
-tract, a large proportion of the proteid is destined to undergo
-complete conversion into amino-acids, and that from these fragments the
-body, by a process of synthesis, can construct its own peculiar type of
-proteid.
-
-This latter suggestion is worthy of a moment’s further consideration.
-As is well known, every species of animal has its own particular
-type of proteid, adapted to its particular needs. The proteids of
-one species directly injected into the blood of another species are
-incapable of serving as nutriment to the body, and frequently act as
-poisons. Man in his wide choice of food consumes a great variety of
-proteids, all different in some degree from the proteids of his own
-tissues. Is it not possible, therefore, that it is the true function
-of pancreatic and intestinal digestion to break down the different
-proteids of the food completely into simple fragments, so that the body
-can reconstruct after its own particular pattern the proteids essential
-for its nourishment? Or, we can follow the suggestion contained in the
-work of Abderhalden,[10] who finds that in the long continued digestion
-of various proteids by pancreatic juice there results in addition to
-the amino-acids a very resistant residue, non-proteid in nature, which
-is termed polypeptid. In other words, Abderhalden believes that pepsin,
-trypsin, and erepsin are not capable of bringing about a _complete_
-breaking down of proteids into amino-acids, but that there always
-remains a nucleus of the proteid not strictly proteid in nature, though
-related thereto,--polypeptid,--which may serve as a starting-point for
-the synthesis or construction of new proteid molecules, the various
-amino-acids being employed to finish out the structure and give the
-particular character desired. This view, however, is rendered somewhat
-untenable by the more recent experiments of Cohnheim,[11] who claims
-that proteids can be _completely_ broken down by pepsin, trypsin,
-and erepsin, and consequently polypeptids would hardly be available
-for the synthesis of proteids. Moreover, Bergell and Lewin[12] have
-ascertained that there is present in the liver an enzyme or ferment
-which has the power of digesting or breaking down certain dipeptids
-and polypeptids into amino-acids. Hence, it follows that if any
-polypeptids are absorbed from the intestine, they would naturally be
-carried to the liver, where further cleavage into fragments suitable
-for synthetical processes might occur. In any event, there is good
-ground for the belief that the more or less complete disruption of the
-proteid molecule into small fragments renders possible a synthetical
-construction of new proteid to meet the demands of the organism; a fact
-of great importance in our conception of the possibilities connected
-with this phase of proteid nutrition.
-
- [10] Emil Abderhalden: Abbau und Aufbau der Eiweisskörper im
- thierischen Organismus. Zeitschr. f. physiologische Chemie, Band 44,
- p. 27.
-
- [11] Otto Cohnheim: Zur Spaltung des Nahrungseiweisses im Darm.
- Zeitschrift f. physiologische Chemie, Band 49, p. 64.
-
- [12] Bergell and Lewin: Zeitschrift für experimentelle Pathologie und
- Therapie, Band 3, p. 425.
-
-Fatty foods undergo little or no chemical alteration until they reach
-the small intestine. During their stay in the stomach they naturally
-become liquid from the heat of the body, and there is more or less
-liberation of fat from the digestive action of gastric juice on cell
-walls, connective tissues, etc. Most food fat is in the form of
-so-called neutral fat, which must undergo hydrolysis or saponification
-before it can be absorbed and thus made available for the body. This
-is accomplished by the enzyme lipase, or steapsin, of the pancreatic
-juice, aided indirectly by the presence of bile. Under the influence
-of this fat-splitting enzyme all neutral fats, whether animal or
-vegetable, are broken apart, through hydrolysis, into glycerin and a
-free fatty acid; the latter reacting in some measure with the sodium
-carbonate of the pancreatic juice to form a sodium salt, or soluble
-soap, while perhaps the larger part of the fatty acid is held in
-solution by the bile present. Soap, free acid, and glycerin are then
-absorbed from the intestine and are found again combined in the lymph
-as neutral fat. In this way the fats of the food are rendered available
-for the nourishment of the body.
-
-The next important chemical change taking place in the small intestine
-is that induced by the amylopsin of the pancreatic juice, which, acting
-in essentially the same manner as the ptyalin of saliva, converts
-any unaltered starch into dextrins and sugar. The latter substance,
-maltose, is exposed to the action of another enzyme contained in the
-intestinal secretion termed maltase, which transforms it into dextrose,
-a monosaccharide.
-
-In these ways the proteids, fats, and carbohydrates of the food are
-gradually digested, so far as conditions will admit, digestion being
-practically completed by the time the material reaches the ileocæcal
-valve at the beginning of the large intestine. Throughout the length
-of the small intestine absorption proceeds rapidly; water, salts, and
-the products of digestion passing out from the intestine into the
-circulating blood and lymph. At the ileocæcal valve, however, the
-contents of the intestine are practically as fluid as at the beginning
-of the small intestine, due to the fact that water is continually being
-secreted into the intestine. In the large intestine, the contents
-become less and less fluid through reabsorption of the water, and as
-the propulsive movements of the circular and longitudinal muscle fibres
-of the intestinal wall carry the material onward toward the rectum,
-the last portions of available nutriment are absorbed. Finally, in
-varying degree, certain putrefactive changes are observed in the large
-intestine involving a breaking down of some residual proteid matter,
-through the agency of micro-organisms almost invariably present, with
-formation of such substances as indol, skatol, phenol, fatty acids,
-etc. These processes, however, in health are held rigidly in check,
-and count for little in fitting the food for absorption. Digestion, on
-the other hand, extending as we have seen from the mouth cavity to the
-ileocæcal valve, is the handmaiden of nutrition, preparing all three
-classes of organic foodstuffs for their passage into the circulating
-blood and lymph, and thus paving the way for their utilization by the
-hungry tissue cells.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-ABSORPTION, ASSIMILATION, AND THE PROCESSES OF METABOLISM
-
- TOPICS: Physiological peculiarities in absorption. Chemical changes
- in epithelial walls of intestine. Two pathways for absorbed
- material. Function of the liver as a regulator of carbohydrate.
- Absorption of proteid products. Assimilation of food products.
- Anabolism. Katabolism. Metabolism. Processes of metabolism. Older
- views regarding oxidation. Discoveries of Lavoisier. The views of
- Liebig. Theory of luxus consumption. Oxidation in the body not simple
- combustion. Oxygen not the _cause_ of the decompositions. Oxidation
- not confined to any one place. Intracellular enzymes. Living cells
- the guiding power in katabolism. Some intermediary products of tissue
- metabolism. Chemical structure of different proteids. Decomposition
- products of nucleoproteids. Relation to uric acid. Action of specific
- intracellular enzymes. Creatin and creatinin. Relation to urea.
- Proteid katabolism a series of progressive chemical decompositions.
- Intracellular enzymes as the active agents.
-
-
-Digestion being completed, and the available portion of the foodstuffs
-thereby converted into forms suitable for absorption, the question
-naturally arises, In what manner are these products transported
-from the alimentary tract to the tissues and organs of the body? In
-attempting to answer this question, we shall find many illustrations
-of the precise and undeviating methods which prevail in the processes
-of nutrition. For example, it would seem plausible to assume that the
-different forms of sugar entering into man’s ordinary diet, all of
-them being soluble, would be directly absorbed and at once utilized,
-but such is far from being the case. Milk-sugar and cane-sugar, both
-appearing in greater or less degree in our daily dietaries, if
-introduced directly into the blood, are at once excreted through the
-kidneys unchanged. The body cannot use them, and they are gotten rid
-of as speedily as possible, much as if they were poisons. When taken
-by way of the mouth, however, they are utilized, simply because in
-the intestine two enzymes are present there, known as lactase and
-invertase, which break each of the sugars apart into two smaller
-molecules. In other words, milk-sugar and cane-sugar are disaccharides,
-and if they are to be absorbed in forms capable of being made use
-of by the body they must be split apart into simpler sugars, viz.,
-monosaccharides, such as dextrose, levulose, etc. The great bulk of the
-carbohydrate food consumed by man is in the form of starch, and this,
-as we have seen, is converted into maltose by the action of saliva and
-pancreatic juice. Maltose, however, like cane-sugar, is a disaccharide,
-and the body has no power to burn it or utilize it directly; but in the
-intestine and elsewhere is an enzyme termed maltase, which breaks up
-maltose into two molecules of the monosaccharide dextrose, and this the
-body can use. Man frequently consumes starch to the extent of a pound a
-day, and if utilized it must all undergo transformation into maltose,
-and then into dextrose. There is no apparent reason why maltose should
-not be absorbed and assimilated as readily as dextrose, but so urgent
-is the necessity for this conversion into dextrose that in the blood
-itself there is present maltase, to effect the transformation of any
-maltose that may gain entrance there. We are here face to face with
-a simple fact in nutrition. The body cannot utilize disaccharides
-directly. Why it is so we cannot say, but the fact is a good
-illustration of the principle that nothing can be taken for granted in
-our study of nutrition.
-
-For years, physiologists assumed that the ordinary physical laws of
-osmosis, imbibition, and diffusion were quite adequate to explain
-the passage of digested food materials into the blood and lymph.
-If a substance was soluble and diffusible, that was sufficient; it
-would quite naturally be absorbed in harmony with its diffusion
-velocity. This, however, is not wholly true, since experiment shows
-that the rapidity of absorption of diffusible substances through
-the wall of the intestine is by no means always proportional to the
-diffusion velocity of the substance. The lining membrane of the
-small intestine, where absorption mainly takes place, is not to be
-compared to a dead parchment membrane. On the contrary, it is made
-up of living protoplasmic cells; absorption is not a physical, but a
-physiological, process, in which the living epithelium cells stand as
-guardians of the portals, ready to challenge and, if need be, modify
-the rate of passage. Osmosis and diffusion undoubtedly play some part
-in absorption, but they alone are not sufficient to account for what
-actually takes place in the absorption of digestion products, and other
-substances from the living intestine.
-
-The primary products formed in the digestion of proteid foods--the
-proteoses and peptones--afford another illustration of physiological
-peculiarity in absorption. These bodies are readily soluble and
-quite diffusible, yet they are never found to any extent in the
-circulating blood and lymph during health. It is of course possible,
-as has been previously suggested, that as soon as formed they undergo
-transformation into simpler decomposition products in the small
-intestine; but this is by no means certain. If proteoses and peptones
-are injected directly into the blood, they cause a marked disturbance,
-influencing at once blood-pressure, affecting the coagulability of
-the blood, and in many other ways exhibiting a pronounced deleterious
-action which at once indicates they are out of their normal
-environment. They are not at home in the circulating blood, and the
-latter medium gets rid of them as speedily as possible; they behave
-like veritable poisons, and yet they are the primary products formed
-in the digestion of all proteid foodstuffs. On the basis of all
-physical laws governing diffusion they should be absorbed, and help to
-renew the proteids of the blood and later the proteids of the tissues.
-Yet, as we have said, they are not normally present in the blood or
-lymph. Apparently, in the very act of absorption, as they pass through
-the epithelial cells of the intestinal wall, before they gain entrance
-to the blood stream, they undergo transformation into serum-albumin
-and globulin, the characteristic blood proteids. The other alternative
-is that, as previously mentioned, they are completely broken down
-in the intestine into amino-acids, etc., and these simpler products
-synthesized, as they pass through the intestinal wall toward the blood,
-into serum-albumin and globulin. Certainly as yet, there is no evidence
-that the amino-acids, as such, go through the epithelial cells of the
-intestine; they are not found in the blood or lymph to any appreciable
-extent, yet the proteids of the blood are reinforced in some manner by
-the products of proteid digestion. Whichever view is correct, one thing
-is perfectly obvious, viz., that in the act of absorption the products
-resulting from the gastric and pancreatic digestion of proteid foods
-are exposed to some influence, presumably in the epithelial cells of
-the intestinal wall, by which there is a reconstruction of proteid.
-Further, the proteid substances so formed are of the type peculiar to
-the blood of that particular species of animal. The proteids of beef,
-mutton, chicken, oatmeal, or bread go to make the proteids of human
-blood.
-
-From these statements, it is obvious that what we term absorption is
-something more than a simple diffusion of soluble substances from
-the alimentary tract into the blood current. The process is much
-more complex than appears on the surface, and our lack of definite
-knowledge, in spite of numerous efforts to unravel the mystery,
-merely strengthens the view that we are dealing here with an obscure
-physiological problem, and not a simple physical one. Digestion induces
-a splitting up of the food proteid into fragments, large or small,
-while incidental to absorption there is apparently a reconstruction,
-or synthesis, of proteid from the fragments so formed. The process
-seems somewhat costly, physiologically speaking, yet when one considers
-the variety of proteids consumed as food, it is easy to comprehend
-how essential it is that in some manner, as in absorption, there be
-opportunity for construction of the specific proteids of the blood and
-lymph.
-
-We find an analogous process in the absorption of fats. As we have
-seen, the fats of the food are broken apart in the small intestine into
-glycerin and free fatty acid, a portion of the latter, and perhaps all,
-combining with the alkali of the intestinal juices to form soluble
-soaps, or sodium salts of the respective fatty acids. The neutral fats
-present in animal and vegetable foods are all alike in containing
-the glyceryl radicle, but they differ in the character of the fatty
-acids present. Further, one form of animal fat, like that from beef,
-may contain quite a different proportion of stearin, palmitin, and
-olein than is present in the fat of another animal, like mutton. By
-digestion, however, they are all broken apart into fatty acid and
-glycerin. These acids and their salts can be readily detected in the
-intestine, but they are not found in the blood or lymph, yet shortly
-after fatty food is taken the lymph is seen to be milky from fat.
-Obviously, the fatty acids liberated in the intestine are absorbed,
-either as soluble soaps or as free fatty acids dissolved in bile, but
-as they pass through the epithelial cells of the intestine into the
-lacteal radicles, there is a synthesis or reconstruction of fat; and
-as a result, neutral fats and not soaps are found in the lymph. Here,
-then, we have a process quite analogous to what apparently occurs in
-the absorption of proteid, though less complex; and it is possible that
-this is one of the factors which aids in the formation of a specific
-fat mixture corresponding, in a measure, to the type of fat present
-in the particular species. It is well understood that the fat of an
-animal’s tissues may be modified somewhat by the character of the
-fat fed, yet in spite of this there is a certain degree of constancy
-in composition which calls for explanation. Sheep and oxen feeding
-in the same pasture have fat widely different in the proportion of
-stearin, palmitin, etc. The fat of man’s tissues is fairly definite
-in composition, yet he eats a great variety of fatty foods. One man
-may consume large amounts of hard mutton fat with its relatively large
-content of stearin, while another individual may take his fat mainly in
-the form of the soft butter fats, with their relatively large content
-of olein and palmitin. In both cases, the fat of the man’s tissues will
-be essentially the same. To be sure, the changes that take place in the
-tissue cells, reinforced by the construction of fat from other sources,
-may be partly responsible for this constancy of composition, but the
-transformations incidental to absorption are quite possibly, in some
-measure, helpful thereto.
-
-The great bulk of the digested food material is absorbed from the small
-intestine, and there are two pathways open through which the absorbed
-material can gain access to the blood. The one path leads directly to
-the liver, and substances taking this course are exposed to the action
-of this organ, before they enter into the general circulation. The
-other path is through the lacteal or lymphatic system, and constitutes
-a roundabout way for substances to enter the blood stream, since
-they must first pass through the thoracic duct before entering the
-main circulation. As a general truth, it may be stated that fats are
-absorbed through the latter channel, while carbohydrates and proteids
-follow the first path. The innumerable blood capillaries in the villi
-of the intestine take up the products resulting from the digestion
-of proteids and carbohydrates, through which they are passed into
-the portal vein, and thereby distributed throughout the liver. This
-means that both carbohydrates and proteids--or their decomposition
-products--are exposed to a variety of possible changes in this large
-glandular organ, before they can enter into the tissues of the body.
-As we have seen, practically all carbohydrate food is converted into
-a monosaccharide, principally dextrose, in the alimentary tract; and
-it is in this form of a simple sugar that the carbohydrate passes into
-the blood. This might easily mean a pound of sugar absorbed during
-the twenty-four hours, and would obviously give to the blood a high
-degree of concentration, unless the excess was quickly disposed of.
-Sugar is very diffusible, and if it accumulates to any extent in the
-blood it is quickly gotten rid of by excretion through the kidneys.
-This, however, is wasteful, physiologically and otherwise, and does not
-ordinarily occur except in diseased conditions. Further, physiologists
-have learned that a certain small, but definite, amount of sugar in the
-blood is a necessary requirement in nutrition, and it is the function
-of the liver to maintain the proper carbohydrate level.
-
-We must again emphasize the great importance of carbohydrate food;
-there is a far larger amount of starchy food consumed than of any
-other foodstuff, and it is more readily available as a source of
-energy. Its presence in the blood, in the form of sugar, is constantly
-demanded, but it must be kept within the proper limits for the uses
-of the different tissues and organs of the body. The liver serves as
-an effective regulator, maintaining, in spite of all fluctuations
-in the supply and demand, a definite percentage of sugar such as is
-best adapted to keep the tissues of the body in a normal and healthy
-condition. This regulation by the liver is rendered possible through
-the ability of the hepatic cells to transform the sugar brought to
-the gland into glycogen, so-called animal starch, which is stored
-up in the liver until such time as it is needed by the body. The
-process is one of dehydration, the reverse of what takes place in the
-intestine when ordinary starch is converted into maltose and dextrose.
-The efficiency of this regulating mechanism depends also upon the
-ability of the liver to transform glycogen into sugar, presumably
-through the agency of an enzyme in the hepatic cells. Hence, glycogen
-may be looked upon as a temporary reserve supply of carbohydrate,
-manufactured and stored in the liver during digestion, when naturally
-large amounts of sugar are passing into the portal blood, and to be
-drawn upon whenever from any cause the content of sugar in the blood
-threatens to fall below normal. Obviously, there must be some delicate
-machinery for the adjustment of these opposite changes in the liver,
-and we may well believe that it is associated with the composition
-of the blood itself, which in some fashion stimulates and inhibits,
-as may be required, the functional activity of the liver, or its
-component cells. In any event, we have in this so-called glycogenic
-function of the liver a most effective means for accomplishing the
-complete and judicious utilization of all the sugar formed from the
-carbohydrates of the food, after it has once passed beyond the confines
-of the alimentary tract into the blood; preventing all loss, and at
-the same time guarding against all danger, from undue accumulation
-of sugar in the circulation. We see, too, how wise the provision
-that all sugar should pass from the alimentary canal into the portal
-circulation and not by way of the lymphatics, since by the latter
-channel the regulating action of the liver would be mainly lost.
-Further, recalling how soluble and diffusible sugar is, we may well
-marvel that it practically all passes from the intestine by way of
-the blood, and escapes entry into the lymphatics. Surely, this marked
-shunning of the other equally accessible pathway affords a striking
-illustration of selective action such as might be expected in a
-physiological process, but not in harmony with the ordinary physical
-laws of osmosis or diffusion. In conformity with this statement, it may
-be mentioned that appropriate experiments have clearly demonstrated
-that the different sugars available as food are not absorbed from the
-intestine in harmony with their diffusion velocity, but show deviations
-therefrom which can be explained only on the ground that the intestinal
-wall exercises some selective action, due to the living cells composing
-it. Likewise interesting in their bearing on nutrition are the
-observations of Hofmeister,[13] who finds by experiments on dogs that
-the assimilation limit of the different sugars shows marked variation.
-Thus, dextrose, levulose, and cane-sugar have the highest assimilation,
-while milk-sugar is far less easily and completely assimilated. If this
-is equally true of man, it indicates that starchy foods, with their
-ultimate conversion into dextrose, are to be ranked as having a high
-assimilation limit, thus affording additional evidence of their high
-nutritive value.
-
- [13] Franz Hofmeister: Ueber Resorption und Assimilation der
- Nährstoffe. Archiv f. d. exper. Pathol. u. Pharm., Band 25, p. 240.
-
-In the absorption of proteid products, their passage from the intestine
-by way of the portal circulation insures exposure to the action of the
-hepatic cells, before they are distributed by the general circulation
-throughout the body. It is only under conditions of an excessive
-intake of proteid foods that their products are absorbed by way of the
-lymphatics. These points are clearly established, and there is every
-ground for believing that substantial reasons exist to account for
-this single line of departure. Just what the liver does, however, is
-uncertain. In fact, as already indicated, there is lack of definite
-knowledge as to how far the proteid foods are broken down in digestion,
-prior to absorption. The combined action of pepsin, trypsin, and
-erepsin, if sufficiently long continued, can accomplish a complete
-disruption of the proteid molecule. We are inclined to assume in a
-general way that the “proteids taken as food cannot find a place in
-the economy of the animal body till they have been, as it were, melted
-down and recast.”[14] How far this melting down or disruption extends
-in normal digestion, we do not at present know. As already stated,
-neither proteoses and peptones, nor the amino-acids, are found in
-the blood stream in sufficient amounts, or with that frequency, to
-suggest absorption in these forms. Possibly, as some physiologists have
-suggested, the amount of any of these products to be found at any one
-time in a given quantity of blood is too small for certain recognition,
-yet in the twenty-four hours the amount passing from intestine to
-liver might be sufficiently large to equal the total proteid absorbed.
-We can, however, at present only conjecture, and must rest content
-with the simple statement that in the digestion of the proteid
-foodstuffs, proteoses, peptones, and amino-acids are formed, and that
-by transformation or total reconstruction of these products, special
-types of proteid are manufactured either in the epithelial cells of
-the intestinal walls during absorption, or elsewhere in the body after
-absorption. If this latter is the case, the liver might readily be
-regarded as a likely spot for the synthesis to occur.
-
- [14] J. B. Leathes: Problems in Animal Metabolism. Blakiston’s Son
- and Co., 1906, p. 123.
-
-Bearing in mind what has been said regarding the production of specific
-types of proteid by every species of animal, we can the more readily
-conceive of a synthesis “out of fragments of the original molecules
-rearranged and put together in new combinations, by processes in
-which the intestine can hardly be supposed to play a part.” This,
-the liver might well be assumed as capable of accomplishing, and if
-we were disposed to accept this view we might use as an argument the
-fact that the products of proteid digestion are taken directly to
-this organ, before being cast loose in the tissues and organs of the
-body. There is perhaps as good ground for assuming that a synthesis
-or reconstruction of proteid takes place all over the body; that, as
-suggested by Leathes, “the synthesis of proteids is a function of every
-cell in the body, each one for itself, and that the material out of
-which all proteids in the body are made is not proteid in any form,
-but the fragments derived from proteids by hydrolysis, probably the
-amido-acids, which in different combinations and different proportions
-are found in all proteids, and into which they are all resolved by the
-processes, autolytic or digestive, which can be carried out in every
-cell in the body.” It is certainly a reasonable hypothesis, and since
-we lack positive knowledge it cannot at present be disproved. All that
-we can affirm in the light of established fact is that the products of
-proteid digestion are absorbed from the intestine by way of the portal
-circulation, and that either in their passage through the intestinal
-wall, or later on in the liver or elsewhere, there is a construction of
-new proteid to meet the wants of the body. The liver, indeed, may be
-effective in both construction and destruction of proteid, but there is
-no way of telling at present just how far it acts in either direction.
-
-Regarding the absorption of fats, a single statement will suffice, in
-addition to what has already been said. Fats gain access to the general
-circulation by passing from the intestine into the lacteal radicles,
-thence into the lymphatics, whence they move onward into the thoracic
-duct, and from there are emptied into the great veins at the neck. A
-small amount is apparently absorbed in the form of soap by the portal
-circulation, but by far the larger amount of fat gains access to the
-blood stream without going through the liver.
-
- * * * * *
-
-In these ways, the blood and lymph are continually supplied with
-proteid, fat, and carbohydrate from the ingested food, and as these
-fluids surround and permeate the organized elements of the tissues, the
-latter are enabled to gain what they need to maintain their nutritive
-balance. Living matter is essentially unstable; it is the seat of
-chemical changes of various kinds, anabolic or constructive, and
-katabolic or destructive. The more comprehensive term “metabolic” is
-applied to all of these changes that take place in living matter. In
-anabolism, the dead, inert proteids, fats, and carbohydrates are more
-or less assimilated and made a part of the living matter of the tissue
-cells, while at the same time a certain amount of the food material,
-probably the larger amount, is simply stored as such, or left to
-circulate in the blood and lymph, without being raised to the higher
-level of living protoplasm. In katabolism, this accumulated material,
-and in some degree the living substance itself, is broken down or
-disintegrated with liberation of the stored-up energy, which manifests
-itself in the form of heat and mechanical work. At times, the anabolic
-processes predominate and there is a relatively large accumulation
-of stored-up materials; while at other times, katabolism, with its
-attendant chemical decompositions, predominates, and the body loses
-correspondingly. The point to be emphasized here is that the living
-body, with its multitude of living cells, is the seat of incessant
-change. Construction and destruction are continually going forward
-side by side; sometimes the one and sometimes the other predominating,
-according to existing conditions. The living protoplasm with its
-attendant storage material is, under ordinary conditions, constantly
-being made good from the assimilated food, a part of which is raised to
-the dignity of living matter and becomes an integral part of the living
-cells, while the larger portion is simply stored for future uses, or
-circulates in the blood and lymph which bathe them. Doubtless, this
-storage or circulating material is the main source of the energy which
-constantly flows from the cells in the form of heat and of work, as a
-result of the disruptive changes that constitute katabolism.
-
-Worthy of special notice is the fact that cell protoplasm is
-essentially proteid in nature; water and proteid make up the larger
-part of its substance, to which are added small proportions of
-carbohydrate, fat, and mineral matter. Proteid is the basis of cell
-protoplasm; it is the chemical nucleus of living matter, and owing to
-the large size of its molecule, with its large number of contained
-atoms, is capable of many combinations and many alterations. Most of
-the reactions characteristic of katabolism centre around this proteid,
-but the disruptive changes that occur undoubtedly involve more largely
-the circulating materials present in the blood and lymph, and which
-bathe the cells, rather than the so-called fixed, or organ proteid, of
-the cell substance itself. Still, while the circulating blood and lymph
-furnish largely the substances which are made to undergo disintegration
-in katabolism, the living protoplasmic cell is the controlling power
-which regulates the extent and character of the decompositions,
-and proteid matter is the chemical basis of protoplasm. From these
-statements, we again have suggested the significant importance of the
-proteid foods in nutrition, since they alone can furnish the material
-which constitutes the chemical basis of living cells. The human body,
-which represents the highest form of animal life, is merely, as stated
-by another, “literally a nation of cells derived from a single cell
-called the ovum, living together, but dividing the work, transformed
-variously into tissues and organs, and variously surrounded by
-protoplasm products” (Waller).
-
-The processes involved in metabolism are not easily unravelled. The
-word itself is simple, but it is employed to designate that complex of
-“chemical changes in living organisms which constitute their life, the
-changes by which their food is assimilated and becomes part of them,
-the changes which it undergoes while it shares their life, and finally
-those by which it is returned to the condition of inanimate matter.
-Gathered together under this one phrase are some of the most intricate
-and inaccessible of natural phenomena. It implies also, and gently
-insists on the idea, that all the phenomena of life are at bottom
-chemical reactions” (Leathes). Regarding the processes of anabolism, as
-in the construction of living protoplasm out of inert food materials,
-we can say nothing. This is altogether beyond our ken at present, and
-doubtless will remain so, since it involves a chemical alteration, or
-change, akin to that of bringing the dead to life. With the processes
-of katabolism, however, we may hope for more satisfactory results; and,
-indeed, to-day we have considerable information of value as to some of
-the methods, at least, which are the cause of this phase of nutrition.
-This knowledge, however, has been slow of attainment.
-
-In the earlier years of the sixteenth century, when anatomy and
-physiology were beginning to make progress, the savants of that day,
-hampered as they were by grave misconceptions and by the lack of
-any understanding of chemical phenomena, could not take advantage,
-naturally, of the suggestion that as wood burns or oxidizes in the air
-with liberation of heat, so might the food substances, absorbed by the
-body, undergo oxidation in the tissues and thus give rise to animal
-heat. Such suggestions were at that time as a closed book, and so we
-find Vesalius, in 1543, teaching the Galenic doctrines in physiology
-then prevalent. The conception of heat production, as it existed at
-that time, may be inferred from the following quotation:[15] “The parts
-of the food absorbed from the alimentary canal are carried by the
-portal blood to the liver, and by the influence of that great organ
-are converted into blood. The blood thus enriched by the food is by
-the same great organ endued with the nutritive properties summed up
-in the phrase ‘natural spirits.’ But blood thus endowed with natural
-spirits is still crude blood, unfitted for the higher purposes of the
-blood in the body. Carried from the liver by the vena cava to the right
-side of the heart, some of it passes from the right ventricle through
-innumerable invisible pores in the septum to the left ventricle. As the
-heart expands it draws from the lungs through the vein-like artery air
-into the left ventricle. And in that left cavity, the blood which has
-come through the septum is mixed with the air thus drawn in, and by the
-help of that heat, which is innate in the heart, which was placed there
-as the source of the heat of the body by God in the beginning of life,
-and which remains there until death, is imbued with further qualities,
-is laden with ‘vital spirits,’ and so fitted for its higher duties. The
-air thus drawn into the left heart by the pulmonary vein, at the same
-time tempers the innate heat of the heart and prevents it from becoming
-excessive.” In other words, heat was considered as a divine gift, and
-as can readily be seen, there was an utter lack of appreciation of the
-use of air in breathing. Even van Helmont, who lived in 1577–1644, and
-was in a sense an alchemist, still gave credence to the spirits, viz.,
-that the food absorbed from the stomach and intestine is in the liver
-endued with natural spirits, while in the heart the natural spirits
-are converted into vital spirits, and in the brain the vital spirits
-are transformed into animal spirits.[16] Later, Malpighi discovered
-the true structure of the lungs, and Borelli, in 1680, exposed the
-erroneous views then prevalent regarding the purpose of breathing.
-It is not true, says Borelli, that the use of breathing is to cool
-the excessive heat of the heart or to ventilate the vital flame, but
-we must believe that this great machinery of the lungs, with their
-accompanying blood vessels, is for some grand purpose. In a long and
-vigorous argument, he contends that the “air taken in by breathing is
-the chief cause of the life of animals, far more essential than the
-working of the heart and the circulation of the blood.” He quotes the
-experiments of Boyle, who showed in 1660 “that even in a partial vacuum
-brought about by his air pump, flame was extinguished and life soon
-came to an end; the candle went out and the mouse or the sparrow died.”
-
- [15] Taken from Sir Michael Foster’s “Lectures on the History
- of Physiology during the Sixteenth, Seventeenth, and Eighteenth
- Centuries.” Cambridge, 1901, p. 12.
-
- [16] See Foster’s Lectures, p. 136.
-
-At this time, and for long afterwards, the belief was prevalent
-that the air taken up by the blood in the lungs was the air of the
-atmosphere in its entirety. No one appears to have thought of the
-possibility of only a part of the air being used, for at that time
-there was no suspicion that air was a mixture of substances. Mayow,
-however, in 1668, showed that it was not the whole air which was
-employed for respiration, but a particular part only. At this time,
-great attention was being given to a study of nitre or saltpetre; its
-wonderful properties in combustion were being recognized, and Mayow,
-who was a chemist of repute, claimed that it had its origin partly
-in the air and partly in the earth. The air “which surrounds us, and
-which, since by its tenuity escapes the sharpness of our eyes, seems
-to those who think about it to be an empty space, is impregnated
-with a certain universal salt, of a nitro-saline nature, that is to
-say, with a vital, fiery, and in the highest degree fermentative
-spirit,” to which the name of “igneo-aereus” was applied. Nitre was
-shown to be composed of a _sal fixum_ or sal alkali,--potash as it
-is now called,--and was obviously derived from the earth, while the
-other part of nitre was made up of the _spiritus acidus_, or nitric
-acid. For a time it was supposed that the whole of this _spiritus
-acidus_ was contained in the atmosphere, but it was soon recognized
-that this could not be the case, since nitric acid was found to be a
-corrosive liquid, destructive to life and quite incapable of supporting
-combustion. Hence, Mayow concluded that only a part of the acid
-exists in the atmosphere, viz., that part which he termed _spiritus
-nitro-aereus_. In combustion, there is something in the air which is
-necessary for the burning of every flame, unless perchance igneo-aereal
-particles should pre-exist in the thing to be burnt. These igneo-aereal
-particles form “the more active and subtle part of air which is thus
-necessary for combustion, exist in nitre and indeed constitute its
-‘more active and fiery part.’” Mayow fully recognized that burning
-and breathing involved in a measure the same process; both consisted
-in the consumption of the igneo-aereal particles present in the air.
-“If a small animal and a lighted candle be shut up in the same vessel,
-the entrance into which of air from without be prevented, you will see
-in a short time the candle go out, nor will the animal long survive
-its funeral torch. Indeed, [says Mayow] I have found by observation
-that an animal shut up in a flask together with a candle will continue
-to breathe for not much more than half the time than it otherwise
-would, that is, without the candle.” Something contained in the air,
-necessary alike for supporting combustion and for sustaining life,
-passes from the air into the blood. Mayow expressed his thoughts in
-these words: “And indeed it is very probable that certain particles
-of a nitro-saline nature, and those very subtle, nimble, and of very
-great fermentative power, are separated from the air by the aid of the
-lungs and introduced into the mass of the blood. And so necessary for
-life of every kind is that aereal salt (constituent) that not even
-plants can grow in earth the access of air to which is shut off. But
-if that same earth be exposed to air and so forthwith impregnated with
-that fecundating salt, it at once becomes fit again for growing.”[17]
-Mayow fully appreciated the importance of his nitro-aereal particles in
-the processes of life; he had indeed a fairly accurate conception of a
-sound theory of animal heat; he saw that they were equally necessary
-for burning, or combustion, and for respiration, and so was enabled to
-draw a parallelism between the two processes; he pointed out that they
-were essential for the ordinary activity of the muscles of the body,
-that as muscle work was increased more particles from the air were
-required; indeed, he clearly foresaw the need which the body had for
-these igneo-aereal particles in all the chemical processes of life. And
-thus was foreshadowed a conception of oxidation, a hundred years before
-Priestley evolved his phlogiston theories and Lavoisier discovered
-oxygen.
-
- [17] Quoted from Foster’s Lectures, p. 195.
-
-The discoveries of Lavoisier, published in 1789, led to a clear
-understanding of combustion as a process of oxidation, and paved the
-way for a fuller knowledge of the part played by the oxygen of the
-air in the chemical reactions going on in the animal body. Lavoisier
-showed that the oxygen drawn into the lungs with the air breathed was
-used in the body for the oxidation of certain substances, carbon being
-transformed thereby into carbon dioxide, and hydrogen into water.
-Further, he noted that these oxidations were carried forward on a
-large scale, and he emphasized the importance of oxygen as being the
-true cause of the varied decompositions taking place in the living
-body. The larger the amount of oxygen inspired, the more extensive
-the oxidation, and consequently the rate of respiration as modifying
-the intake of oxygen served in his opinion as a regulator to control
-the extent of the oxidative processes. He pointed out that a definite
-relationship existed between the amount of work done by the body and
-the oxygen consumed; greater muscular activity, lower temperature of
-the surrounding air, the activities attending the digestive functions,
-all seemed to be associated with a greater utilization of oxygen.
-Oxidation was the pivot around which all the chemical reactions of the
-body seemed to centre. Lavoisier, however, was not a physiologist, and
-he was, quite naturally perhaps, led into some errors. For example,
-he considered that the process of combustion or oxidation took place
-in the lungs, certain fluids rich in carbon and hydrogen formed in
-the different organs of the body being brought there for exposure to
-the inspired oxygen. Further, his views implied a simple and complete
-combustion, in which complex substances rich in carbon were directly
-and completely oxidized to carbon dioxide and water, in much the same
-manner as combustion occurs outside the body. Again, he assumed that
-the amount of oxygen taken into the lungs determined the extent of
-oxidation, just as the use of the bellows, by increasing the draft of
-air, causes the fire to burn more brightly.
-
-To Liebig (1842) the next great advance was due. This phenomenally
-clear-minded man, while recognizing at their full value the fundamental
-theories advanced by Lavoisier, saw and fully appreciated their
-incompleteness, and he likewise understood their failure to explain
-many of the phenomena of life more familiar to the physiological mind
-than to that of a simple chemist like Lavoisier. Liebig had made a
-special study of the chemical composition of foodstuffs, and likewise
-of the tissues and organs of the body. He had, moreover, given great
-attention to the decomposition products formed in the body, especially
-the nitrogenous substances excreted through the kidneys, as well as the
-carbon dioxide and water passed out through the lungs and skin. It was
-not strange, therefore, that he should take exception to Lavoisier’s
-view that oxidation in the body consisted in the combustion of a
-fluid, rich in carbon and hydrogen, which was brought to the lungs.
-On the contrary, Liebig contended that it was the organic compounds,
-proteids, fats, and carbohydrates, that underwent oxidation, and not
-necessarily in the lungs, but all over the body, wherever organs and
-tissues were active. Especially noteworthy was the view advanced by
-Liebig, and upheld for many years, that of these three classes of
-compounds the proteids alone served for the construction of organized
-tissues, like muscle, and that in the activity of this tissue, as
-in muscle contraction or muscle work, the energy for the work was
-derived solely from the breaking down or oxidation of this organized
-proteid. On this ground he termed the proteid foodstuffs “plastic,” or
-tissue-building foods. Liebig further pointed out that the substances
-of the body have the power of combining with and holding on to the
-inspired oxygen, and that fats and carbohydrates, _i. e._, the
-non-nitrogenous compounds, easily undergo oxidation or combustion, and
-thereby furnish the heat of the body. For this reason he termed the
-corresponding foodstuffs “respiratory” foods. Proteids, on the other
-hand, according to Liebig’s view, are capable of combustion only in
-slight degree. The cause of the decomposition of proteid substances in
-the body was to be traced solely to muscle work, _i. e._, the energy
-of muscle contraction, or muscle work, was derived from the breaking
-down of the proteids of the muscle tissue, and work was the stimulus
-which brought about proteid decomposition. Non-nitrogenous substances
-played no part in these reactions; muscle work was without influence
-on these compounds, oxygen being the sole stimulus which led to their
-combustion, and heat was the sole product of the combustion.
-
-If Liebig’s theory is correct, that the proteids of the body are
-decomposed only as the result or the accompaniment of muscle work, and
-the proteids of the food are used up only as they take the place of the
-organized proteid so metabolized, it follows that with a like degree of
-muscular activity a given body will always decompose the same amount
-of proteid. If excess of proteid food is taken, the surplus will be
-stored in the tissues, or, in other words, the excretion of nitrogen
-will not be influenced by the amount of proteid consumed in the food.
-This was the line of argument made use of by various physiologists[18]
-who were disposed to criticise Liebig’s view, and quite naturally the
-question was soon made the subject of many experiments. It will suffice
-here merely to say that many concordant results were obtained, showing
-that an abundance of proteid food leads to an increase in the excretion
-of nitrogen, muscle activity remaining at a constant level. Hence, as
-Voit states, some other ground than muscle work must be sought as the
-true cause of proteid katabolism. Consequently, we find this hypothesis
-of Liebig replaced by the theory of “luxus consumption,” in which it
-is maintained that while whatever proteid is used up by the work of
-the muscle must be made good from the proteid of the food, any excess
-of proteid absorbed from the intestinal canal is to be considered as
-“luxus,” and like the non-nitrogenous foods may be burned up in the
-blood, by the oxygen therein, without being previously organized.
-Hence, we see suggested two causes for the decomposition of proteid in
-the body, viz., the work of the muscle and the oxygen of the blood.
-Further, as stated by C. Voit,[19] the nitrogen excretion of the hungry
-or fasting animal affords, according to these views, a measure of the
-extent to which tissue proteid must be broken down in the maintenance
-of life, and of the amount of proteid food necessary to be consumed in
-order to make good the loss; viz., the minimum proteid requirement.
-Again, since any excess of proteid food beyond this minimal
-requirement, according to the theory, is destined to be burned up in
-the blood, or elsewhere, to furnish heat the same as non-nitrogenous
-foods, it follows that the excess of proteid food can be replaced by
-non-nitrogenous aliment.
-
- [18] See C. Voit: Hermann’s Handbuch der physiologie des
- Gesammt-Stoffwechsels. Band 6, Theil 1, p. 269, 1881.
-
- [19] Loc. cit., p. 270.
-
-Oxidation, however, is the keynote in any explanation of the processes
-of metabolism, whether nitrogenous or non-nitrogenous matter is
-involved. Both alike undergo oxidation, but it is not simple oxidation
-or combustion that we have to deal with. In the time of Lavoisier, as
-already stated, it was thought that oxygen alone was the cause of the
-decomposition going on in the body, but simply increasing the intake
-of air or oxygen, as in quickened breathing or deeper inspiration,
-does not increase correspondingly the rate of oxidation. In other
-words, it is not a direct combination of oxygen with the carbon and
-hydrogen of the foodstuffs, or tissue elements, that takes place in
-the body, but rather a gradual, progressive decomposition of complex
-organic compounds into simpler products; made possible, however, by the
-agency of the oxygen carried from the lungs by the circulating blood.
-It was demonstrated years ago that animals breathing pure oxygen do
-not consume any more of the gas than when breathing ordinary air, and
-likewise no more carbon dioxide is produced in the one case than in
-the other. Fifty years ago, Liebig and other physiologists showed that
-frogs’ muscle placed in an atmosphere free of oxygen could be made to
-contract or do work for some considerable time, and with liberation
-of heat. This fact implies a breaking down of muscle substance into
-simpler bodies, but there is here no free oxygen to act as the inciting
-cause; indeed, what actually occurs is a cleavage or splitting up
-of substances in the muscle tissue, but at the expense of oxygen in
-some form of combination in the muscle. This oxygen must have been
-taken from the blood at some previous time and stored in the tissue
-for future use. Again, as C. Voit has expressed it, if oxygen were
-really the immediate cause of the decompositions taking place in the
-organism, we should expect combustion to occur in harmony with the
-well-known relationship of the three classes of organic foodstuffs to
-oxygen. In other words, fats would undergo combustion most readily,
-carbohydrates next, and lastly the nitrogenous or albuminous compounds.
-In reality, however, proteid matter is decomposed in largest quantity;
-a generous addition of proteid food is always accompanied by an
-increased consumption of oxygen. Yet oxygen is not the inciting cause
-of the proteid decomposition, as is seen from the fact that in muscle
-work, where the intake of oxygen is greatly increased, there is no
-noticeable change in the amount of proteid material broken down.
-Plainly, in the body we have to deal not with a direct oxidation of
-the complex compounds of the tissues or of the food, but rather with
-a gradual cleavage of these higher compounds into simpler substances,
-these latter undergoing progressively a still further breaking down
-with intake of oxygen. To repeat, oxygen is not the _cause_ of the
-decompositions within the body, but the extent of the breaking down of
-the tissue or food material is the determining factor in the amount
-of oxygen taken on and used up. The products of decomposition contain
-more oxygen than the original substances undergoing the breaking down
-process, which means that oxygen is taken from the blood and used in
-the physiological combustion that is going on. It is not, however,
-strictly a combustion process; it is more complicated and more gradual
-than ordinary combustion, involving first of all a series of what may
-be termed oxidative cleavages, in which large molecules are gradually,
-step by step, broken down into simpler molecules, and these latter then
-oxidized to still simpler forms. Hence, we find the oxidative changes
-preceded by a variety of alterations in which oxygen may take no part
-whatever; such as hydrolytic cleavage, where the elements of water are
-taken on as a necessary step in the cleavage process; dissociation of
-a simple sort, as when a large molecule breaks up directly into smaller
-molecules, etc.
-
-These statements by no means detract from the importance of oxygen in
-the katabolic processes of the body, but it is physiological oxidation
-that we have to do with, and not simple combustion. Oxygen is not the
-direct cause of the transformations taking place in the body. As one
-looks over the history of progress in our knowledge of nutrition from
-the time of Lavoisier to the present, it is easy to note the gradual
-change of view regarding oxidation in the living organism. Step by
-step, it has been demonstrated that there are many factors involved in
-this breaking down of complex substances; that while oxygen is an ever
-present requirement, there are other equally important factors to be
-taken into account. The contrast between the older views and those now
-current is clearly shown by the difference in attitude regarding the
-_place_ in the body where oxidation occurs. Thus, in the earlier days,
-when the view was gradually gaining ground that nutritional changes
-were mainly the result of oxidation, and that the oxygen drawn into the
-lungs in inspiration was a primary factor, then, as we have seen, the
-lungs were considered as the laboratory where the transformation takes
-place. This view, however, was soon exploded, and next we find the
-blood, the lymph, and other fluids, but especially the blood, looked on
-as the locality where oxidation occurs. This was indeed quite a natural
-view to hold, since the blood is the carrier of oxygen, but we now
-know, in harmony with the fact that the breaking down of complex food
-material is a complicated process, involving various kinds of chemical
-change, that these katabolic processes are not located in any one
-place, but occur all over the body wherever there are active tissues.
-As has been previously stated, the human body is a “nation” of cells,
-all of which are more or less active, and it is in these miniature
-laboratories mainly that oxidation and all the other nutritional
-changes coincident to life take place. Muscle tissue and nerve tissue,
-the large secreting glands, such as the liver, stomach, and pancreas,
-all are the seat of oxidative and other changes which we class under
-the broad term of nutritional. To these cells, therefore, we must
-look for an explanation of the causes of oxidation, and the other
-transformations of a kindred nature that take place in the body.
-
-In our brief survey of digestion, and of the methods there followed
-for the proper utilization of the organic foodstuffs, it was seen
-that the unorganized ferments or enzymes are the active agents in
-accomplishing the breaking down of proteids, and the less profound
-alteration of fats and carbohydrates. Is it not possible that the
-tissues of the body are likewise supplied with enzymes of various
-types, and that upon these powerful agents rests the responsibility
-for the different kinds of decomposition, oxidation and other changes,
-that take place in the body? Some years ago much interest was aroused
-by the observation that certain glands in the body, if simply warmed
-at body temperature with water, in the presence of some germicidal
-agent sufficient to prevent putrefactive changes, underwent what is
-now termed autodigestion, _i. e._, a process of self-digestion, with
-formation of various products, notably such as would naturally result
-from the breaking down of proteid material by ordinary proteolytic
-enzymes. This would seem to imply the presence in the glands of
-a proteid-splitting enzyme, the products formed being proteoses,
-peptones, amino-acids, etc., just such products as result from the
-action of trypsin. To-day, we know that practically all tissues and
-organs can, under suitable conditions, undergo autolysis, and in many
-instances the enzymes themselves can be separated from the tissues by
-appropriate treatment. Liver, muscle, lymph glands, spleen, kidneys,
-lungs, thymus, etc., all contain what are very appropriately called
-intracellular enzymes. These enzymes are of various kinds. Especially
-conspicuous are the hydrolytic, proteid-splitting enzymes, which
-behave in a manner quite similar to, if not identical with, that of
-the digestive enzymes of the gastro-intestinal tract, _i. e._, pepsin,
-trypsin, and erepsin. Further, there are other hydrolytic cleavages
-taking place in tissue cells, such as the cleavage of fats, due as we
-now know to intracellular enzymes of the lipase type, and by which
-neutral fats are split apart into glycerin and fatty acid. Again, there
-are in many organs intracellular enzymes which act upon the complex
-nucleoproteids of the tissue, causing them to break apart into proteid
-and nucleic acid, the latter being further broken down by other enzymes
-with liberation of the contained nuclein or purin bases. Many other
-chemical reactions are brought about by specific enzymes of various
-kinds, present in the cells of particular glandular organs. Thus,
-intracellular enzymes have been found, as in the liver, which are able
-to transform amino-acids into amides, and still others capable of
-splitting up amides.
-
-Equally important, and even more suggestive, are the data which have
-been collected recently regarding oxidative processes in the tissues
-of the body. Specific ferments, known as oxidases, are found widely
-distributed in many organs and tissues, and it is difficult to escape
-the conclusion that as intracellular enzymes they have an important
-part to play in some, at least, of the transformations characteristic
-of tissue katabolism.[20] As a single example, mention may be made of
-aldehydase, which accomplishes the oxidation of substances having the
-structure of aldehydes into corresponding acids. Ferments or enzymes
-of this class are found in the liver, spleen, salivary glands, lungs,
-brain, kidneys, etc., and they may well be considered as important
-agents in the chemical transformations going on in the tissues of
-the body. It would take us too far afield to enter into a detailed
-consideration of these intracellular enzymes; it must suffice to
-emphasize the general fact that in all the tissues and organs of the
-body there are present a large number of enzymes of different types,
-endowed with different lines of activity, and consequently capable
-of accomplishing a great variety of results in metabolism. Oxidation
-may still be a dominant feature in nutrition, oxidative changes may
-characterize more or less every tissue and organ in the body, but the
-processes are subtle and are not to be defined in harmony with simple
-chemical or physical laws. The living cell, with its intracellular
-enzymes, is the guiding and controlling power by which the processes of
-katabolism are regulated in harmony with the needs of the body. Complex
-organic matter is broken down step by step in the various tissues, with
-gradual liberation of the contained energy; processes of hydrolytic
-cleavage alternate with processes of oxidation, the molecules acted
-upon growing smaller with each downward step, until at last the final
-end-products are reached, viz., carbon dioxide, water, and urea, which
-the body eliminates through various channels as true physiological
-waste-products.
-
- [20] See M. Jacoby: Ueber die Bedeutung der intracellulären Fermente
- für die Physiologie und Pathologie. Ergebnisse der Physiologie,
- Erster Jahrgang, 1. Abtheilung, p. 230.
-
-It will be advisable for us to consider briefly some of these
-intermediary products of tissue metabolism, since in any discussion
-of nutritive changes it is quite essential to have some understanding
-of the chemical relationship existing between the various products
-which result from the breaking down of proteid and other materials in
-tissue katabolism. This is especially true of proteid material, since
-in the gradual disintegration of this substance in tissue metabolism
-many intermediary bodies are formed, which undoubtedly exercise some
-physiological influence prior to their transformation into simpler
-bodies, with ultimate formation of the final product, urea. As has
-been pointed out so many times, the proteid foods are peculiar in that
-they alone contain the necessary nitrogen, and in the peculiar form
-able to meet the physiological requirements of the body. Variations in
-the proteid intake are of necessity accompanied by variations in the
-formation of nitrogenous intermediary products, and both quality and
-quantity of these substances must be given due attention in any study
-of nutrition. Further, it is only by an understanding of the general
-or ground structure of proteids that we can hope to attain knowledge
-of the processes going on in the different tissues and organs in
-connection with metabolism, while a true appreciation of the chemical
-peculiarities of the individual proteids will help to explain the
-different nutritional value of vegetable as contrasted with animal
-proteids.
-
-Our understanding of the chemical structure of any organic substance
-is based primarily upon a study of the decomposition products which
-result from its breaking down, under the influence of various chemical
-agencies. Simple proteid substances when acted upon by pancreatic
-juice reinforced by the enzyme erepsin, or when boiled with dilute
-acids, undergo hydrolytic cleavage with ultimate formation of a large
-number of relatively simple bodies, mostly amino-acids, the chemical
-structure of which throws some light upon the nature of the proteid.
-Thus, in the pancreatic digestion of proteid in the intestine we may
-adopt the following scheme as showing in a general way the progressive
-transformation that occurs, understanding at the same time that like
-transformations may be accomplished by corresponding intracellular
-enzymes in the tissues and organs of the body; and further, that by the
-long-continued action of hydrolytic agents there is a complete breaking
-down into amino-acids and other simple products.
-
- Native Proteid
- /\
- / \
- / \
- Protoproteose Heteroproteose : Primary proteoses
- | |
- Deuteroproteose Deuteroproteose : Secondary proteoses
- | |
- Peptone Peptone
- | |
- Amino-acids Amino-acids
-
-Among these end-products, or amino-acids, are leucin, tyrosin, aspartic
-acid, glutaminic acid, glycocoll, arginin, lysin, histidin, and
-likewise the peculiar aromatic body tryptophan. The chemical make-up
-of these substances may be indicated by the following structural
-formulæ, which, if even only partially understood, will suggest to the
-non-chemical mind some idea of close chemical relationship:
-
- CH(NH_{2})COOH
- / CH(NH_{2})COOH
- CH_{2} |
- \ CH_{2}-COOH
- CH_{2}-COOH
-
- Glutaminic acid Aspartic acid
-
- CH_{3}
- CH_{2}-NH_{2} \
- | CH-CH_{2}-CH(NH_{2})-COOH
- COOH /
- CH_{3}
-
- Glycocoll Leucin
-
- OH
- /
- C_{6}H_{4}
- \
- CH_{2}-CH(NH_{2})COOH
-
- Tyrosin
- C·CH_{2}·CH·(NH_{2})·COOH
- / \\
- C_{6}H_{4} CH
- \ /
- NH
-
- Tryptophan
-
- CH_{2}-NH CH_{2}-NH_{2} CH--N
- | \ | || \\
- CH_{2} C--NH_{2} CH_{2} || CHµ
- | // | || /
- CH_{2} NH CH_{2} C--NH
- | | |
- CH·NH_{2} CH_{2} CH_{2}
- | | |
- COOH CH-NH_{2} CH-NH_{2}
- | |
- COOH COOH
-
- Arginin Lysin Histidin
-
-In these various decomposition products there is apparent certain
-definite lines of resemblance, on which is based one or more
-suggestions regarding possible ways in which these chemical groups are
-linked, or bound together, in the proteid molecule. Thus, there is
-apparently present a complex or nucleus which may be indicated as
-
- | |
- HC-NH-CO- also HC-NH-C(NH)-
- | |
-
-The proteid molecule is presumably built up of amino-acids variously
-joined together, this synthesis being accomplished, doubtless, by the
-condensation of different types of amino-acids, in which the first
-of the above groups represents the more common method of union. We
-may indeed conjecture that such methods of condensation take place in
-the human body, in the epithelial cells of the intestine, and in the
-tissues in general; and that by such methods, construction of proteid
-is accomplished out of the various fragments split off by digestion,
-etc. In a tentative way, the principle may be illustrated by the fusion
-of leucin and glutaminic acid,--following Hofmeister’s suggestion,--in
-which a still larger complex is formed:
-
- : :
- --CO-:-NH--CH--CO--NH--CH--CO-:-NH--
- : | | :
- C_{4}H_{9} (CH_{2})_{2}
- |
- CO·OH
-
- Leucin Glutaminic acid
-
-In this way, step by step, the proteid molecule is built up, and
-naturally in katabolism the proteid breaks down along certain definite
-lines of cleavage, with formation of katabolic products containing
-those groups, or chemical nuclei, which characterize the different
-proteid molecules. For it is to be clearly understood that there are
-many different forms of proteid, perhaps superficially alike, but
-possessed of physiological individuality. This is well illustrated
-by the two primary proteoses formed in digestion. As will be
-recalled, there are at first two proteoses produced, protoproteose
-and heteroproteose. These are, superficially at least, not radically
-unlike; they possess essentially the same percentage composition, but
-when broken down by vigorous chemical methods they show a totally
-different make-up. In other words, at the very beginning of digestion
-there is a splitting up of the proteid into two parts, which have
-quite a different chemical structure, as is clearly indicated by the
-difference in the character and amount of the decomposition products
-yielded by hydrolytic cleavage. Thus, heteroalbumose as derived from
-blood-fibrin contains 39 per cent of its total nitrogen in basic form,
-_i. e._, in a form which goes over into the basic bodies, arginin,
-lysin, and histidin, etc. On the other hand, protoalbumose from the
-same source yields hardly 25 per cent of basic nitrogen. Further,
-heteroalbumose yields only a very small amount of tyrosin, while
-protoalbumose gives on decomposition a large amount of this substance.
-Again, heteroalbumose furnishes a large yield of leucin and glycocoll,
-while protoalbumose gives no glycocoll and only a little leucin.
-Obviously, these two proteoses have an inner structure quite divergent
-one from the other, and owing to this fact they must play a quite
-different rôle in metabolism.
-
-Even greater differences in inner chemical structure are found among
-native proteids. By way of illustration, we may take egg-albumin,
-the casein of cow’s milk, gliadin of wheat, and the edestin of hemp
-seed. These are all typical proteids; they are all useful as food, but
-they are radically different in their inner chemical structure, as is
-clearly indicated by the following data,[21] which show the percentage
-yield of the different amino-acids and ammonia:
-
- [21] These data were furnished the writer by Dr. Thomas B. Osborne,
- and represent in large measure the results of his own chemical work.
-
- +--------+-------+--------+----------+--------+------+---------+--------+
- | | | |Glutaminic| | | | |
- | |Leucin.|Tyrosin.| Acid. |Arginin.|Lysin.|Histidin.|Ammonia.|
- +--------+-------+--------+----------+--------+------+---------+--------+
- |Egg- | | | | | | | |
- | albumin| 6.1 | 1.1 | 9.0 | ... | ... | ... | 1.6 |
- |Casein | 10.5 | 4.5 | 10.7 | 4.8 | 5.8 | 2.6 | 1.9 |
- |Gliadin | 5.7 | 1.2 | 37.3 | 3.2 | 0 | 0.6 | 5.1 |
- |Edestin | 19.9 | 2.7 | 14.0 | 14.2 | 1.6 | 2.2 | 2.3 |
- +--------+-------+--------+----------+--------+------+---------+--------+
-
-These are not mere technical differences, but they represent
-divergences of structure which cannot help counting as material factors
-in nutritional processes. Especially noticeable is the large yield of
-glutaminic acid from wheat proteid, as contrasted with the proteid
-(casein) of animal origin. As a rule, glutaminic acid forms a larger
-proportion of the decomposition products of vegetable than of animal
-proteids. Similarly, arginin is present in much larger proportion
-in most vegetable proteids than in most animal proteids. While many
-other data more or less trustworthy might be added, these figures
-will suffice to emphasize the main point under discussion, viz., that
-individual proteids show marked variation in the amount of the several
-amino-acids which serve as corner-stones or nuclei in the building
-up of the molecule, and consequently they must yield correspondingly
-different katabolic products when serving the body as food.
-
-Turning now to another phase of tissue metabolism, we may consider
-briefly the nucleoproteids and their characteristic decomposition
-products; bodies which are widely distributed as cleavage products
-formed in the disintegration of most cell protoplasm, and having
-special interest in nutrition because of their chemical relationship
-to that well-known substance, uric acid. Nucleoproteids of some type
-are found in all cells; consequently they are present in all tissues,
-in all glandular organs, and their widespread distribution constitutes
-evidence of their great physiological importance. Nucleoproteids are
-compound substances made up of some form of proteid and nucleic acid.
-By simple hydrolysis with dilute mineral acids they are broken down
-into proteid, phosphoric acid, and one or more bodies known as nuclein
-bases. Of these latter substances, there are four well-defined bodies,
-viz., adenin, hypoxanthin, guanin, and xanthin, which from their
-peculiar chemical constitution are known as “purin bases.” In the
-body, there is present in many cells a peculiar intracellular enzyme
-termed _nuclease_, which has the power of liberating these purin bases
-from their combination as a component part of tissue nucleoproteids,
-or of the contained nucleic acid. In autolysis or self-digestion of
-many glands, such as the spleen, thymus, etc., this chemical reaction
-is easily induced by action of the contained nuclease. Further, the
-liberated purin bases then undergo change because of the presence of
-certain deamidizing enzymes, and as a result guanin is transformed into
-xanthin, and adenin is converted into hypoxanthin. These ferments are
-true intracellular enzymes, and are termed respectively _guanase_ and
-_adenase_. The real essence of the reaction they accomplish is clearly
-indicated by the following formulæ, which likewise show the chemical
-nature and relationship of the four substances:
-
- HN--CO HN--CO
- | | | |
- H_{2}N·C C--NH + H_{2}O = CO C--NH + NH_{3}
- || || \ || || \
- || || CH || || CH
- || || // || || //
- N--C--N HN--C--N
-
- Guanin Xanthin
-
- N==C·NH_{2} HN--CO
- | | | |
- HC C--NH + H_{2}O = HC C--NH + NH_{3}
- || || \ || || \
- || || CH || || CH
- || || // || || //
- N--C--N N--C--N
-
- Adenin Hypoxanthin
-
-These two enzymes are typical hydrolyzing enzymes, but it is to be
-noted that there is not only a taking on of water with a retention of
-the oxygen, but there is also a giving off of ammonia, by which the
-transformation is made possible. Adenin is known as an amino-purin
-and guanin as an amino-oxypurin, while hypoxanthin is an oxypurin and
-xanthin a dioxypurin. In other words, the two intracellular enzymes
-are able to transform the two amino-purins into the corresponding
-oxypurins; _i. e._, the enzymes are deamidizing ferments, liberating
-the NH_{2} group of the adenin and guanin and thus forming two new
-compounds. These reactions, though more or less technical, are
-emphasized in this way not merely because they illustrate the action
-of intracellular enzymes in intermediary metabolism, thus affording a
-striking example of the gradual changes that take place in ordinary
-katabolic processes, but especially because they throw light upon the
-production of another substance common in body metabolism, viz., uric
-acid. It has long been known that nucleoproteids, nucleins, and other
-compounds containing these purin radicles, when taken as food, cause
-at once an increased output of uric acid, and it has been clearly
-recognized that in some way this latter substance, as a product of
-metabolism, must come from the transformation of nuclein bases. To-day,
-we understand that in many tissues, as in the liver, spleen, lungs,
-and muscle, there is present a peculiar oxidizing ferment, an oxidase,
-by the action of which hypoxanthin can be converted into xanthin, and
-the latter directly oxidized to uric acid. This conversion into uric
-acid is purely a process of oxidation, brought about by a typical
-intracellular oxidase, known specifically as “xanthin oxidase,” the
-reaction involved being as follows:
-
- HN--CO HN--CO
- | | | |
- CO C--NH + O = CO C--NH
- | || \ | || \
- | || CH | || CO
- | || // | || /
- HN--C--N HN--C--NH
-
- Xanthin Uric acid
-
-From these several reactions, it is clear how various intracellular
-enzymes working one after the other are able gradually to evolve uric
-acid from tissue nucleoproteids. Further, it is to be noted that there
-is another tissue oxidase--contained principally in the kidneys,
-muscle, and liver--which has the power of oxidizing and thus destroying
-uric acid, with formation, among other substances, of urea. Remembering
-that urea has the following chemical constitution
-
- NH_{2}
- /
- C==O
- \
- NH_{2}
-
-it is easy to see, by comparison of the formulæ, how uric acid might
-easily yield two molecules of urea through simple oxidation. In this
-way, excess of uric acid produced in the body can be converted into
-urea, and in this harmless form be excreted from the system.
-
-Finally, reference should be made here to several other products of
-tissue metabolism, products of the breaking down of proteid matter in
-the body, since they are liable to prove of interest to us in other
-connections. Thus creatin, abundant in the muscle and other places; the
-related substance creatinin, present in the urine; methyl guanidin,
-a decomposition product of creatin; and urea, all call for a word of
-description. The chemical relationship of these bodies is clearly
-indicated by the following formulæ:
-
- NH_{2} NH-------
- / / \
- C==NH C==NH CO
- \ \ /
- N(CH_{3})CH_{2}COOH N(CH_{3})CH_{2}
-
- Creatin Creatinin
-
- NH_{2} NH_{2}
- / /
- C==NH C==O
- \ \
- NH(CH_{3}) NH_{2}
-
- Methyl guanidin Urea
-
-Creatinin is chemically the anhydride of creatin, _i. e._, it can be
-formed from creatin by the simple extraction of one molecule of water,
-H_{2}O. Creatin, by hydrolytic cleavage, will break down into one
-molecule of urea and one molecule of sarcosin or methyl glycocoll, as
-shown in the following equation:
-
- NH_{2} NH_{2}
- / CH_{2}·NH·(CH_{3}) /
- C==NH + H_{2}O = | + C==O
- \ COOH \
- N (CH_{3}) CH_{2}COOH NH_{2}
-
- Creatin Sarcosin Urea
-
-Methyl guanidin is a decomposition product of creatin, while guanidin,
-as can be seen from the formula, is like urea, excepting that the
-group NH replaces the oxygen of urea. These simple statements will
-suffice for our present purpose, viz., to indicate the more or less
-close chemical relationships existing between many of these nitrogenous
-decomposition products resulting from proteid katabolism; also to
-suggest how by slight chemical alteration one decomposition product
-may be resolved into another related substance in the processes of
-katabolism. Our conception of the processes involved in proteid
-katabolism is that of a series of progressive chemical decompositions,
-in which intracellular enzymes play the all-important part. The
-intermediary products formed are definite bodies because of the
-specific nature of the active enzymes, and, secondly, because of the
-chemical nature of the substances acted upon. In other words, oxidation
-in the animal body takes the shape of a series of well-defined chemical
-reactions, in which chemical constitution and specific enzyme action
-are the predetermining cause. In the absence of the particular chemical
-groups, the oxidase is unable to bring about oxidation, or, given the
-proper compound or mother substance in the absence of the specific
-oxidase, there is no oxidation. Hence, oxidation in the animal body
-is not the result of simple combustion, but, on the contrary, it
-consists of a series of orderly chemical processes, each one of which
-is presided over by an intracellular enzyme, specific in its nature,
-in that it is capable of acting only upon substances having a certain
-definite constitution, and leading invariably to a certain definite
-result. The processes which years ago were considered as due to the
-peculiar vital properties of the tissue cells, and which were supposed
-to be entirely dependent upon their morphological and functional
-integrity, are now seen to be due primarily to a great variety of
-enzymes, manufactured indeed by the living cells, but capable of
-manifesting their activity even when free from the influence of the
-living protoplasm. The varied processes of tissue katabolism are the
-result of orderly and progressive chemical changes, in which cleavage,
-hydrolysis, reduction, oxidation, deamidization, etc., alternate with
-each other under the influence of specific enzymes, where chemical
-constitution and the structural make-up of the various molecules are
-determining factors in the changes produced.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-THE BALANCE OF NUTRITION
-
- TOPICS: Body equilibrium. Nitrogen equilibrium. Carbon equilibrium.
- Loss of nitrogen during fasting. Influence of previous diet on loss
- of nitrogen in fasting. Output of carbon during fasting. Influence
- of pure proteid diet on output of nitrogen. Influence of fat on
- proteid metabolism. Effect of carbohydrate on nitrogen metabolism.
- Storing up of proteid by the body. Transformation of energy in the
- body. Respiration calorimeter. Basal energy exchange of the body.
- Circumstances influencing energy exchange. Effect of food on heat
- production. Respiratory quotient and its significance. Influence of
- muscle work on energy exchange. Elimination of carbon dioxide during
- work and with different diets. Effect of excessive muscular work
- on energy exchange. Oxygen consumption under different conditions.
- Output of matter and energy subject to great variation. Body
- equilibrium and approximate nitrogen balance to be expected in health.
-
-
-Man, strictly speaking, is always in a condition of unequilibrium. If
-placed upon a large and sensitive pair of scales with the opposite
-side exactly counterpoised, he will be found to lose weight constantly
-until water or food are taken, when the losses of an hour or two may
-be made good, or perchance more than balanced. The human body is a
-maelstrom of chemical changes; chemical decompositions are taking place
-continuously at the expense of the proteids, fats, and carbohydrates
-of the tissues and of the food, the stored-up energy of these organic
-compounds being thereby transformed into the active or “kinetic”
-forms of heat and motion; while carbon dioxide, water, urea, and
-some few other nitrogenous substances are being continually formed as
-the normal waste products of these tissue changes, and constantly or
-intermittently excreted. In other words, the body is in a perpetual
-condition of chemical oscillation, constantly consuming its own
-substance, rejecting the waste products which result, and giving off
-energy in the several forms characteristic of living beings. The
-condition of the body plainly depends upon the relation which it is
-able to maintain between the income and the expenditure of matter
-and energy. If the income equals the output, the body is kept in a
-condition approaching equilibrium; if the intake exceeds the outgo, the
-body adds to its capital of matter and energy; while if the expenditure
-is greater than the income, the accumulated capital is drawn upon;
-and this, if continued indefinitely, results in a drain upon the bank
-which must eventually end in disaster. It is comparatively easy,
-however, for man to maintain his body in a condition of equilibrium
-from day to day; _i. e._, the losses of the morning can be made good
-at luncheon, or the expenditures of an entire day counterbalanced by
-a corresponding addition to capital the following day, in which case
-the body may be said to be in balance. It is necessary, however, to
-discriminate between body equilibrium, meaning thereby the maintenance
-from day to day of a constant body-weight, and nitrogen equilibrium,
-or carbon equilibrium. In the latter cases, what is meant is that the
-intake of nitrogen, or of carbon, exactly equals the output of these
-two elements. It is quite possible, however, to have a condition of
-nitrogen equilibrium without the body being in a state of balance, as
-when the outgo of carbon exceeds the intake of carbon, or when there is
-an increased output of water.
-
-As a rule, it may be stated that when a man puts out less carbon and
-less nitrogen than he takes in he must be gaining in weight; the only
-exception being the possible case of an increased excretion of water,
-which might more than counterbalance the gain. On the other hand, if
-he gives off more carbon and more nitrogen than he takes in, the body
-must lose in weight. Where the output of carbon is beyond the amount of
-carbon ingested, the lost carbon represents a drain upon body fat. In
-a reversal of this condition, _i. e._, where the carbon taken in is in
-excess of the outgo, the body is gaining in fat. Theoretically, gain
-or loss of carbon may mean gain or loss of either carbohydrate or fat,
-but practically stored-up carbon generally stands for accumulated fat;
-and, correspondingly, loss of carbon represents a withdrawal from the
-store of adipose tissue, since glycogen and sugar from a quantitative
-standpoint figure only slightly in these metabolic processes. When the
-body excretes more nitrogen than is taken in during a given period,
-there is only one interpretation possible, viz., that the body is
-losing proteid or flesh. If, on the other hand, the nitrogen import
-exceeds the outgo, then the body must be gaining flesh. Here, again,
-there is the theoretical possibility that gain or loss of nitrogen
-might represent increase or decrease of proteid in some glandular
-organ, or even in the blood; but practically it is the relatively
-bulky muscle tissue, with its high content of proteid matter, that is
-most subject to change in metabolism. Finally, it is easy to see how,
-knowing the percentage of nitrogen in proteid and the percentage of
-carbon in fat, one can calculate from the nitrogen and carbon lost or
-gained the amounts of proteid or fat added to the capital stock, or
-withdrawn from the store of nutritive material.
-
-When there is no income, as in fasting, the body loses rapidly, living
-during the hunger period upon its store of energy-containing material.
-Many careful observations have been made upon people who have fasted
-for long periods, some as long as thirty days, the income consisting
-solely of water. The following figures[22] show the daily excretion of
-nitrogen in several notable cases:
-
- [22] Taken from Landergren: Untersuchungen über die Eiweissumsetzung
- des Menschen. Skandinavisches Archiv für Physiologie, Band 14, p.
- 112; and from A. Magnus-Levy: v. Noorden’s Handbuch der Pathologie
- des Stoffwechsels, 1906, p. 312.
-
- +-----------------+-------------+-------------+-------------+
- | | Breithaupt. | Cetti. | Succi. |
- | Day of Fasting. | 59.9 Kilos. | 56.5 Kilos. | 62.4 Kilos. |
- +-----------------+-------------+-------------+-------------+
- | | grams | grams | grams |
- | 0 | 13.0 | 13.5 | 16.2 |
- | 1 | 10.0 | 13.6 | 13.8 |
- | 2 | 9.9 | 12.6 | 11.0 |
- | 3 | 13.3 | 13.1 | 13.9 |
- | 4 | 12.8 | 12.4 | 12.8 |
- | 5 | 11.0 | 10.7 | 12.8 |
- | 6 | 9.9 | 10.1 | 10.1 |
- | 7 | ... | 10.9 | 9.4 |
- | 8 | ... | 8.9 | 8.4 |
- | 9 | ... | 10.8 | 7.8 |
- | 10 | ... | 9.5 | 6.7 |
- +-----------------+-------------+-------------+-------------+
-
-In Succi’s case, the fasting was continued for thirty days. The daily
-average loss of nitrogen from the 11th to the 15th day was 5.8 grams;
-from the 16th to the 20th day, 5.3 grams; from the 20th to the 25th
-day, 4.7 grams; and from the 26th to the 30th day, 5.3 grams. A daily
-loss of 5.3 grams of nitrogen means a breaking down, or using up, of 33
-grams of proteid, or a little more than one ounce. On the sixth day of
-fasting, all three of these subjects showed essentially the same daily
-loss of nitrogen; viz., 10 grams, which implies a using up of 62.5
-grams of proteid material. We must not be led astray by these figures,
-however, or draw too hasty conclusions therefrom regarding the
-requirements of the body for proteid food. Noting the close agreement
-in the nitrogen output of the three subjects on the sixth day, combined
-with the fact that their body-weight was essentially the same, we
-might infer that 62.5 grams of proteid matter represents the amount of
-nitrogenous food necessary to maintain nitrogen equilibrium and keep
-the body in a condition of balance. Such a conclusion, however, would
-be quite erroneous for several reasons. First, a man fasting, if he was
-in an ordinary condition of nutrition prior to the fast, has in his
-tissues a large store of fat. It is considered that in fasting only
-about 10–12 per cent of the total energy of the body is derived from
-tissue proteid; the major part comes from the fat stored up. When there
-is no income to make good the loss, the body must naturally draw upon
-its own store. A certain amount of proteid must be used up daily, but
-in addition there are the energy requirements to be considered. These
-are met mainly by fat and carbohydrate, and so long as fat endures
-proteid will be drawn upon only, or mainly, to meet the nitrogen
-requirement; but if the fat gives out, then proteid must be used in
-larger quantity, as a source of energy. Hence in fasting, the daily
-loss of nitrogen will be governed largely by the condition of the body
-as regards fat. Thus, Munk has reported the case of a well-nourished
-and fat person, suffering from disease of the brain, who gave off daily
-in the later stages of starvation only one-third the amount of nitrogen
-voided by Cetti, who had been poorly nourished. Obviously, in fasting,
-as soon as the adipose tissue of the body has been largely used up,
-there will be an increase in the amount of tissue proteid consumed,
-since under such conditions the heat of the body and the energy of
-muscular work (work of the heart and involuntary muscles) must come
-from the decomposition of proteid. In harmony with this statement, it
-is frequently observed that in cases of starvation there comes toward
-the end a sudden and marked increase in the output of nitrogen.
-
-Secondly, the elimination of nitrogen during the earlier days of
-fasting is governed in large measure by the character and extent of
-the diet on the days just preceding the fast. This is well illustrated
-by some experiments conducted by C. Voit on a dog. In the first series
-of experiments, the dog received daily 2500 grams of meat prior to
-fasting; in the second series, 1500 grams of meat were fed daily before
-the fast; while in the third series, a mixed diet relatively poor
-in proteid was given. The following figures[23] show the amounts of
-proteid used up by the dog (calculated from the nitrogen excreted) each
-day of the fasting period, under the different conditions:
-
- [23] Expressed in this form from Voit’s figures by A. Magnus-Levy.
- Loc. cit., p. 311.
-
- +------------------+---------------+----------------+---------------+
- | | First Series. | Second Series. | Third Series. |
- +------------------+---------------+----------------+---------------+
- | | grams | grams | grams |
- |First fasting day | 175 | 77 | 40 |
- |Second " " | 72 | 54 | 33 |
- |Third " " | 56 | 46 | 30 |
- |Fourth " " | 50 | 53 | 36 |
- |Fifth " " | 36 | 43 | 35 |
- |Sixth " " | 39 | 37 | 37 |
- +------------------+---------------+----------------+---------------+
-
-We see very clearly in these experiments the effects of the large
-quantities of proteid fed on the destruction of proteid in the early
-days of fasting. When the body is rich in proteid from food previously
-taken, the metabolism of nitrogenous matter is very large at first,
-as in the first series of experiments. Indeed, in this series, even
-on the fifth day of fasting, the amount of proteid metabolized was
-larger than on the second day of the third series. We have here a
-forcible illustration of the physiological axiom that excess of proteid
-matter in the tissues, or in the blood, stimulates proteid metabolism;
-and it affords convincing proof of the contention that in the first
-days of fasting the output of nitrogen, or the amount of proteid used
-up, will depend in large measure upon the proteid condition of the
-body at the time of the fast. Equally noticeable is the fact that
-there comes a time--the sixth day in the above experiment--when the
-nitrogen output reaches a common level, irrespective of the previous
-proteid condition of the body. Further, it is easy to see that the
-greater loss of nitrogen, _i. e._, the large breaking down of proteid
-during the first few days of fasting, in those cases where proteid
-food has been freely taken, suggests the existence in the tissues of
-two forms of proteid. We may term them, following the nomenclature of
-Voit, as circulating and morphotic, or tissue, proteid; or, we may
-designate them as labile and stable forms of proteid. In other words,
-following the usually accepted view, this circulating or labile proteid
-represents reserve or surplus material which is easily decomposed
-and hence rapidly gotten rid of, while the stable proteid is more
-slowly oxidized, and its metabolism may be taken as representing more
-nearly the real necessities of the body. However this may be, it is
-plainly manifest that the nitrogen output, meaning the metabolism of
-proteid matter, during hunger or fasting is modified by a variety of
-circumstances, notably the previous nutritive condition of the body as
-regards both fat and proteid. It is hardly necessary to add that the
-amount of muscular work performed is another factor of importance in
-this connection. Fat in the body represents inert material stored up
-mainly for nutritive purposes; hence, in hunger it is used largely, and
-serves to protect more important tissues. Thus, experiments have shown
-that in long periods of fasting, adipose tissue may be consumed to the
-extent of 97 per cent of the total amount present, while the heart and
-nervous tissue will not lose over 3 per cent of their tissue substance.
-The influence of tissue fat upon the consumption of proteid during
-hunger can thus be fully appreciated.
-
-The output of carbon during fasting may be illustrated by the following
-experiment[24] made upon a young man, the nitrogen data being included
-for comparison, and likewise the intake of food, in terms of nitrogen
-and carbon, preceding the fast and for two days following the fast. The
-fasting was of five days’ duration.
-
- [24] Taken from Johansson, Landergren, Sondén, and Tiegerstedt:
- Beiträge zur Kenntniss des Stoffwechsels beim hungernden Menschen.
- Skandinavisches Archiv für Physiologie, Band 7, p. 29.
-
- +------+--------------+---------------------+------------------------+
- | | | Intake. | Output. |
- | Day. | Body-weight. +---------+-----------+------------+-----------+
- | | | Carbon. | Nitrogen. | Carbon.[25]| Nitrogen. |
- +------+--------------+---------+-----------+------------+-----------+
- | | kilos | grams | grams | grams | grams |
- | 2 | 67.4 | 438.7 | 30.96 | 303.4 | 25.81 |
- | 3 | 66.9 | 0 | 0 | 197.6 | 12.17 |
- | 4 | 65.7 | 0 | 0 | 188.8 | 12.85 |
- | 5 | 64.8 | 0 | 0 | 183.2 | 13.61 |
- | 6 | 63.9 | 0 | 0 | 180.8 | 13.69 |
- | 7 | 63.1 | 0 | 0 | 176.2 | 11.47 |
- | 8 | 63.9 | 439.9 | 35.65 | 270.5 | 26.83 |
- | 9 | 65.5 | 391.7 | 23.68 | 258.8 | 19.46 |
- +------+--------------+---------+-----------+------------+-----------+
-
- [25] The carbon output represents the total carbon of the expired
- air, urine, and excrement.
-
-On the non-fasting days, the intake consisted of an ordinary food
-mixture of proteids, fats, and carbohydrates, with a small addition
-of alcohol. The point to be emphasized here, however, is that the
-carbon-content was more than sufficient to meet the needs of the body.
-Thus, it will be observed that on all three of the days when food was
-taken, the income of carbon was far in excess of the output. In other
-words, on the day preceding the beginning of the fast the body stored
-up 135 grams of carbon, and on the day following the fast the body
-retained 169 grams of carbon to help make good the loss. Similarly,
-the amount of proteid food taken in on the day prior to the fast was
-considerably in excess of the needs of the body, 5.1 grams of nitrogen
-equivalent to 31.8 grams of proteid being stored for future use.
-Plainly, the man was not in either carbon or nitrogen balance prior
-to the fast, but was taking far more food than the needs of the body
-called for. This fact may be emphasized by noting that the total fuel
-value of the daily food, plus the fuel value of the alcohol, amounted
-on an average to about 4200 large calories, while the fuel value of the
-material metabolized on the feeding days averaged only 2500 calories.
-Looking at the figures showing the output of carbon, as well as of
-nitrogen, during the fasting days, it is to be seen that in the early
-days of fasting, the metabolism of the body tends to remain at a fairly
-constant level, especially when figured per kilogram of body-weight.
-
-To fully appreciate what takes place in a man of the above body-weight
-fasting for five days (though living on a large excess of food prior to
-the fast), the daily losses of carbon and nitrogen may be translated
-into terms of fat and proteid. If it is assumed that the total carbon,
-aside from what necessarily belongs to the proteid indicated by the
-nitrogen figures, comes from the oxidation of fat, it is easy to
-compute the amounts of fat and proteid metabolized, or destroyed, each
-day of the fasting period. These are shown in the following table:
-
- +------+--------------+--------------+
- | Day. | Proteid | Fat |
- | | metabolized. | metabolized. |
- +------+--------------+--------------+
- | | grams | grams |
- | 3 | 76.1 | 206.1 |
- | 4 | 80.3 | 191.6 |
- | 5 | 85.1 | 181.2 |
- | 6 | 85.6 | 177.6 |
- | 7 | 71.7 | 181.2 |
- +------+--------------+--------------+
-
-Finally, if from these figures we calculate the fuel value of the
-proteid and fat oxidized per day, it is possible to gain a fairly clear
-conception of the part played by these two classes of tissue material
-during fasting, in furnishing the heat of the body and the energy for
-muscular motion, etc.
-
- +------+---------------+---------------+-------------+
- | | Fuel Value of | Fuel Value of | Total |
- | Day. | the Proteid | the Fat | Fuel Value. |
- | | metabolized. | metabolized. | |
- +------+---------------+---------------+-------------+
- | | calories | calories | calories |
- | 3 | 303 | 1916 | 2220 |
- | 4 | 320 | 1781 | 2102 |
- | 5 | 339 | 1684 | 2024 |
- | 6 | 341 | 1651 | 1992 |
- | 7 | 286 | 1684 | 1970 |
- +------+---------------+---------------+-------------+
-
-These somewhat general statements, with the illustrations given, will
-serve in a brief way to emphasize some of the essential features of
-metabolism in the fasting individual; where there is no income of
-energy-containing material, and where the body must draw entirely
-upon its store of accumulated fat and proteid to keep the machinery
-in motion, maintain body temperature, and do the tasks of every-day
-life. When it is remembered that persons have fasted for periods of
-thirty days or longer without succumbing, it is evident that the body
-of the well-nourished man has a large reserve of nutritive material,
-which can be drawn upon in cases of emergency. At the same time, the
-facts presented show us that in the early days of fasting the actual
-amounts of tissue proteid and body fat consumed are not large. In
-Cetti’s case, on the sixth day of fasting the metabolized nitrogen
-amounted to 10 grams, which implies a loss of 62.5 grams of proteid.
-At this rate of loss, one pound of dry proteid matter in the form of
-tissue proteid would meet the wants of a man of 130 pounds body-weight
-for seven and a half days, provided of course there was a reasonable
-stock of fat to help satisfy the energy requirements. Finally, we may
-again emphasize the fact that the loss of nitrogen in the fasting man
-is by no means a measure of the minimal proteid requirement. By feeding
-fat, or carbohydrate, or both, the output of nitrogen can be materially
-diminished, although naturally we cannot establish a nitrogen balance
-by so doing, since the income is free from nitrogen; but we can
-postpone for a time the approach of nitrogen starvation.
-
-We may next profitably consider the effect of a pure proteid diet--such
-as lean meat free from fat--on the output of nitrogen. In studying this
-problem, we at once meet with several important and surprising facts.
-First, we are led to see that, strange as it may seem, every addition
-of proteid to the diet results in an increased excretion of nitrogen.
-In other words, increase of proteid income is followed at once by an
-increase in the metabolism of proteid, with a corresponding outgo of
-nitrogen. The hungry or fasting man with his income entirely cut off,
-and consequently suffering from a heavy drain upon his capital stock,
-would be expected, when suddenly supplied with fresh capital in the
-form of meat or other kind of proteid food, to hold on firmly to this
-all-important foodstuff; but such is not the case. It is impossible,
-for example, to establish nitrogen equilibrium by an income of proteid
-equal to what the individual during fasting is found to metabolize.
-As stated by another, “It is one of the cardinal laws of proteid
-metabolism that the store of nitrogenous substances in the body is not
-increased by, or not in proportion to, an increase in the nitrogen
-intake.” The principle is well illustrated in the fasting experiment
-just described. On the fifth day of fasting, the nitrogen output
-amounted to 11.4 grams. On the day following, the man took 35.6 grams
-of nitrogen in the form of proteid, while the excretion of nitrogen for
-that day rose to 26.8 grams. In other words, although deprived of all
-proteid income for five days, and during that period drawing entirely
-upon his proteid capital, the man was wholly unable to avail himself of
-the proteid so abundantly supplied at the close of the fast and make
-good the losses of the preceding days; only a small proportion of the
-proteid income could be retained. If a dog fed on a definite quantity
-of meat suddenly has his proteid income increased, there is at once an
-acceleration of proteid metabolism, and a corresponding increase in the
-output of nitrogen. Addition of still more proteid to his income is
-followed by an accumulation of a portion of the proteid; but this tends
-to decrease gradually, while there is a corresponding daily increase
-in the excretion of nitrogen. In this manner, there finally results a
-condition of nitrogenous equilibrium or nitrogen balance.
-
-Again, an animal brought into nitrogen equilibrium by excessive
-proteid feeding, if suddenly given a small amount of meat per day,
-tends to put out nitrogen from its own tissues. This tissue loss,
-however, decreases slowly, and eventually the animal is quite likely
-to re-establish nitrogen equilibrium at a lower level. There is, in
-other words, a strong tendency for the body to pass into a condition
-of nitrogen balance under different conditions of proteid feeding,
-even after a long period of nitrogen loss and with an abundance of
-proteid in the intake. The starving body, as we have seen, cannot make
-use of all the nitrogen fed, although we can well conceive its great
-need for all the proteid available. A certain amount of the proteid
-fed, or its contained nitrogen, is at once passed out of the body and
-lost, even though the organism be gasping, as it were, for proteid to
-make good the drain incidental to long fasting. A recent writer[26]
-has suggested that some explanation for these anomalies may be found
-in the supposition “that a long succession of generations in the past,
-which have lived from choice or necessity on a diet rich in proteids,
-have handed down to us, as an inheritance, a constitution in which
-arrangements exist for the removal of nitrogen from a considerable
-part of this proteid. The fact that the amount of proteid taken is
-re-adjusted to suit the actual needs of the body, though it makes
-these arrangements unnecessary, will not necessarily remove them. The
-denitrifying enzyme, which has been trained to keep guard over the
-entrances by which nitrogenous substances are admitted into the body,
-will continue to levy its toll of nitrogen, even when the amount of
-proteid presented to it is no more than the tissues which it serves
-actually require.”
-
- [26] Leathes: Problems in Animal Metabolism. Philadelphia, 1906, p.
- 157.
-
-As an illustration of how the body behaves with a low nitrogen intake
-followed by a sudden increase in the income of proteid, some data from
-an experiment performed by Sivén[27] on himself may be cited:
-
- [27] Sivén: Zur Kenntniss des Stoffwechsels beim erwachsenen
- Menschen, mit besonderer Berücksichtigung des Eiweissbedarfs.
- Skandinavisches Archiv für Physiologie, Band 11, p. 308.
-
- +--------+--------------+-------------+-----------+----------+
- | | | Nitrogen of | Nitrogen | Nitrogen |
- | Date. | Body-weight. | the Food. | excreted. | Balance. |
- +--------+--------------+-------------+-----------+----------+
- | | kilos | grams | grams | grams |
- | Nov. 6 | 65.4 | 2.69 | 8.31 | -5.62 |
- | 7 | 65.4 | 2.69 | 5.37 | -2.68 |
- | 8 | 65.1 | 2.69 | 5.71 | -3.02 |
- | 9 | 65.3 | 2.69 | 4.88 | -2.19 |
- | 10 | 65.0 | 2.69 | 4.32 | -1.63 |
- | 11 | 64.9 | 2.69 | 4.25 | -1.56 |
- | 12 | 64.9 | 2.69 | 4.47 | -1.78 |
- | 13 | 64.6 | 2.96 | 4.88 | -1.92 |
- | 14 | 64.4 | 2.96 | 4.30 | -1.44 |
- | 15 | 64.3 | 2.96 | 4.75 | -1.79 |
- | 16 | 64.4 | 2.96 | 4.36 | -1.40 |
- | 17 | 64.4 | 2.96 | 4.13 | -1.17 |
- | 18 | 64.4 | 2.96 | 4.35 | -1.39 |
- | 19 | 64.4 | 2.96 | 4.32 | -1.36 |
- | 20 | 64.4 | 2.96 | 4.22 | -1.26 |
- | 21 | 64.0 | 2.96 | 4.06 | -1.10 |
- | | | | +----------+
- | | | | | -31.31 |
- | | | | | |
- | 22 | 64.1 | 4.02 | 4.22 | -0.20 |
- | 23 | 64.4 | 4.02 | 4.35 | -0.33 |
- | 24 | 64.4 | 4.02 | 4.21 | -0.19 |
- | 25 | 64.4 | 4.02 | 4.40 | -0.38 |
- | | | | +----------+
- | | | | | -1.10 |
- | | | | | |
- | 26 | 64.2 | 8.24 | 6.56 | +1.68 |
- | 27 | 64.4 | 13.45 | 8.67 | +4.78 |
- | 28 | 64.4 | 13.66 | 10.54 | +3.12 |
- | 29 | 64.0 | 13.45 | 11.10 | +2.35 |
- | 30 | 64.2 | 13.24 | 12.83 | +0.41 |
- | Dec. 1 | 64.2 | 13.24 | 11.70 | +1.54 |
- | 2 | 63.9 | 12.61 | 12.00 | +0.61 |
- | | | | +----------+
- | | | | | +14.49 |
- | | | | | |
- | 3 | 64.0 | 22.93 | 16.24 | +6.69 |
- | 4 | 63.9 | 22.41 | 21.47 | +0.94 |
- | 5 | 63.9 | 22.41 | 23.10 | -0.69 |
- | 6 | 63.6 | 23.35 | 23.12 | +0.23 |
- | 7 | 63.9 | 23.04 | 22.82 | +0.22 |
- | 8 | 63.8 | 22.62 | 22.86 | -0.24 |
- | | | | +----------|
- | | | | | +6.15 |
- +--------+--------------+-------------+-----------+----------+
-
-I have ventured to give these data in some detail, because of their
-exceeding great interest in several directions aside from the point
-under discussion. Confining our attention to the nitrogen exchange, it
-is to be observed that for a period of two weeks Sivén lived on less
-than 3 grams of nitrogen per day, and without any excessive intake
-of carbohydrate or fat. During this time, the body naturally was in
-a condition of minus balance as regards nitrogen, the output being
-considerably larger than the income. The total amount of nitrogen lost
-in the period, 31 grams, corresponds to a breaking down of 193 grams of
-tissue proteid, or over one-third of a pound. On increasing the income
-of nitrogen to 4 grams per day, the nitrogen loss still continued,
-though at a much lower rate; indeed, the body is seen to approach very
-closely to a condition of nitrogen equilibrium. Still further increase
-of the nitrogen income to 13 grams per day was followed at once by a
-slight accumulation of proteid, and the body showed a decided plus
-balance of nitrogen, as on November 27. This, however, is seen to
-decrease gradually with a corresponding daily increase in the outgo of
-nitrogen, until on December 2 the body was once more practically in
-nitrogenous equilibrium. On again increasing the nitrogen income, to 23
-grams per day, the same process was repeated, although in this case the
-body more quickly approached a condition of nitrogen balance.
-
-We see in these data striking confirmation of the statement that the
-nitrogen outgo tends to keep pace with the income of nitrogen, the
-body always striving to maintain a condition of nitrogen equilibrium.
-Consequently, the fasting man having lost largely of his store of
-proteid can replace the latter only slowly, even though he eats
-abundantly of proteid food. Thus, Sivén in the week ending December 2,
-though taking over 13 grams of nitrogen a day, retained in his body
-only 14.5 grams of nitrogen during the entire seven days; while in the
-six days following, with a daily intake of 23 grams of nitrogen, he
-gained only about 8 grams additional. The human body does not readily
-store up proteid, and this is true no matter how greatly the tissues
-are in need of replenishment.
-
-If the daily income is reinforced by the addition of carbohydrate or
-fat, there is observed a decided influence on the outgo of nitrogen;
-the rate or extent of proteid metabolism is at once modified, fat and
-carbohydrate both having a direct saving effect on proteid. Neither fat
-nor carbohydrate can prevent the katabolism of proteid, but they can
-and do decrease it, and thus serve as proteid-sparers. In the fasting
-body, or where there is only an intake of proteid, the latter material,
-except for the fat contained in the tissues, must serve the double
-purpose of meeting the specific nitrogen requirements of the body and
-furnishing the requisite energy. The energy requirements, however, can
-be met more advantageously by either of the non-nitrogenous foodstuffs,
-and just so far as they are oxidized, so far will there be a saving of
-proteid. Herein lies the philosophy of a mixed diet, with its natural
-intermingling of proteid, fat, and carbohydrate. For the same reason,
-the body of a man rich in fat will in fasting lose far less proteid
-per day than the lean man; or, if fed with a given amount of proteid
-food, the fat man may attain nitrogen equilibrium, or even store up a
-little proteid, while on the same diet the lean man will lose proteid.
-Further, if a man is in nitrogen balance with a given amount of proteid
-food, the addition of fat or carbohydrate to the diet will permit of a
-reduction in the amount of proteid necessary to maintain nitrogenous
-equilibrium. Fat, however, when added to food, does not always protect
-proteid to the extent possibly suggested by the preceding statements.
-The following data from oft-quoted experiments by Voit[28] on dogs will
-serve to illustrate:
-
- [28] C. Voit: Hermann’s Handbuch der Physiologie des
- Gesammtstoffwechsels, Band 6, p. 130.
-
- +-----------------------++-----------------------------+
- | Food. || Flesh. |
- +-----------+-----------++--------------+--------------+
- | Meat. | Fat. || Metabolized. | On the Body. |
- +-----------+-----------++--------------+--------------+
- | grams | grams || grams | grams |
- | 1500 | 0 || 1512 | -12 |
- | 1500 | 150 || 1474 | +26 |
- | | || | |
- | 500 | 0 || 556 | -56 |
- | 500 | 100 || 520 | -20 |
- +-----------+-----------++--------------+--------------+
-
-It is to be observed that in both of these experiments the fairly large
-addition of fat results in a saving of proteid, but the sparing effect
-in the first experiment amounts to only 38 grams of proteid for the
-150 grams of fat added. In the second experiment, however, there is
-a saving of 36 grams of proteid, although only 100 grams of fat were
-fed. The radical point of difference in the two experiments is the
-amount of proteid ingested. Proteid food stimulates proteid metabolism;
-it likewise accelerates the metabolism of non-nitrogenous matter,
-consequently the sparing or protecting effect of fat on proteid is
-most conspicuous when the intake of proteid is relatively small. Only
-under such conditions, does fat protect in large degree the consumption
-of proteid in the body. In the ordinary, daily, dietary of man, with
-its great variety of food materials and with its proteid-content not
-exceeding 125 grams, fat is apt to be a conspicuous element, and under
-such conditions its sparing effect on proteid metabolism is most
-marked. Further, it must not be forgotten, as Voit originally pointed
-out, that the adipose tissue of the body acts like the food-fat, and
-consequently the proteid-sparing effect of the former may be added to
-that of the latter.
-
-The addition of carbohydrate to a meat diet produces at once a saving
-in the decomposition of proteid, as shown in the following figures,
-covering an experiment of two days:
-
- Meat. Sugar. Proteid metabolized.
- 500 grams. 200 grams. 502 grams.
- 500 0 564
-
-Without the sugar, there was a minus balance of 64 grams of proteid,
-but addition of the carbohydrate caused practically a saving of all
-of this, with establishment of essentially a nitrogen balance. The
-sparing of proteid by carbohydrate is greater than by fats, a fact
-of considerable dietetic importance which is well illustrated by the
-following experiments (on dogs) taken from Voit:
-
- +-------------------------------++-------------------------------------+
- | Food. || Flesh. |
- +-------+-----------------------++--------------+----------------------+
- | Meat. | Non-nitrogenous Food. || Metabolized. | Balance of the Body. |
- +-------+-----------------------++--------------+----------------------+
- | grams | grams || grams | grams |
- | 500 | 250 Fat || 558 | -58 |
- | 500 | 300 Sugar || 466 | +34 |
- | 500 | 200 Sugar || 505 | -5 |
- | 800 | 250 Starch || 745 | +55 |
- | 800 | 200 Fat || 773 | +27 |
- | 2000 | 200–300 Starch || 1792 | +208 |
- | 2000 | 250 Fat || 1883 | +117 |
- +-------+-----------------------++--------------+----------------------+
-
-In considering the results of this experiment, it must be remembered
-that the calorific or fuel value of fat as compared with carbohydrate
-is as 9.3 : 4.1; in other words, fats have a fuel value of more than
-twice that of carbohydrates. In spite of this fact, it is clearly
-evident that carbohydrates as a class--for the different sugars and
-starches act alike in this respect--are far more efficient than fats
-in saving proteid. Thus, with an income of 500 grams of meat and 250
-grams of fat, the body of the animal lost 58 grams of proteid, while
-with a like amount of meat and 300 grams of sugar the body not only
-saved the 58 grams, but in addition stored 34 grams of proteid, showing
-a plus balance to that extent. The sparing of proteid by carbohydrate
-amounts on an average, according to Voit, to 9 per cent--in the highest
-cases to 15 per cent--of the proteid given, while the saving produced
-by fat averages only 7 per cent. Further, increasing quantities of
-carbohydrates in the food diminish the rate of proteid metabolism much
-more regularly and constantly than increasing quantities of fat. We
-may attribute this difference in action, in a measure at least, to the
-greater ease in oxidation and utilization of the carbohydrate. In any
-event, starches and sugars are most valuable adjuncts to the daily
-diet, because of this marked proteid-saving power, while their fuel
-value adds just so much to the total energy intake.
-
-A more striking illustration of the action of carbohydrate in sparing
-proteid is seen in experiments on man, where the nitrogen intake is
-reduced to a minimum, so as to constitute a condition of specific
-nitrogen-hunger. In such a case, increasing amounts of carbohydrate
-added to the intake reduce enormously the using up of tissue proteid.
-The following experiment with a young man 22 years old and 71.3 kilos
-body-weight, reported by Landergren,[29] affords good evidence of the
-extent to which this proteid sparing power may manifest itself.
-
- [29] Landergren: Untersuchungen über die Eiweissumsetzung des
- Menschen, Skandinavisches Archiv für Physiologie, Band 14, p. 114.
-
-We see here the nitrogen consumption fall to the exceedingly low level
-of 3.34 grams per day, or 0.047 gram per kilo of body-weight. To
-appreciate the full significance of this drop in the extent of proteid
-metabolism, we may recall that Succi, with a body-weight of only 62.4
-kilos, on the seventh day of fasting excreted 9.4 grams of nitrogen,
-corresponding to a metabolism of 58.7 grams of tissue proteid. In
-other words, with an intake of only 5.6 grams of proteid, the addition
-of 908 grams of carbohydrate, with a total fuel value of 3745 calories,
-reduced the consumption of tissue proteid to 20.8 grams. The same
-individual, if fasting, would undoubtedly have used up at least 70
-grams of tissue proteid.
-
- +----+------------------------------------------++---------++------------+
- | | Intake. || Output. || |
- |Day.+--------+-----+--------+--------+---------++---------++ Proteid |
- | |Proteid.| Fat.| Carbo- |Alcohol.|Calories.||Nitrogen ||metabolized.|
- | | | |hydrate.| | ||of Urine.|| |
- +----+--------+-----+--------+--------+---------++---------++------------+
- | | grams |grams| grams | grams | || grams || grams |
- | 1 | 35.2 | 6.1 | 507 | 26.6 | 2465.9 || 12.16 || 76.0 |
- | 2 | 28.7 | 4.7 | 787 | 26.6 | 3574.3 || 8.37 || 52.3 |
- | 3 | 28.8 | 4.7 | 841 | 26.6 | 3796.1 || 5.02 || 31.3 |
- | 4 | 28.3 | 4.9 | 839 | 13.3 | 3690.5 || 4.50 || 28.1 |
- | 5 | 5.4 | .. | 898 | .... | 3703.9 || 4.01 || 25.0 |
- | 6 | 6.0 | .. | 931 | .... | 3841.7 || 3.36 || 21.0 |
- | 7 | 5.6 | .. | 908 | .... | 3745.8 || 3.34 || 20.8 |
- +----+--------+-----+--------+--------+---------++---------++------------+
-
-It is evident from what has been said that both of these
-non-nitrogenous foods, fat and carbohydrate, play a very important
-part in nutrition, because of their ability to maintain in a measure
-the integrity of tissue proteid. When we recall that a diet of pure
-proteid, such as meat or eggs, must be excessive in quantity in order
-to meet the energy requirements of the body, and that the stimulating
-action of proteid food serves to whip up body metabolism, we can
-appreciate at full measure the great physiological economy which
-results from the addition of carbohydrate and fat to the daily diet.
-The establishment of nitrogenous equilibrium is made possible at a much
-lower level by the judicious addition of these two non-nitrogenous
-foodstuffs. The same principle may be illustrated in another way, viz.,
-by noting the effect on tissue proteid of withdrawal of a portion of
-the fat or carbohydrate of the intake, in the case of a person nearly
-or quite in nitrogen balance. The following experiment[30] affords a
-good example of what will occur under such treatment:
-
- [30] An experiment by Miura, quoted from A. Magnus-Levy in v.
- Noorden’s Handbuch der Pathologie des Stoffwechsels, 1906, p. 331.
-
- +-------+---------------------------------------++---------+----------+
- | | Income. || |Balance of|
- | +---------+-----+-------------+---------+|Output of| Nitrogen |
- | |Nitrogen.| Fat.|Carbohydrate.|Calories.||Nitrogen.| in Body. |
- +-------+---------+-----+-------------+---------++---------+----------+
- |Av. of | grams |grams| grams | || grams | |
- |3 days | 15.782 |40.47| 289.6 | 1955 || 14.927 | +0.862 |
- |Nov. 30| 15.782 |40.34| 177.3 | 1493 || 14.959 | +0.830 |
- |Dec. 1| 15.782 |40.34| 177.3 | 1493 || 17.546 | -1.757 |
- | 2| 15.782 |40.34| 177.3 | 1493 || 18.452 | -2.663 |
- +-------+---------+-----+-------------+---------++---------+----------+
- | Average of the last two days -2.210 |
- +---------------------------------------------------------------------+
-
-Starting with the body in a condition of plus nitrogen balance, _i.
-e._, with a mixed diet more than sufficient to maintain the tissue
-proteid intact, the reduction of the fuel value of the food from 1955
-to 1493 calories by cutting off 112 grams of carbohydrate per day was
-followed by a gradual, but marked, increase in the output of nitrogen;
-indicating thereby the extent to which the body proteid was then drawn
-upon to make good the loss of energy-containing income. The body showed
-at the close of the experiment a minus nitrogen balance averaging
-2.2 grams per day, or a loss of 13.8 grams of tissue proteid, which
-would obviously have continued, under the above conditions, until the
-body was exhausted. In other words, the 112 grams of carbohydrate,
-if added to the diet on December 3 and the following days, would
-have quickly saved the daily loss of 2.4 grams of nitrogen, and thus
-changed the drain of tissue proteid to an actual gain, with consequent
-establishment of a growing plus balance.
-
-It is obvious from what has been stated, that in man the body can
-accomplish a storing of proteid only when the intake is reinforced by
-substantial additions of fat or carbohydrate. It is plainly a matter of
-great physiological importance that the body should be able to increase
-at times its reserve of proteid. This, however, cannot apparently be
-accomplished on a large scale under ordinary conditions. Any storing
-up of nutritive material in excess, whether it be proteid or fat,
-necessarily involves overfeeding, _i. e._, the taking of an amount of
-food beyond the capacity of the body to metabolize at the time. Fat,
-as we know, may be stored in large quantities, and it is in cases of
-overfeeding with non-nitrogenous foods that we find accumulation of
-fat most marked. Overfeeding with proteid, however, does not lead to
-corresponding results, owing primarily to the peculiar physiological
-properties of proteid; its general stimulating effect on metabolism,
-the tendency of the body to establish nitrogenous equilibrium at
-different levels, and the fact emphasized by von Noorden that flesh
-deposition is primarily a function of the specific energy of developing
-cells. In other words, the protoplasmic cells of the body are more
-important factors in the storing or holding on to proteid than an
-excess of proteid-containing food.
-
-It is generally considered as a settled fact, that in man it is
-impossible to accomplish any large permanent storing or deposition of
-flesh by overfeeding. Similarly, it is understood that the muscular
-strength of man cannot be greatly increased by an excessive intake of
-food. The only conditions under which there is ordinarily any marked
-and permanent flesh deposition are such as are connected with the
-regenerative energy of living cells. Thus, as von Noorden has stated,
-an accumulation or storing of tissue proteid is seen especially in the
-growing body, where new cells are being rapidly constructed; also in
-the adult where growth may have ceased, but where increased muscular
-work has resulted in an hypertrophy or enlargement of the muscular
-tissue; and lastly in those cases where, owing to previous insufficient
-food or to the wasting away of the body incidental to disease, the
-proteid content of the tissues has been more or less diminished, and
-consequently an abundance of proteid food is called for and duly
-utilized to make good the loss. In some oft-quoted experiments by
-Krug, conducted on himself, it was observed that with an abundant food
-intake, sufficient to furnish 2590 calories per day (44 calories per
-kilo of body-weight), a condition approaching nitrogenous equilibrium
-was easily maintained. On then increasing the fuel value of the food
-to 4300 calories (71 calories per kilo of body-weight) by addition
-of fat and carbohydrate, there was during a period of fifteen days a
-sparing of 49.5 grams of nitrogen or 309 grams of proteid, which would
-correspond to about 1450 grams, or three pounds, of fresh muscle. It
-is to be noted, however, that of this excess of calories added to the
-intake only 5 per cent was made use of for flesh deposit, the remaining
-95 per cent going to make fat.
-
-Again, we may call attention to the well-known fact that in feeding
-animals for food, while fat may be laid on in large amounts, flesh
-cannot be so increased by overfeeding. In this matter, however, race
-and individuality count for considerable. Thus, there is on record a
-more recent series of experiments conducted by Dapper[31] on himself
-which shows some remarkable results. Starting with a daily diet not
-excessive in amount, he was able by an addition of only 80 grams of
-starch to accomplish a laying up of 3.32 grams of nitrogen per day for
-a period of twelve days, or a total gain of 39.8 grams of nitrogen,
-equal to 248 grams of proteid. It may be said that the gain of proteid
-or flesh here for the twelve days was no greater than in the preceding
-case (fifteen days), but the difference lies in the fact that Krug
-accomplished his gain by increasing the daily intake from 2590 to 4300
-calories, an amount which he found too large to be eaten with comfort,
-while the later investigator raised the fuel value of his daily food
-from 2930 to only 3250 calories. As the experiments by Dapper contain
-other points of interest bearing on the question before us, we may
-advantageously consider them somewhat in detail. The following table
-gives the more important results:
-
- [31] Max Dapper: Ueber Fleischmast beim Menschen. Inaug. Disser.
- Marburg, 1902.
-
- +----+-----+--------------+-------------------+--------+------------------+
- |No. | | | Food Composition. | | |
- |of |Dura-| Character +---------+---------+Nitrogen|Maxima and Minima |
- |Exp.|tion.| of Food. |Nitrogen.|Calories.|Balance.|of Nitrogen-gain. |
- +----+-----+--------------+---------+---------+--------+------------------+
- | |days | | grams | | grams | grams |
- | 1 | 6 |Ordinary mixed| 20.25 | 2930 | +2.18 |+3.2 on 4th day. |
- | | | diet | | | |+1.5 on 6th day. |
- | | | | | | | |
- | 2 | 12 |Ditto + 80 | 20.09 | 3250 | +3.32 |+4.75 on 2d day. |
- | | | grams starch | | | |+4.65 on 12th day.|
- | | | | | | |+2.30 on 8th day. |
- | | | | | | | |
- | 3 | 9 |Ditto + 80 | 24.58 | 3400 | +2.55 |+5.98 on 1st day. |
- | | | grams starch,| | | |+4.73 on 2d day. |
- | | | + 40 grams | | | |+0.50 on 6th day. |
- | | | plasmon | | | |+1.60 on 9th day. |
- +----+-----+--------------+---------+---------+--------+------------------+
-
-As we look at these results, the nitrogen gain for the first and
-second days of the third experiment and the first day of the second
-experiment may well attract our attention, since they show an
-astonishing laying by of proteid, or gain of flesh, under the influence
-of a comparatively small increase in the fuel value of the food. A
-gain of 5.98 grams of nitrogen means 37.3 grams of proteid, or more
-than an ounce; by no means an inconsiderable addition for one day to
-the store of tissue proteid. In the third experiment, where plasmon
-(dried, milk proteid) was added to the diet, there is to be noted a
-gradual falling off in the proteid-sparing power, which may perhaps
-be interpreted as implying that the body was practically saturated
-with proteid, and that owing to this fact the body was unable to
-continue its laying hold of nitrogen. In the entire period of 21
-days, however, the body had succeeded in accumulating a store of 62.8
-grams of nitrogen, or 392 grams of proteid, and this without adding
-very largely to the intake of non-nitrogenous matter. This experiment
-affords a striking illustration of the ability of the body to “fatten
-on nitrogen,” but it is very doubtful if such results can generally
-be obtained. Lüthje,[32] however, has reported a large retention of
-nitrogen on a diet containing 50 grams of nitrogen daily, with a fuel
-value of 4000 calories. It is more than probable that there existed
-in these particular cases some personal peculiarity or idiosyncrasy
-which favored the proteid-sparing power. The personal coefficient of
-nutrition is not to be ignored; it shows itself in many ways, and the
-above results are to be counted among those that are exceptional and
-not the rule. In the words of Magnus-Levy, “a given diet with Cassius
-may lead to different results than with Anthony.”
-
- [32] Zeitschrift für klinische Medizin, Band 44, p. 22.
-
-For the study of many questions in nutrition, it becomes necessary to
-determine accurately the transformations of energy within the body
-as contrasted with the transformation of matter; the total income
-and outgo of energy, measured in terms of heat, are to be compared
-one with the other and a balance struck. Further, in studying the
-metabolism of carbohydrate and fat it is necessary to determine the
-output of gaseous products through the lungs and skin; to estimate the
-excretion of carbon dioxide and water, and the intake of oxygen. For
-these purposes, a special form of apparatus known as a respiration
-calorimeter is employed. The double name is indicative of the twofold
-character of the apparatus, viz., a suitably constructed chamber so
-arranged as to permit of measuring at the same time the respiratory
-products and the energy given off from the body. The form of apparatus
-best known to-day, and with which exceedingly satisfactory work has
-been done, is the Atwater-Rosa apparatus, as modified by Benedict. It
-consists essentially of a respiration chamber, in reality an air-tight,
-constant-temperature room (with walls of sheet metal, outside of which
-are two concentric coverings of wood completely surrounding it, with
-generous air spaces between), sufficiently large to admit of a man
-living in it for a week or more at a time. Connected with the chamber
-is a great variety of complex apparatus for maintaining and analyzing
-the supply of oxygen, determining the amount of carbon dioxide and
-of water, etc., etc. As an apparatus for measuring heat, the chamber
-may be described as “a constant-temperature, continuous-flow water
-calorimeter, so devised and manipulated that gain or loss of heat
-through the walls of the chamber is prevented, and the heat generated
-within the chamber cannot escape in any other way than that provided
-for carrying it away and measuring it.”[33]
-
- [33] For an account of the respiration calorimeter and the great
- diversity of apparatus accessory thereto, together with a description
- of the methods of measurement, analysis, etc., see Publication No.
- 42, Carnegie Institution of Washington, “A Respiration Calorimeter
- with Appliances for the Direct Determination of Oxygen.” By W. O.
- Atwater and F. G. Benedict.
-
-In illustration of the efficiency of an apparatus of this description,
-and of the close agreement obtainable by direct calorimetric
-measurement with the estimated energy, as figured from the materials
-oxidized in the body, we may quote the following data from Dr.
-Benedict’s report, referred to in the footnote. The subject was a young
-man who had been fasting for five days. The experiment deals with the
-metabolism on the first day after the fast, when a diet composed mainly
-of milk was made use of, containing 53.31 grams of proteid, 211.87
-grams of fat, and 75.41 grams of carbohydrate. The following table
-shows the results of the experiment:
-
- +--------------------------+--------+---------+---------+--------+-----------------+
- | Heat of Combustion of | (d) | (e) | (f) | | Heat Measured |
- | Food and Excreta as | Avail- | Total |Estimated| Heat | Greater or |
- | Determined by Bomb | able | Energy | Energy |Measured| Less than |
- | Calorimeter. | Energy |from Body| from | by | Estimated. |
- +--------+--------+--------+ from |Material | Material|Respira-+--------+--------+
- | (a) | (b) | (c) | Food. |Gained or| Oxidized| tion | | |
- | Food. | Excre- | Urine. | a-(b+c)|Lost.[34]| in the | Calor- | Amount.|Propor- |
- | | ment. | | | | Body. | imeter.| | tion. |
- | | | | | | d-e | | | |
- +--------+--------+--------+--------+---------+---------+--------+--------+--------+
- |calories|calories|calories|calories|calories | calories|calories|calories|per cent|
- | 2569 | 149 | 103 | 2317 | +229 | 2088 | 2113 | +25 | +1.2 |
- +--------+--------+--------+--------+---------+---------+--------+--------+--------+
-
- [34] In the experiment, the body lost 29.16 grams of proteid = 165
- calories, but gained fat and glycogen = 393 calories. Hence, there
- were 229 calories gained from body material.
-
-As is seen from the above figures, the total fuel value of the food
-was 2569 calories. The fuel value of the unoxidized portion of the
-food contained in the excreta was 149 + 103 calories, leaving as the
-available energy of the food 2317 calories. This must be further
-corrected by the fact, mentioned in the footnote, that a portion of
-the food was stored as fat and glycogen, while the body lost at the
-same time a small amount of proteid. Making the necessary correction
-for these causes, we find 2088 calories as the energy from material
-oxidized in the body. The actual output of energy as measured by the
-calorimeter was 2113 calories, only 1.2 per cent greater than the
-estimated amount.
-
-By aid of the respiration calorimeter, many important questions in
-nutrition can be more or less accurately answered, especially such as
-relate to the total energy requirements of the body. The law of the
-conservation of energy obtains in the human body as elsewhere, and if
-we can measure with accuracy the total heat output, with any energy
-liberated in the form of work, and at the same time determine the total
-excretion of carbon dioxide, water, nitrogen, etc., together with the
-intake of oxygen, it becomes not only possible to ascertain the energy
-requirements of the body under different conditions, but, aided by
-data obtainable through study of the exchange of matter, we can draw
-important conclusions concerning the sources of the energy, _i. e._,
-whether from proteid, fat, or carbohydrate.
-
-It is obvious that a man asleep, or lying quietly at rest, in the
-calorimeter, especially when he has been without food for some hours,
-furnishes suitable conditions for ascertaining the minimal energy
-requirements of the body. Under such conditions, bodily activity and
-heat output are at their lowest, and we are thus afforded the means of
-determining what is frequently called the basal energy exchange of the
-body. The following table taken from Magnus-Levy, and embodying results
-from many sources, shows the heat production during sleep, calculated
-for 24 hours, of various individuals of different body-weight and of
-different body surface.
-
-I venture to present these individual results, rather than make a
-general statement simply, because it is important to recognize the
-fact that the basal energy exchange differs according to body-weight,
-extent of body surface, and the condition of the body. In the table,
-the results are arranged in the order of body-weight, and it is
-plain to see that the absolute energy exchange is greater with heavy
-persons than with light, yet the energy exchange does not increase
-in proportion to increase of body-weight. With a man of 83 kilos
-body-weight, the basal exchange is only 30–40 per cent higher than
-in a man of 43 kilos body-weight. In other words, the man of small
-body-weight has, per kilo, a much higher basal exchange than the
-heavier man. The energy exchange is more closely proportional to the
-extent of body surface than to weight.
-
- +-------------+----------------+--------------+
- | Body-weight | Total Calories | Calories per |
- | of the | for 24 Hours. | Kilo of |
- | Individual. | | Body-weight. |
- +-------------+----------------+--------------+
- | kilos | | |
- | 43.2 | 1333 | 30.9 |
- | 48.0 | 1214 | 25.3 |
- | 50.0 | 1315 | 25.9 |
- | 53.0 | 1527 | 28.8 |
- | 55.0 | 1590 | 28.9 |
- | 56.5 | 1519 | 26.8 |
- | 57.2 | 1560 | 27.3 |
- | 58.0 | 1510 | 26.0 |
- | 62.5 | 1431 | 22.9 |
- | 63.0 | 1418 | 22.5 |
- | 63.0 | 1492 | 23.7 |
- | 64.0 | 1656? | 25.8 |
- | 64.9 | 1475 | 22.7 |
- | 65.0 | 1498 | 23.0 |
- | 65.0 | 1445 | 22.2 |
- | 67.5 | 1608 | 23.8 |
- | 67.5 | 1621 | 24.0 |
- | 70.0 | 1661 | 23.7 |
- | 70.0 | 1620 | 23.1 |
- | 71.2 | 1787 | 25.1 |
- | 72.6 | 1550 | 21.3 |
- | 72.7 | 1657 | 22.8 |
- | 73.0 | 1584 | 21.7 |
- | 73.0 | 1630 | 22.4 |
- | 75.6 | 1670 | 22.1 |
- | 82.0 | 1556 | 19.0 |
- | 82.7 | 2030? | 24.5 |
- | 83.5 | 1670 | 20.0 |
- | 88.3 | 2019? | 22.9 |
- | 90.4 | 1773 | 19.6 |
- +-------------+----------------+--------------+
-
-As Richet has expressed it, the basal energy exchange is inversely
-proportional to the body-weight and directly proportional to the body
-surface. This is in harmony with the view advanced by v. Hösslin, “that
-all the important physiological activities of the body, including
-of course its internal work and the consequent heat production, are
-substantially proportional to the two-thirds power of its volume, and
-that since the external surface bears the same ratio to the volume,
-a proportionality necessarily exists between heat production and
-surface.”[35]
-
- [35] See Armsby: Principles of Animal Nutrition, p. 368.
-
-There are, however, many circumstances that modify, or influence,
-energy exchange. Thus, the taking of food, with all the attendant
-processes of digestion, assimilation, etc., involves an expenditure of
-energy not inconsiderable. This has been experimentally demonstrated
-on man by several investigators. With fatty food, Magnus-Levy found
-that his subject lying upon a couch, as completely at rest as possible,
-produced in the 24 hours 1547 calories when 94 grams of fat were eaten,
-and 1582 calories when 195 grams of fat were consumed. The increase of
-heat production over the basal energy exchange was 10 and 58 calories
-respectively. With a mixed diet, where proteid food is a conspicuous
-element, the increase in heat production is much more marked. Thus,
-in some experiments reported from Sweden the following data were
-obtained:[36]
-
- [36] Taken from Armsby: Principles of Animal Nutrition, p. 383.
-
- +---------+---------------------+------------------+
- | Day. | Energy of the Food. | Heat Production. |
- +---------+---------------------+------------------+
- | | calories | calories |
- | First | 4141 | .... |
- | Second | 4277 | 2705 |
- | Third | 0 | 2220 |
- | Fourth | 0 | 2102 |
- | Fifth | 0 | 2024 |
- | Sixth | 0 | 1992 |
- | Seventh | 0 | 1970 |
- | Eighth | 4355 | 2436 |
- | Ninth | 3946 | 2410 |
- +---------+---------------------+------------------+
-
-We see here an increase of 495 calories per day in heat production,
-due to metabolism of the food ingested. In other words, with a basal
-energy exchange of 2022 calories, the average of the five fasting days,
-energy equivalent to 495 calories was expended in taking care of the
-ingested food. It should be added, however, that the daily ration here
-was somewhat excessive, 4193 calories being considerably in excess
-of the requirements of the body. Finally, it should be stated that of
-the several classes of foods, proteids cause the greatest increase in
-metabolism and fats the least.
-
-In studying heat production in the body under varying conditions,
-one of the important aids in drawing conclusions as to the character
-of the body material burned up is the respiratory quotient. This is
-the relationship, or ratio, of the oxygen absorbed to the oxygen of
-the carbon dioxide eliminated, viz., CO_{2}/O_{2}. Carbohydrates
-(C_{6}H_{12}O_{6}, C_{12}H_{22}O_{11}) all contain hydrogen and oxygen
-in the proportion to form water, H_{2}O, and in their oxidation they
-need of oxygen only such quantity as will suffice to oxidize the carbon
-(C) of the sugar to carbon dioxide (CO_{2}). Carbohydrates, starch
-and sugars, have a respiratory quotient of 1.00. Fat, on the other
-hand, has a respiratory quotient of 0.7, and proteid, 0.8. Hence, it
-is easy to see that the respiratory quotient will approach nearer to
-unity as the quantity of carbohydrate burned in the body is increased.
-Similarly, the respiratory quotient will grow smaller the larger the
-amount of fat burned up. Practically, we never find a respiratory
-quotient of 1.0 or 0.7, because there is always some oxidation of
-proteid in the body. If, by way of illustration, we assume that the
-energy of the body under given conditions comes from proteid to the
-extent of 15 per cent, while the remaining 85 per cent is derived from
-the oxidation of carbohydrate, the respiratory quotient will be 0.971.
-If, however, the 85 per cent of energy comes from fat, the respiratory
-quotient will change to 0.722. In the resting body, as in the early
-morning hours, after a night’s sleep and before food is taken, the
-respiratory quotient is generally in the neighborhood of 0.8. When,
-however, as sometimes happens, the quotient at this time of day
-approaches 0.9, it must be assumed that sugar is being burned in the
-body, presumably from carbohydrate still circulating from the previous
-day’s intake.
-
-As can easily be seen, any special drain upon either fat or
-carbohydrate in the processes of the body will be indicated at once
-by a corresponding change in the respiratory quotient. This we shall
-have occasion to notice later on, in considering the source of the
-energy of muscle contraction. Further, the respiratory quotient will
-naturally change in harmony with transformations in the body which
-involve alterations in oxygen-content, without the oxygen of the
-inspired air being necessarily involved; as in the formation of a
-substance poor in oxygen, such as fat, from a substance rich in oxygen,
-such as carbohydrate. Moreover, the reversal of this reaction, as
-in the formation of sugar from proteid with a taking on of oxygen,
-will produce a corresponding effect upon the respiratory quotient.
-As Magnus-Levy has clearly pointed out, in the formation of fat from
-carbohydrate, carbon dioxide is produced in large amount without the
-oxygen of the inspired air being involved at all. In such a change,
-100 grams of starch will yield about 42 grams of fat, while at the
-same time 45 grams of carbon dioxide will be produced. This might
-cause the respiratory quotient to rise as high as 1.38. Again, in
-the formation of sugar from proteid, the respiratory quotient may
-sink very decidedly, the changes involved being accompanied by a
-taking on of oxygen from the air, without, however, any corresponding
-increase of carbon dioxide in the expired air. Assuming a manufacture
-of 60 grams of dextrose from 100 grams of proteid, _i. e._, from the
-non-nitrogenous moiety of the proteid molecule, a respiratory quotient
-of 0.613 would be possible. Thus, a diabetic patient, living upon a
-carbohydrate-free diet, consuming only proteid and fat, may show a
-respiratory quotient of 0.613–0.707. These illustrations will suffice
-to show how chemical alterations taking place in the body, involving
-transformations of proteid, fat, and carbohydrate of the tissues
-and of the food, may produce alterations in the respiratory quotient
-without necessarily being directly connected with intake of oxygen or
-output of carbon dioxide through the lungs; and how, conversely, the
-respiratory quotient becomes a factor of great significance in throwing
-light upon the character of the nutritive changes taking place in the
-body.
-
-Among the various conditions that influence the energy exchange of
-the body, muscle work stands out as the most conspicuous. It needs no
-argument to convince one that all forms of muscular activity involve
-liberation of the energy stored up in the tissues of the body; and
-consequently that all work accomplished means chemical decomposition,
-in which complex molecules are broken down into simple ones with
-liberation of the contained energy, the energy exchange being
-proportional to the amount of work done. As we have seen, the basal
-energy exchange of the normal individual is ascertained by studying his
-heat production while at rest--best during sleep--without food, when
-involuntary muscle activity and heat production are at their lowest.
-The maximum energy exchange is seen in the individual at hard muscular
-work. Heat production is then at its highest, as can be ascertained
-by direct calorimetric observation; or, by studying the output of
-excretory products, which measure the extent of the oxidative processes
-from which comes the energy for the accomplishment of the work. As
-an illustration of the general effect of muscular work on the energy
-exchange of the body, we may cite a summary of some results reported by
-Atwater and Benedict,[37] the figures given being average results, from
-several individuals, and covering different periods of time. Though
-not strictly comparable in all details, they are sufficiently so to
-illustrate the main principle.
-
- [37] Atwater and Benedict: Experiments on the Metabolism of Matter
- and Energy in the Human Body 1900–1902. Bulletin No. 136, Office of
- Experiment Stations, U. S. Department of Agriculture, 1903, p. 141.
-
-
-HEAT GIVEN OFF BY BODY, INCLUDING FOR WORK EXPERIMENTS THE HEAT
-EQUIVALENT OF THE EXTERNAL MUSCULAR WORK.
-
- +----------------+--------+---------------------------------------+--------+
- | | Total | Rates per Hour. | |
- | | Amount +-------------------+-------------------+ Average|
- | Kind of | of Heat| Day Periods. | Night Periods. | for |
- | Experiment. | in 24 | | | 24 |
- | | Hours. +---------+---------+---------+---------+ Hours. |
- | | |7 A.M. to|1 P.M. to|7 P.M. to|1 A.M. to| |
- | | | 1 P.M. | 7 P.M. | 1 A.M. | 7 A.M. | |
- +----------------+--------+---------+---------+---------+---------+--------+
- | |calories| calories| calories| calories| calories|calories|
- |Rest experiments| 2262 | 106.3 | 104.4 | 98.3 | 67.9 | 94.3 |
- +----------------+--------+---------+---------+---------+---------+--------+
- |Work experiments|} | | | | | |
- | Heat eliminated|} 4225 | 231.7 | 235.6 | 118.1 | 78.4 | 166.6 |
- | | | | | | | |
- |Heat equivalent |} | | | | | |
- | of external |} 451 | 58.5 | 56.8 | ... | ... | ... |
- | muscular work |} | | | | | |
- +----------------+--------+---------+---------+---------+---------+--------+
- | Total | 4676 | 290.2 | 292.4 | 118.1 | 78.4 | 194.8 |
- +----------------+--------+---------+---------+---------+---------+--------+
-
-The work done in these experiments was on a stationary bicycle in the
-calorimeter, and the heat equivalent was calculated from measurements
-made by an ergometer attached to the bicycle. We are not concerned here
-with details, but simply with the general question of the influence of
-muscular work upon the energy exchange of the body. We note that the
-work of the day periods, 7 A. M. to 7 P. M., resulted, in the several
-cases brought together under the average figures, in an increased heat
-production amounting to more than 100 per cent. Further, we observe
-that in the body, as in all machines, only a fraction of the energy
-liberated by the accelerated chemical decomposition, or oxidation,
-was manifested as mechanical work, the larger part by far being heat
-eliminated and lost. Thus, Zuntz has found that, in man, about 35 per
-cent of the extra energy of the food used in connection with external
-muscular work is available for that work. This, however, shows a
-noticeably higher degree of efficiency than is generally obtainable
-by the best steam or oil engines. Lastly, attention may be called to
-the fact that after the work of the day was finished at 7 P. M., the
-next period of six hours still showed an accelerated metabolism, as
-contrasted with what took place during absolute rest.
-
-As bearing upon the exchange of matter in the body in connection with
-muscular work, and as showing the relationship which exists here
-between energy exchange and exchange of matter, we may quote a few
-data relating to the elimination of carbon dioxide; remembering that
-this substance represents particularly the final oxidation product in
-the body of carbonaceous materials, such as fat and carbohydrate. The
-following data, taken from Atwater and Benedict,[38] being results of
-experiments upon the subject “J. C. W.,” are of value as showing the
-variations in output of carbon dioxide that may be expected under the
-conditions described:
-
- [38] Loc. cit., pp. 130 and 131.
-
- +------------------+---------+---------+-----------+---------+----------+
- | | | | | | Extra |
- | | Rest Ex-| Rest Ex-| Work Ex- | Work Ex-| Severe |
- | Period. |periments|periments| periments |periments| Work |
- | | without | with |with Carbo-| with |Experiment|
- | | Food. | Food. | hydrate |Fat Diet.| with |
- | | | | Diet. | |Fat Diet. |
- +------------------+---------+---------+-----------+---------+----------+
- | | grams | grams | grams | grams | grams |
- | 7 A.M. to 1 P.M. | 189.6 | 230.4 | 694.0 | 642.3 | 907.0 |
- | 1 P.M. to 7 P.M. | 172.6 | 232.0 | 705.6 | 634.8 | 821.3 |
- | 7 P.M. to 1 A.M. | 167.2 | 196.6 | 260.1 | 230.3 | 842.7 |
- | 1 A.M. to 7 A.M. | 146.7 | 153.1 | 161.1 | 157.6 | 502.6 |
- +------------------+---------+---------+-----------+---------+----------+
- |Total for 24 hours| 676.1 | 812.1 | 1820.8 | 1665.0 | 3073.6 |
- +------------------+---------+---------+-----------+---------+----------+
-
-In considering these figures bearing on the output of carbon dioxide
-under the conditions specified, we note at once a correspondence with
-the total energy exchange, as indicated in the preceding table. As
-previously stated, we are at present dealing simply with generalities,
-and the important point to be observed here is that muscular work--7 A.
-M. to 7 P. M.--in the work experiments, increases enormously the output
-of carbon dioxide. We see clearly emphasized a connection between the
-total energy exchange of the body, as expressed in calories or heat
-units, and the oxidation of carbonaceous material, of which carbon
-dioxide is the natural oxidation product. We note that on the cessation
-of work--7 P. M. to 7 A. M.--the output of carbon dioxide tends to drop
-back to the level characteristic of the corresponding period in rest,
-with or without food. In the experiment with “extra severe muscular
-work,” the results are different simply because here the subject
-worked sixteen hours, necessitating a portion of the work being done
-at night-time. Finally, it should be mentioned that the differences in
-output of carbon dioxide in these experiments are somewhat greater than
-in many experiments of this type, although all show the same general
-characteristics. This may be explained, as stated by the authors from
-whom the data are taken, “by the fact that J. C. W. was a larger and
-heavier man than any of the others; that the differences in diet were
-wider, and that the amounts of external muscular work were larger in
-these experiments than in those with the other subjects.”
-
-If we pass from experiments of this type, conducted in a calorimeter,
-to those cases where competitive trials of endurance are held by
-trained athletes, _i. e._, where external muscular activity is pushed
-to the extreme limit, we then see even more strikingly displayed the
-effect of work in increasing the energy exchange of the body. One of
-the best illustrations of this type of experiment is to be found in the
-observations made in connection with the six-day bicycle race held in
-New York City, at the Madison Square Garden, in December, 1898.[39]
-The observations in question were made upon three of the athletes,
-one of whom withdrew early in the fourth day, while the others
-continued until the close of the race--142 consecutive hours--winning
-the first and fourth places, respectively. The following table gives
-the computation of energy of the material metabolized, exclusive of
-body-fat lost:
-
- [39] See W. O. Atwater and H. C. Sherman: The effect of severe
- and prolonged muscular work on food consumption, digestion, and
- metabolism. Bulletin No. 98, Office of Experiment Stations, U. S.
- Department of Agriculture.
-
- +------------+-------------+--------------+-------------+
- | Subject. | Duration of | Total Energy | Average per |
- | | Experiment. | Metabolized. | Day. |
- +------------+-------------+--------------+-------------+
- | | days | calories | calories |
- | Miller | 6 | 28917 | 4820 |
- | Albert | 6 | 36441 | 6074 |
- | Pilkington | 3 | 13301 | 4464 |
- +------------+-------------+--------------+-------------+
-
-Miller, the winner of the race, who averaged a daily energy exchange
-of 4820 calories, rode 2007 miles during the week, and finished the
-race without physical or mental weakness resulting from the fatigue and
-strain. During the first five days, he rode about 21 hours a day and
-slept only 1 hour. Albert, who weighed a few pounds less than Miller,
-covered 1822 miles in 109 hours, with an average daily exchange of
-6074 calories. We may add a table (on the following page) showing the
-balance of income and outgo of nitrogen in these three subjects, as
-being of general interest in this connection. The figures given are
-averages per day.
-
- +----------+-----+---------------------------------+-------------------+
- | |Dura-| Income in Food. | Nitrogen. |
- | Subject. |tion +-----+-----+------+--------+-----+------+------+-----+
- | | of | | |Carbo-| | | | In | |
- | |Exp. | Pro | Fat.| hy- | Fuel | In | In |Excre-|Loss.|
- | | |teid.| |drate.| Value. |Food.|Urine.|ment. | |
- +----------+-----+-----+-----+------+--------+-----+------+------+-----+
- | |days |grams|grams|grams |calories|grams|grams |grams |grams|
- |Miller | 6 | 169 | 181 | 585 | 4770 | 29.4| 36.2 | 1.8 | 8.6 |
- |Albert | 6 | 179 | 198 | 559 | 6095 | 29.1| 33.7 | 2.5 | 7.1 |
- |Pilkington| 3 | 211 | 178 | 509 | 4610 | 36.0| 38.9 | 2.2 | 5.1 |
- +----------+-----+-----+-----+------+--------+-----+------+------+-----+
-
-The special significance of these data, as bearing upon the topic
-under discussion, is that apparently all three of the subjects were
-drawing in a measure upon their body material. As stated by Atwater
-and Sherman, Pilkington lost per day 5.1 grams of nitrogen; that is
-to say, the total nitrogen excreted exceeded the total nitrogen of
-the food by 5.1 grams per day, corresponding to 33 grams of proteid,
-which must have been drawn from the supply in the body. If we assume
-that lean flesh contains 25 per cent of proteid, this would mean about
-4-3/4 ounces per day. The other two subjects, Miller and Albert, lost
-from the body per day 8.6 grams and 7.1 grams respectively of nitrogen,
-which would imply a loss of about 54 grams and 44 grams of body proteid
-respectively, or 8 ounces and 6-1/4 ounces of lean flesh per day. It is
-evident, therefore, that none of the three subjects consumed sufficient
-food to avoid loss of body proteid, under the existing conditions of
-muscular activity. Indeed, it may be noted in Miller’s case that the
-average fuel value of the food per day was 4770 calories, while the
-average expenditure of energy per day was 4820 calories. We should
-naturally expect, however, that any small deficiency in fuel value
-would be made good by a call upon body fat. “Why the body should use
-its own substance under such circumstances is a question which at
-present cannot be satisfactorily answered. The fact that such was the
-case, each of the contestants who finished the race consuming during
-the period body protein equivalent to 2 or 3 pounds of lean flesh, and
-that no injury resulted therefrom, would seem to indicate that these
-men had stores of protein which could be metabolized to aid in meeting
-the demands put upon the body by the severe exertion, without robbing
-any of the working parts, and at the same time relieving the system
-of a part of the labor of digestion. Possibly, the ability to carry
-such a store of available protein is one of the factors which make for
-physical endurance.”[40] This possibility we shall have occasion to
-discuss in another connection. At present, the facts presented are to
-be accepted as accentuating the general law that the energy exchange
-of the body, everything else being equal, is increased proportionally
-to increase in the extent of external muscular activity. It may be
-noted that Albert, who did considerably less work than Miller, showed
-a much larger exchange of energy than the latter athlete. This,
-however, is to be connected with the fact that his fuel intake was 1300
-calories larger per day than Miller’s; in other words, the conditions
-were not equal. This fact also calls to mind the observations of
-Schnyder,[41] who, studying the relationship between muscular activity
-and the production of carbon dioxide, maintained that the quantity of
-this excretory product formed depends less upon the amount of work
-accomplished than upon the intensity of the exertion; efficiency in
-muscular work varying greatly with the condition of the subject, and
-his familiarity with the particular task involved.
-
- [40] Atwater and Sherman. Loc. cit., p. 51.
-
- [41] L. Schnyder: Muskelkraft und Gaswechsel. Zeitschrift für
- Biologie, Band 33, p. 289.
-
-From what has been said, it is obvious that oxygen consumption, as
-well as output of carbon dioxide, must vary enormously with variations
-in the muscular activity of the body. The one important factor
-influencing the quantities of oxygen and carbon dioxide exchanged in
-the lungs, _i. e._, the extent of the respiratory interchange, is
-muscular activity; and since, as we have seen, carbonaceous material
-is the substance mainly oxidized in muscle work, it follows, as
-carbon dioxide is excreted principally through the lungs, that the
-respiratory interchange becomes in good measure an indicator of the
-extent of chemical decomposition incidental to external work. If we
-recall that man, on an average, at each inspiration draws in about 500
-cubic centimeters of air (30 cubic inches), and that for the 24 hours
-he averages 15 breaths a minute, it is easy to see that in one minute
-the average man will inspire 7.5 litres of air, or 450 litres an hour,
-with a total of 10,800 litres for the entire day, which is equivalent
-to about 380 cubic feet. This would be a volume of air just filling a
-room 7-1/3 feet in length, width, and height. Inspired air loses to the
-body 4.78 volumes per cent of oxygen, while expired air contains an
-excess of 4.34 volumes per cent of carbon dioxide. In muscular work,
-respiration is increased in frequency and in depth. The volume of air
-exchanged in the lungs during severe labor may be increased sevenfold,
-while oxygen consumption and carbon dioxide excretion are frequently
-increased 7–10 times. The following figures, being values for one
-minute, show the effect on oxygen consumption of walking on a level and
-climbing, the subject being a man of 55.5 kilos body-weight:[42]
-
- [42] G. Katzenstein: Ueber die Einwirkung der Muskelthätigkeit auf
- den Stoffverbrauch des Menschen. Pflüger’s Archiv für die gesammte
- Physiologie, Band 49, p. 330. Also Magnus-Levy: v. Noorden’s Handbuch
- der Pathologie der Stoffwechsel, p. 233.
-
- +------------------+----------------------------------------+-----------+
- | |Oxygen Consumption in Cubic Centimeters.| |
- | +---------+------------------------------+ |
- | | | After Deducting Value | |
- | Form of Work. | | for Rest. |Respiratory|
- | | Total. +-----------+------------------+ Quotient. |
- | | | | For Each | |
- | | | Total. | Kilo of Moving | |
- | | | | Weight. | |
- +------------------+---------+-----------+------------------+-----------+
- |Standing at rest | 263.75 | .... | .... | 0.801 |
- |Walking on a level| 763.00 | 499.25 | 8.990 | 0.805 |
- |Climbing | 1253.20 | 989.45 | 17.819 | 0.801 |
- +------------------+---------+-----------+------------------+-----------+
-
-Remembering that these figures represent the oxygen consumption for
-only one minute of time, it is easy to see the striking effect of
-moderate and vigorous exercise on respiratory interchange. Simply
-walking along a level suffices to increase the consumption of oxygen
-threefold over what occurs when the body stands at rest. When the more
-vigorous exercise attendant on lifting the body up a steep incline
-is attempted, most striking is the great increase in the amount of
-oxygen consumed. We thus see another forcible illustration of the
-influence of muscular activity upon the exchange of matter in the
-body, and a further confirmation of the statement, so many times made,
-that oxidation--especially the oxidation of fats and carbohydrates by
-which large quantities of heat are set free, easily convertible into
-mechanical energy--is a primary factor in the metabolic processes, by
-which the machinery of the living man is able to work so efficiently.
-
-Finally, we cannot avoid the conclusion that the outgoings of the body,
-in the form of matter and energy, are subject to great variation,
-incidental to the degree of activity of the day or hour. The ordinary
-vicissitudes of life, bringing days of physical inaction, followed
-perhaps by periods of unusual activity; changes in climatic conditions,
-with their influence upon heat production in the body; alterations in
-the character and amount of the daily dietary, etc.,--all seemingly
-combine as natural obstacles to the maintenance of a true nutritive
-balance. Outgo, however, must be met by adequate amounts of proper
-intake if there is to be an approach toward a balance of nutrition.
-In some way the normal, healthy man does maintain, approximately at
-least, a condition of balance; not necessarily for every hour or for
-every day, but the intake and outgo if measured for a definite period,
-not too short, say for a week or two, will be found to approach each
-other very closely. Body equilibrium and approximate nitrogen balance
-may be reasonably looked for, as well as a balance of total energy, in
-the case of a healthy man leading a life which conforms to ordinary
-physiological requirements. The man who, on the other hand, consciously
-or unconsciously, continues an intake way beyond the outgo, whose daily
-income of nitrogen and total fuel value far exceeds the requirements
-of his body, obviously lives with an accumulating plus balance, which
-ordinarily shows itself in increasing body-weight and with a storing
-away of fat.
-
-Equally conspicuous is the effect of an inadequate income of proper
-nutriment; a food supply which persistently fails to furnish the
-available nitrogen and total energy value called for by the body under
-the conditions prevailing, will inevitably result in a minus balance,
-which, if continued too long, must of necessity tax the body’s store
-to the danger limit. At the same time, the well-nourished individual,
-without being unduly burdened by a bulky store of energy-containing
-material, is always supplied with a sufficient surplus to meet all
-rational demands, when from any cause the intake fails, for brief
-periods of time, to be commensurate with the needs of the body. It is
-reasonable to believe, however, that in the maintenance of good health,
-and the preservation of a high degree of efficiency, the body should be
-kept in a condition approaching a true nutritive balance.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-SOURCE OF THE ENERGY OF MUSCLE WORK, WITH SOME THEORIES OF PROTEID
-METABOLISM
-
- TOPICS: Relation of muscle work to energy exchange. Views of Liebig.
- Experimental evidence. Relation of nitrogen excretion to muscle
- work. Significance of the respiratory quotient in determining
- nature of the material oxidized. Fats and carbohydrates as source
- of energy by muscles. Utilization of proteid as a source of energy.
- Formation of carbohydrate from proteid. Significance of proteid
- metabolism. Theories of Carl Voit. Morphotic proteid. Circulating
- proteid. General conception of proteid metabolism on the basis of
- Voit’s theories. Pflüger’s views of proteid metabolism. Rapidity of
- elimination of food nitrogen. Methods by which nitrogen is split off
- from proteid. Theories of Folin. Significance of creatinin and of the
- percentage distribution of excreted nitrogen. Endogenous or tissue
- metabolism. Exogenous or intermediate metabolism. Needs of the body
- for proteid food possibly satisfied by quantity sufficient to meet
- the demands of tissue or endogenous metabolism. Bearings of Folin’s
- views on current theories and general facts of proteid metabolism.
- Large proteid reserve and voluminous exogenous metabolism probably
- not needed. Importance of feeding experiments in determining the true
- value of different views.
-
-
-As we have already seen, every form of muscular activity begets an
-increase in the energy exchange of the body. Between the two extremes
-of absolute rest and excessive muscular exertion, we find differences
-of 2000 calories or more per day as representing the degree of chemical
-decomposition corresponding to the particular state of muscular
-activity. The work of the involuntary muscles, such as have to do with
-peristalsis, respiration, rhythmical beat of the heart, etc., is a
-relatively constant factor, though naturally subject to some variation,
-as has been pointed out in other connections. External muscular
-activity, however, is the one factor above all others that modifies the
-rate of energy exchange. A little longer walk, a heavier load to carry,
-a steeper hill to climb, any increase great or small in the activity
-of the muscles of the body, means a corresponding increase in chemical
-decomposition, with increased output of the ordinary products of tissue
-oxidation. The material so consumed, or oxidized, must be made good
-to hold the body in equilibrium; the supplies drawn upon are to be
-replaced, if the tissues of the body are to be kept in a proper state
-of efficiency.
-
-What is the nature of the material used up in connection with muscle
-work? As can readily be seen, this is an important question, for on its
-answer depends, in some measure at least, the character of the proper
-intake, or food, to be supplied in order to make good the loss. If the
-energy of mechanical work, the energy of muscle contraction, comes from
-the breaking down of proteid matter alone, then obviously excessive
-muscular work would need to be accompanied, or followed, by a generous
-supply of proteid food. If, on the other hand, external work means
-liberation of energy solely from non-nitrogenous materials, then it
-is equally clear that fats and carbohydrates are the proper foods to
-offset the drain incidental to vigorous muscular action.
-
-The views of Liebig, briefly referred to in a previous chapter, held
-sway over physiologists for many years. His dictum that proteid foods
-were true plastic foods, entering into the structure of the tissues
-of the body, and that they alone were the real sources of muscular
-energy, met for a time with no opposition. It was not until the advent
-of a more critical spirit, accompanied by a fuller appreciation of
-the necessity of experimental evidence, that physiologists began to
-test with scientific accuracy the validity of the current views. It
-is worthy of note that long prior to this time, even before oxygen
-was discovered, the far-sighted and resourceful John Mayow, in his
-work with the various “spirits” of the body and their relation to
-respiration, etc., evolved the view that muscular power has its origin
-in the combustion of fat brought to the muscles by the blood and burned
-there by aid of a gas or “spirit” taken from the air by the lungs, and
-likewise carried to the muscles by the circulating blood. Considering
-the time when Mayow lived and the dearth of true scientific knowledge
-as we measure it to-day, his hypothesis was a wonderful forestalling of
-present views.
-
-It is quite obvious that the views of Liebig, if true, admit of easy
-proof; since, if the energy of muscular power comes from the breaking
-down of proteid, there should be a certain parallelism between the
-output of nitrogen from the body and the amount of muscular work
-accomplished, everything else being equal. As stated in a previous
-chapter, such study of this question as was made soon disclosed the
-fact that the one element above all others that seemed to influence the
-output of nitrogen was the intake of proteid food. Thus, the English
-investigators, Lawes and Gilbert, found by experimenting with animals
-that when the latter were kept under uniform conditions of muscular
-work, the amount of nitrogen excreted ran parallel with the intake
-of nitrogen. Further, in the early experiments of Voit, the results
-obtained clearly showed that variations in the amount of work performed
-were practically without influence on the excretion of nitrogenous
-waste products.
-
-The experiment, however, that came as a death blow to the theories of
-Liebig was that of Fick and Wislicenus,[43] who in 1865 made an ascent
-of the Faulhorn, 6500 feet high, using a diet wholly non-nitrogenous.
-From the nitrogen excreted they were able, of course, to calculate the
-amount of proteid oxidized in the body during the period of work, and
-found that the proteid consumed could not have furnished, at the most,
-more than one-half the energy required to lift the weights of their
-bodies to the top of the high peak. Further, they observed that neither
-during the work period, nor immediately after, was there any noticeable
-increase in the excretion of nitrogen. Obviously, as they state, the
-oxidation of proteid matter in the body cannot be the exclusive source
-of the energy of muscular contraction, since the measurable amount
-of external work performed in the ascent of the mountain was far
-greater than the equivalent of the energy capable of being furnished
-by the proteid actually burned. To which may be added the fact that
-considerable energy, not measurable in their experiment, must have
-been employed in the work of the involuntary muscles of the body; thus
-increasing by so much the difference between the muscular work actually
-accomplished and the available energy from proteid consumed. It is true
-that minor criticisms regarding certain details of the experiment can
-be offered to-day, such as the fact that the men were, in a measure,
-in a state of “nitrogen starvation,” etc., but these criticisms do
-not in any degree militate against the main thesis that the energy of
-muscular contraction does not come exclusively from the consumption or
-breaking down of proteid, either of food or tissue. Vigorous and even
-severe muscular work does not necessarily increase the decomposition
-of proteid material. Dogs made to run in large treadmills, with the
-same diet as on resting days, were found to excrete practically no
-more nitrogen than during the days of rest. Occasionally, however,
-in some one experiment the output of nitrogen would show an increase
-over the output on resting days. Further, experiments made with horses
-led to essentially the same result, except that greater increase in
-the excretion of nitrogen was observed than with dogs. This increase
-in nitrogen output, however, as a concomitant of increased muscular
-activity, could be prevented by adding to the amount of carbohydrate
-food.
-
- [43] See Gesammelte Schriften von Adolf Fick. Ueber die Entstehung
- der Muskelkraft. Band 2, p. 85. Würzburg, 1903.
-
-While experiments of this nature, on man and animals, all tended to
-show little or no increase in the excretion of nitrogen, as a result
-of muscle work; and likewise no increase in the output of sulphur and
-phosphorus, thus strengthening the view that muscular energy is not the
-result of proteid disintegration, there was observed marked increase
-in the consumption of oxygen, and in the excretion of carbon dioxide.
-Non-nitrogenous matter was thus at once suggested as the material
-with which muscle chiefly does its work. There is to-day no question
-of the general truth of this statement, yet there are other aspects
-of the problem to be considered before we can lay it aside. Pflüger,
-working with dogs, and Argutinsky, experimenting on himself by arduous
-mountain climbing, reached conclusions seemingly quite opposed to what
-has just been said. Their results, however, admit of quite a different
-interpretation from what they were disposed to attach to them. Thus,
-Pflüger[44] would go back to the old view that all muscle work is at
-the expense of proteid material, because lean dogs fed mainly, or
-entirely, on meat and made to do an excessive amount of work were found
-by him to excrete nitrogen somewhat in proportion to the amount of work
-done. Argutinsky,[45] likewise, in his mountain climbing carried to the
-point of fatigue, and with a high proteid intake likewise, saw in the
-increased output of nitrogen a suggestion of the same idea. In reality,
-however, their results merely prove that, under some circumstances,
-proteid may serve as the chief source of muscular energy; as when the
-body is poor in fat and carbohydrate, or when the intake consists
-solely of proteid matter. In other words, muscular work may result in
-an increased excretion of nitrogen when the work is very severe, and
-there is not a corresponding increase in the fats or carbohydrates
-(fuel ingredients) of the food. In the words of Bunge,[46] “we might
-assume _à priori_, on teleological grounds, that in the performance
-of its most important functions the organism is to a certain extent
-independent of the quality of its food. As long as non-nitrogenous
-food is supplied in adequate quantity or is stored up in the tissues,
-muscular work is chiefly maintained from this store. When it is gone
-the proteids are attacked.”
-
- [44] Pflüger: Die Quelle der Muskelkraft. Pflüger’s Archiv für die
- gesammte Physiologie, Band 50, p. 98.
-
- [45] Argutinsky: Muskelarbeit und Stickstoffumsatz. Ibid., Band 46,
- p. 552.
-
- [46] Bunge: Textbook of Physiological and Pathological Chemistry.
- Second English Edition, 1902, p. 352.
-
-There is no question that the energy of muscular contraction can come
-from all three classes of organic foodstuffs. Voluntary muscular
-movement is under the control of the nervous system, and when the
-stimulus is applied the muscle is bound to contract, provided of
-course there is sufficient energy-containing material present to
-furnish the means. Muscle tissue, like other tissues and organs, has
-a certain power of adaptability, by which it is able to do its work,
-even though it is not adequately supplied with its preferred nutrient.
-While proteid is plainly not the material from which the energy of
-muscular contraction is ordinarily derived, it is equally evident
-that in emergency, as when the usual store of carbohydrate and fat is
-wanting, proteid can be drawn upon, and in such cases vigorous work
-may be attended with increased nitrogen output. In harmony with this
-statement, we find on record in recent years many experiments, both
-with man and animals, where severe muscular labor is accompanied by an
-excretion of nitrogen beyond what occurs on days of rest; but by simply
-adding to the intake of non-nitrogenous food this increased outgo of
-nitrogen is at once checked. With moderate work, the nitrogen outgo
-is rarely influenced; it is only when the work becomes excessive, or
-the store of non-nitrogenous reserve is small and the intake of the
-latter food is limited, that proteid matter is drawn upon to supply the
-required energy.
-
-Recalling what has been said regarding the significance of the
-respiratory quotient, it is obvious that we have here a means of
-acquiring information as to the character of the material that is
-burned up in the body during muscular work. Increased metabolism
-of carbohydrate will necessarily result in raising the respiratory
-quotient, and if the latter food material alone is involved the
-respiratory quotient must naturally approach 1.0. Zuntz, however, has
-clearly shown that vigorous muscular activity does not materially
-change the respiratory quotient; except in cases of very severe work,
-where the oxygen-supply of the muscles is interfered with. Indeed, the
-muscles may be made to do work sufficient to increase the consumption
-of oxygen threefold or more, without any change in the respiratory
-quotient being observed. And as there is frequently no change whatever
-in the output of nitrogen under these conditions, it follows that the
-energy of the muscle work must have come from the decomposition of
-non-nitrogenous material. If carbohydrates alone were involved, the
-respiratory quotient would obviously undergo change. Since, however,
-this remains practically stationary, we are led to the conclusion that
-fat must be involved in large degree, in addition to carbohydrate.
-
-In this connection, it is a significant fact that with _fasting_
-animals, where the store of carbohydrate material is more or less used
-up, severe muscle work may be accomplished without any appreciable
-increase in nitrogen output, thus showing that proteid material is not
-involved and clearly pointing to fat as the source of the muscular
-energy. Thus, in an experiment referred to by Leathes, a dog on the
-sixth and seventh day of starvation was made to do work in a treadmill
-equivalent to climbing to a height of 1400 meters, yet the output
-of nitrogen was increased from six to only six and a half grams.
-Obviously, not much of the energy of this muscle work could have come
-from the breaking down of proteid, but it must have been derived mainly
-from the oxidation of fat. There is abundant evidence that fat can be
-used as a source of energy by muscles, as well as carbohydrates and
-proteids, and there is every reason for believing that the yield of
-work for a given amount of chemical energy in the form of fat is as
-good as in the case of either of the other two substances. In fact, the
-observations of Zuntz show that fat can be used just as economically
-by the body for muscle work as either carbohydrates or proteid. Thus,
-in one experiment,[47] he determined the oxygen-consumption and
-respiratory quotient in a man resting and working on three different
-diets--one principally fat, one principally carbohydrate, and the other
-principally proteid--and found that slightly less oxygen and energy
-were required to do work on the fat diet than on the others. This is
-clearly shown in the following table:
-
- [47] Quoted from Leathes: Problems in Animal Metabolism, p. 100.
-
- +------------+------------------+------------------+------+----------------+
- | | | | | Per |
- | | Resting. | Working. |Kilo- | Kilogram-meter |
- | | | |gram- | of Work. |
- | Diet +--------+---------+--------+---------+meters+------+---------+
- |Principally.| Oxygen |Respira- | Oxygen |Respira- | of |Oxygen|Calories.|
- | |Used per| tory |Used per| tory | Work | Used.| |
- | | Minute.|Quotient.| Minute.|Quotient.| Done.| | |
- +------------+--------+---------+--------+---------+------+------+---------+
- | | c.c. | | c.c. | | | c.c. | |
- |Fat | 319 | 0.72 | 1029 | 0.72 | 354 | 2.01 | 9.39 |
- |Carbohydrate| 277 | 0.90 | 1029 | 0.90 | 346 | 2.17 | 10.41 |
- |Proteid | 306 | 0.80 | 1127 | 0.80 | 345 | 2.38 | 11.35 |
- +------------+--------+---------+--------+---------+------+------+---------+
-
-From these data, we see that per kilogram-meter of work less energy
-was required and less oxygen consumed with fat than with either of the
-other two foodstuffs; but practically, fat and carbohydrate as sources
-of muscle energy have about the same value.
-
-Much stress is ordinarily laid upon the importance of a large intake
-of proteid food whenever the body is called upon to perform severe, or
-long-continued, muscular work; but in view of what has been stated it
-may be questioned whether there is any real physiological justification
-for such custom. The pedestrian Weston,[48] who in 1884 walked 50 miles
-a day for 100 consecutive days, was found by Blyth during a period of
-five days to consume in his food 37.2 grams of nitrogen a day, while he
-excreted only 35.3 grams, leaving a balance of 1.9 grams of nitrogen
-per day apparently stored in the body. His daily food during this
-period was composed of 262 grams of proteid, 64.6 grams of fat, and 799
-grams of carbohydrate, with an estimated fuel value of 4850 calories.
-Yet he performed this large amount of work daily, and still laid by a
-certain amount of proteid on a ration, the energy value of which would
-not ordinarily be considered high for the muscular work to be done.
-Fourteen years prior to this, Weston, while in New York, was carefully
-studied by Dr. Flint during a period of 15 days, on 5 of which he
-walked a total of 317 miles. His diet was essentially a proteid diet,
-consisting principally of beef extract, oatmeal gruel, and raw eggs.
-Nitrogen intake and output were carefully compared during the days of
-rest and during the days of work, with the results tabulated.
-
- [48] This and the following account of Weston are taken from Bulletin
- No. 98, U. S. Department of Agriculture, Office of Experiment
- Stations. The effect of severe and prolonged muscular work on food
- consumption, digestion, and metabolism. By W. O. Atwater and H. C.
- Sherman, p. 13.
-
- +--------------+----------------+--------+--------------------------+
- | | | | Nitrogen. |
- | | | +-----+------+------+------+
- | | |Duration| In | In | In |Gain +|
- | Period. | Occupation. |of Test.|Food.|Urine.|Excre-| or |
- | | | | | |ment. |Loss -|
- +--------------+----------------+--------+-----+------+------+------+
- | | | days |grams|grams |grams |grams |
- |Fore period |Comparative rest| 5 | 22.0| 18.7 | 1.4 | +1.9 |
- | | | | | | | |
- |Working period|Walking 62 miles|{ | | | | |
- | | per day |{ 5 | 13.2| 21.6 | 1.6 |-10.0 |
- | | | | | | | |
- |After period |Rest | 5 | 28.6| 22.0 | 2.2 | +4.4 |
- +--------------+----------------+--------+-----+------+------+------+
-
-In this case it will be noted that the daily ration was comparatively
-small, and, further, that during the working period the subject
-consumed much less proteid than on the resting days. Moreover, when
-we remember that the total energy value of his diet must have been
-quite small, it is not at all strange that in the laborious task of
-walking 62 miles a day he should have temporarily drawn upon his store
-of body proteid to the extent of 62.5 grams, or 10 grams of nitrogen a
-day. Such experiences, however, do not by any means constitute proof
-that in excessive muscular work there is need for the consumption of
-correspondingly increased quantities of proteid food, or that the
-energy of muscular work comes preferably from the breaking down of
-proteid material. Carbohydrate and fat unquestionably take precedence
-over proteid in this respect, and we may accept as settled the view
-that in all practical ways carbohydrate and fat stand on an equal
-footing as sources of muscular energy. Less clear, perhaps, is the
-question as to how these two radically different types of organic
-material are utilized by the muscle. It has been a favorite belief
-among some physiologists that the contracting muscle makes use of
-only one substance as the direct source of its energy, and that this
-substance is the sugar dextrose. This view would seemingly imply that
-fat and proteid must undergo alteration prior to their utilization
-by the muscle; that, possibly, the carbon of the fat and proteid
-is transformed into sugar before the muscle can make use of it. So
-far as fat is concerned, this view is not supported by the facts
-available, since experiments show that the heat and energy liberated
-in the utilization of a given amount of fat in muscle work are in
-harmony with the energy value of the fat; in other words, the fat is
-apparently burned, or oxidized, directly, without undergoing previous
-transformation into any form of carbohydrate; or, if transformation
-does occur, under some conditions, it must take place within the muscle
-and without loss of energy. The practical significance of these facts
-is at once apparent, for if fat, in order to be available as a source
-of muscle energy, must first undergo conversion into sugar, it would
-be far more economical from a physiological standpoint to replace the
-fat of the diet with carbohydrate in any attempt to provide suitable
-nourishment for the working muscle. We may safely conclude, however,
-that fat and carbohydrate, as previously suggested, are in reality both
-capable of direct metabolism by the muscular tissue, and that each is
-of value as a source of muscular energy in proportion to its heat of
-combustion, yielding substantially the same proportion of its potential
-energy in the form of mechanical work.
-
-Regarding the utilization of proteid as a source of energy by the
-muscle, there are many grounds for believing that here the body
-has to deal with certain alterations, before the proteid can be
-made available. We may indeed conjecture the transformation of a
-non-nitrogenous portion of the proteid molecule into carbohydrate, as
-a necessary step in its utilization for muscle work. It is certainly
-true that in the ordinary katabolic processes, through which proteid
-passes, there is a tendency for the nitrogen-containing portion to
-be quickly split off and eliminated, leaving a carbonaceous residue
-which may represent as much as 80 per cent of the total energy of the
-original proteid. This so-called carbon moiety of the proteid molecule
-is apparently much less rapidly oxidized than the nitrogenous portion,
-and may indeed be temporarily stored in the body, in the form of fat or
-carbohydrate.[49] We have very convincing proof that the carbohydrate
-glycogen can be formed from proteid. Thus, the feeding of proteid to
-warm-blooded animals may be accompanied by an accumulation of glycogen
-in the liver. This is interpreted as meaning that in the cleavage
-of proteid by digestion the various nitrogenous products formed are
-somewhere, probably in the liver, still further acted upon; the
-contained nitrogen with some of the carbon being converted into urea,
-while the non-nitrogenous residue is transformed into glycogen, or
-sugar. That some such change takes place, or, more specifically, that
-carbohydrate does result from proteid is more strikingly shown in human
-beings suffering with diabetes. In severe forms of this disease, all
-carbohydrate food consumed is rapidly eliminated through the kidneys in
-the form of sugar, the body having lost the power of burning sugar. If
-such a person is placed upon a diet composed exclusively of proteid,
-sugar still continues to be excreted, and there is observed a certain
-definite relationship between the nitrogen output and the excretion of
-sugar, thus implying that they have a common origin.
-
- [49] See Leo Langstein: Die Kohlehydratbildung aus Eiweiss.
- Ergebnisse der Physiologie, Band 3, Erster Theil, p. 456.
-
- See also, Lüthje: Zur Frage der Zuckerbildung aus Eiweiss. Archiv für
- d. gesammte Physiologie, Band 106, p. 160.
-
-Further, there are certain drugs, such as phloridzin, which, when
-introduced into the circulation, set up a severe diabetes and
-glycosuria. Dogs treated in this way, fed solely on proteid or even
-starved for some time, will continue to excrete sugar, and as in the
-previous instance, there is observed a certain definite ratio between
-the nitrogen output and the elimination of sugar; thus leading to
-the conclusion that both arise from the destruction of the proteid
-molecule. Careful study of this ratio of dextrose to nitrogen has led
-Lusk to the conclusion that full 58 per cent of the proteid may undergo
-conversion into sugar in the body. Hence, it is easy to see how in
-muscle work, when proteid is the sole source of the energy of muscular
-contraction, the work accomplished may still result from the direct
-oxidation of carbohydrate material, indirectly derived from the proteid
-molecule. It requires no argument, however, to convince one that such a
-procedure for the normal individual is less economical physiologically
-than a direct utilization of carbohydrate and fat, introduced as such
-and duly incorporated with the muscle substance. Consequently, in the
-nourishment of the body for vigorous muscular work, there is reason
-in a diet which shall provide an abundance of carbohydrate and fat;
-proteid being added thereto only in amounts sufficient to meet the
-ordinary requirements of the body for nitrogen and to furnish, it may
-be, proper pabulum for the development of fresh muscle fibres, where,
-as in training, effort is being made to strengthen the muscle tissue
-and so enable it to do more work. Increase in proteid food may help to
-make new tissue, but the source of the energy of muscle work is to be
-found mainly in the breaking down of the non-nitrogenous materials,
-carbohydrate and fat.
-
-In view of these facts, we may advantageously consider next the real
-significance of the proteid metabolism of the body. As we have seen, a
-meal rich in proteid leads at once--within a few hours--to an excretion
-of urea equivalent to full 50 per cent of the nitrogen of the ingested
-proteid, while a few hours later finds practically all of the nitrogen
-of the intake eliminated from the body. Further, it is to be remembered
-that in a general way this occurs no matter what the condition of the
-body may be at the time and no matter how large or small the amount of
-proteid consumed. In other words, there is practically no appreciable
-storing of nitrogen or proteid for future needs,--at least none that is
-proportional to the increase in nitrogen intake, even though the body
-be in a condition approximating to nitrogen starvation. Moreover, it
-is to be recalled that the increased proteid metabolism attendant on
-increased intake of proteid food is accompanied by an acceleration of
-the metabolism of non-nitrogenous matter; thus resulting in a stirring
-up of tissue change, with consequent oxidation and loss of a certain
-proportion of accumulated fat and carbohydrate. Coincident with this
-increased excretion of nitrogen, the output of carbon dioxide is
-likewise increased somewhat, due as is believed mainly to increased
-metabolism of the involuntary muscle fibres of the gastro-intestinal
-tract, by action of which the accelerated peristalsis so characteristic
-of food intake is accomplished. Further, the increased output of
-carbon dioxide, under these conditions, is to be attributed also to
-the greater activity of the digestive and excretory organs, naturally
-stimulated to greater functional power by the presence of proteid
-foods and their decomposition products. Still, as stated by Leathes,
-“the two main end-products of proteid metabolism, urea and carbonic
-acid, are, to a great extent, produced independently of each other,
-and the reactions which result in the discharge of the nitrogen are
-not those in which energy is set free, work done, and carbonic acid
-produced.” In other words, there is suggested what we have already
-referred to, viz., that in proteid metabolism a nitrogenous portion of
-the proteid molecule is quickly split off and gotten rid of, while the
-non-nitrogenous part may be reserved for future oxidation, serving as
-a source of muscle energy or for other purposes. This being so, it is
-plain that “proteid metabolism in so far as it is concerned with the
-evolution of energy, proteid metabolism in its exothermic stages, may
-be almost entirely non-nitrogenous metabolism” (Leathes).
-
-Is there any advantage to the body, however, in this carbonaceous
-residue of the proteid molecule over simple carbohydrate and fat?
-Can the processes of the body be accomplished more economically,
-or more advantageously, with a daily diet so constructed that the
-tissues and organs must depend mainly upon this carbon moiety of
-the proteid molecule for their energy-yielding material? It has been
-one of the physiological dogmas of the past, that the tissues and
-organs of the body, or rather their constituent cells, preferred to
-use proteid for all their needs whenever it was available. If proteid
-were wanting, either because of insufficient intake, or because of
-excessive activity, then the tissue cells would draw upon their store
-of non-nitrogenous material. Food proteid and tissue proteid, however,
-were the materials preferred by the organism, so ran the argument, and
-the large and incessant output of nitrogen which accompanied the intake
-of proteid was accepted as proof of the general truth of this idea.
-We might well question wherein lies the great advantage to the body
-in this continual excretion of nitrogen; whether the loss of energy
-in handling and removing the nitrogenous portion of the necessarily
-large proteid intake, in order to render available the non-nitrogenous
-part of the molecule, might not more than compensate for the supposed
-gain? But the truly astonishing fact that the output of nitrogen runs
-parallel with the intake of proteid, that the body cannot store up
-nitrogen to any large extent, has been taken as conclusive evidence
-that the organism prefers to use proteid for all of its requirements.
-Truly, we might just as well argue that this significant rise in
-the excretion of nitrogen after partaking of a proteid meal is an
-indication that the body has no need of this excess of nitrogen; that
-it is indeed a possible source of danger, since the system strives
-vigorously to rid itself of the surplus, and that the energy-needs of
-the body can be much more advantageously and economically met from fat
-and carbohydrate than from the carbonaceous residue resulting from the
-disruption of the proteid molecule.
-
-In discussing these questions, we shall need to refer to several of
-the current theories concerning proteid metabolism, notably, the
-theories of Voit, Pflüger, and Folin. In 1867 Carl Voit,[50] of
-Munich, advanced the view that the proteid material of the body exists
-in two distinct forms, viz., as “morphotic” or “organized” proteid,
-representing proteid which has actually become a part of the living
-units of the body, _i. e._, an integral part of the living tissues;
-and “circulating” proteid, or that which exists in the internal meshes
-of the tissue, or in the surrounding lymph and circulating blood.
-The real point of distinction here is that while one portion of the
-body proteid is raised to the higher plane of living matter, _i. e._,
-becomes a component part of the living protoplasm, another and perhaps
-larger portion is outside of the morphological framework of the tissue,
-constituting a sort of internal medium which bathes the living cells,
-and acts as middleman between the blood and lymph on the one side and
-the living cells on the other. According to Voit’s view, it is this
-circulating proteid that undergoes metabolism; the proteid of the food
-after digestion and absorption being carried to the different tissues
-and organs, and then, without becoming an integral part of the living
-protoplasm of the cells, it is broken down under the influence of
-the latter. Obviously, small numbers of tissue cells are constantly
-dying, their proteid matter passing into solution, where it likewise
-undergoes metabolism. In other words, according to Voit, the great
-bulk of the proteid undergoing katabolism is the circulating proteid,
-derived more or less directly from the food, and which at no time has
-been a part of the tissue framework; while a smaller, but more constant
-amount, represents the breaking down of tissue cells. This conception
-of proteid metabolism is akin to our conception of morphological and
-physiological destruction. In the words of Foster: “We know that an
-epithelial cell, as notably in the case of the skin, may be bodily
-cast off and its place filled by a new cell; and probably a similar
-disappearance of and renewal of histological units takes place in all
-the tissues of the body to a variable extent. But in the adult body
-these histological transformations are, in the cases of most of the
-tissues, slow and infrequent. A muscle, for instance, may suffer very
-considerable wasting and recover from that wasting without any loss or
-renewal of its elementary fibres. And it is obvious that the metabolism
-of which we are now speaking does not involve any such shifting of
-histological units. On the other hand, we find these histological
-units, the muscle fibre or the gland cell, for instance, living on
-their internal medium, the blood, or rather on the lymph, which is
-the middleman between themselves and the actual blood flowing in the
-vascular channels.”
-
- [50] See Voit: Hermann’s Handbuch der Physiologie, Band 6, p. 301.
-
-Voit claims that the proteid dissolved in the fluids of the body
-is more easily decomposable than that which exists combined in
-organized form, or as more or less insoluble tissue proteid; and it
-is this soluble and circulating form which, under the influence of
-the living cells, undergoes destruction or metabolism. We know, as
-has been previously stated, that oxidation does not take place to
-any extent in the circulating blood, and similarly there is every
-reason for believing that proteid metabolism does not occur in this
-menstrum. Metabolism is limited mainly to the active tissues of the
-body, but according to the present conception of the matter it does
-not occur at the expense of the proteid of the living cells, but
-involves material contained in the fluids bathing the cells; _i. e._,
-it is not the organized proteid that undergoes metabolism, but the
-proteid circulating in and about the internal meshes of the cells and
-tissues, the living cell being the active agent in controlling the
-process. Further, this view lessens the difficulty of understanding
-the elimination of nitrogen after a meal rich in proteid. If it was
-necessary to assume that all the proteid of our daily food is built
-up into living protoplasm before katabolism occurs, it would be
-exceedingly difficult to explain the sudden and rapid elimination of
-nitrogen which follows the ingestion of proteid. For example, we can
-hardly imagine that merely eating an excess of proteid food will lead
-to an actual breaking down of the living framework of the tissues,
-equivalent to the amount of nitrogen which the body at once eliminates.
-Voit’s theory, on the other hand, supposes a twofold origin of the
-nitrogen excreted; one part, the larger and variable portion, comes
-from the direct metabolism of the circulating proteid, being the
-immediate result of the ingested food and varying in amount with the
-quantity of proteid food consumed; the other, smaller and less variable
-in amount, has its origin in the metabolism of the true tissue proteid,
-or the actual living framework of the body.
-
-In a fasting animal, the tissues and organs of the body still contain
-a large proportion of proteid matter, yet only a small fraction of
-this proteid is eliminated each day, hardly 1 per cent. If, however,
-proteid is absorbed from the intestine, proteid metabolism is at once
-increased, and the excretion of nitrogen may be fifteen times greater
-than during hunger. In other words, the extent of proteid metabolism
-is not at all proportional to the total amount of proteid contained
-in the body as a whole, but runs parallel in a general way with the
-quantity of proteid absorbed from the intestine. Obviously, the newly
-absorbed proteid is quite different in nature from the proteid which
-in much larger amounts is deposited throughout the body, since it is
-not organized and is so much more easily decomposable (Voit). This is
-the circulating proteid of the body; it exists in solution, and it is a
-significant fact that, according to Voit, the chemical transformations
-that characterize proteid katabolism occur only in solution. The
-organized proteid, on the other hand, is in a state of suspension,
-and its katabolism, which is relatively very small, is preceded by
-solution of the proteid in the fluids of the tissue, after which
-its further breaking down is assumed to be the same as that of the
-circulating proteid. This latter view is a fundamental part of the Voit
-theory; in long-continued fasting, for example, the living protoplasm
-of the various tissues and organs is of necessity drawn upon for the
-nourishment of the more vital parts of the body, such as the brain,
-spinal cord, etc., consequently the organized proteid is gradually
-dissolved and then decomposed, after it has become liquefied and has
-thus lost its organized structure.
-
-In this conception of proteid metabolism, we picture the different
-organs and tissues of the body as being permeated by a fluid which
-carries variable amounts of nutritive material, the quantity of the
-latter determining in a way the extent of the proteid katabolism which
-shall take place. As the proteid of the food passes into the blood and
-lymph, the fluids bathing the cells are correspondingly enriched, and
-as a result, proteid katabolism is accelerated in parallel degree.
-During hunger, on the other hand, the organized proteid of the tissue
-cells is gradually liquefied and passes out into the current of the
-circulating fluids. As before stated, the organized proteid as such is
-never decomposed; it must first enter into solution, and then under
-the influence of the living cells it undergoes disruption in the same
-manner as the circulating proteid. It is thus evident that the tissue
-cells and the circulating fluids permeating them bear an ever changing
-relationship to each other. Excess of circulating proteid will be
-attended by increased katabolism, while at the same time there may be
-some accumulation of proteid in the cells, and indeed some conversion
-into organized proteid. During fasting, hunger, or with an insufficient
-intake of proteid food, the current will naturally be in the opposite
-direction, and organized proteid will slowly, but surely, be drawn
-upon.
-
-Again, we may ask in view of these facts, of what real use to the
-body is this large katabolism of circulating proteid? We can easily
-understand the need of proteid to supply the loss incidental to the
-breaking down of organized or true tissue proteid, but this we are led
-to believe is very small in amount. Is there any real need for proteid
-beyond this requirement? The physiological fuel value of proteid is
-no greater than that of carbohydrate and considerably less than half
-that of fat, consequently there is on the surface no apparent reason
-why proteid should be used for its energy value in preference to the
-non-nitrogenous foodstuffs. Further, as we have seen, the energy of
-muscle work comes mainly, at least, from the breaking down of fat and
-carbohydrate; proteid, in the case of the well-nourished individual,
-ordinarily playing no part in this important line of energy exchange.
-Lastly, in the katabolism of proteid there is the large proportion
-of nitrogenous matter to be split off and disposed of before the
-carbon moiety of the molecule can be rendered available. Here, we have
-involved not only a loss of energy, but in addition a certain amount of
-what appears to be useless labor thrown upon the liver, kidneys, and
-other organs. Is there any wonder that the thoughtful physiologist,
-looking at the facts and theories presented by the Voit conception
-of proteid katabolism, should ask wherein lies the value to the body
-of this high rate of metabolism of circulating proteid, a rate of
-metabolism which is seemingly governed primarily by the amount of
-proteid food ingested?
-
-Turning next to Pflüger’s[51] views regarding proteid katabolism, we
-find a totally different outlook. Here, the supposition prevails that
-the plasma of the blood and lymph, with its contained proteid, is the
-food of the organs or their cells, but that before this food material
-can undergo katabolism it must first be absorbed by the cell and built
-up into the living protoplasm of the tissue. In other words, according
-to the views expressed by Pflüger, katabolism must be preceded by
-organization of the proteid. Expressed in still different language,
-the proteid material circulating in blood and lymph must be eaten up
-by the hungry cells and, by appropriate anabolic processes, made an
-integral part of the living protoplasm before disassimilation can
-occur. Further, according to Pflüger’s conception of these processes,
-there is a radical difference in the chemical nature of living
-protoplasm as compared with that of the so-called circulating proteid.
-The latter is looked upon as being comparatively stable, resisting
-oxidation in high degree, and hence not prone to undergo metabolism.
-Living protoplasm, on the other hand, is characterized by instability,
-suffering oxidation with the greatest ease, and hence readily broken
-down in the ordinary processes of katabolism. Assuming for the moment
-the correctness of this theory, we see at a glance that all disruption
-of proteid matter in the body must be preceded by the upbuilding of the
-proteid into living protoplasm. There can be no destruction of proteid
-until the latter has been raised to the high plane of living matter.
-The dead, inert circulating proteid can serve simply as food for the
-living cells, and cannot undergo katabolism until it has been built up
-into the organized structure of the tissue or organ. Even though we
-grant that a small proportion of proteid may suffer katabolism without
-previous organization, it does not materially modify the general trend
-of the argument that, according to Pflüger’s hypothesis, proteid
-katabolism is essentially a process involving the disruption of living
-protoplasm.
-
- [51] Eduard Pflüger: Ueber einige Gesetze des Eiweissstoffwechsels
- (mit besonderer Berücksichtigung der Lehre vom sogenannten
- “circulirenden Eiweiss”). Archiv f. d. gesammte Physiologie, Band 54,
- p. 333.
-
-Consider what this means in the light of facts already presented.
-Remembering that the one factor above all others influencing the rate
-of proteid katabolism is the amount of proteid food taken in, and that
-the output of nitrogen, no matter what the previous condition of the
-body or the amount of proteid food ingested, runs more or less parallel
-with the consumption of proteid, we are forced to the conclusion, in
-accepting this hypothesis, that there must be superhuman activity in
-the building up of living protoplasm, only to be followed, however, by
-its immediate and more or less complete breaking down. Further, think
-of the daily or periodical fluctuation in the construction of bioplasm,
-coincident with variations in the amount of proteid food consumed, and
-the corresponding destruction of bioplasm as indicated by the daily
-output of nitrogen. Imagine, if you will, the concrete case of a man
-of 70 kilos body-weight eating a daily ration containing 125 grams
-of proteid, the nitrogen equivalent of which is practically excreted
-within twenty-four hours, and are we not wise in hesitating to believe
-that all of that proteid has been so quickly built up into living or
-organized tissue only to be immediately broken down and thrown out of
-the body? Think of the enormous activity implied in the manufacture
-of this bioplasm in the time allotted, and for what? Apparently, so
-that it can be broken down again. But such energy as is liberated in
-the breaking-down process might be derived far more economically by
-simple destruction of the proteid, as contained in the meshes of the
-tissue elements, without assuming a preliminary conversion into living
-protoplasm. Obviously, we have here a theory which does not help us in
-arriving at any very satisfactory conception of proteid metabolism.
-The facts which Pflüger and his followers bring forward in support of
-the theory are not very convincing, or at least not sufficiently so to
-carry conviction in the face of a natural disinclination to believe in
-the necessity of such a profound anabolic process, merely as a prelude
-to the speedy destruction of the finished product. Finally, we may add
-that if all proteid katabolized in the body must first be raised to the
-high level of living protoplasm before the final disruption can occur,
-it may be prudent to keep the daily intake of this foodstuff down to a
-level somewhat commensurate with the real needs of the body.
-
-As has been stated many times in the course of this presentation,
-the most striking feature of proteid metabolism is the rapidity with
-which large quantities of proteid consumed as food are broken down,
-and the contained nitrogen eliminated from the body as urea. A few
-hours will suffice to accomplish the more or less complete destruction
-of food proteid; and any theory of proteid metabolism, to be at all
-satisfactory, must explain this peculiar phenomenon. According to
-recent investigations, it seems probable that some, at least, of the
-cleavage products of proteid formed during intestinal digestion are
-not built up into new proteid, but are at once eliminated mainly in
-the form of urea, without becoming a part of either the so-called
-circulating proteid, or the living protoplasm of the body. It will be
-recalled that under the influence of the digestive enzymes, trypsin
-and erepsin, proteid foodstuffs may be broken down while undergoing
-intestinal digestion into monamino- and diamino-acids, such as
-leucin, tyrosin, arginin, lysin, etc. A certain proportion of these
-comparatively simple substances may be directly absorbed by the
-portal circulation and carried to the liver, where they may undergo
-conversion into urea. In this way, some portion of the nitrogen of
-the ingested food may be quickly eliminated from the system. As has
-been stated in another connection, we are not sure at present how
-far proteid decomposition of the kind indicated takes place normally
-in the body. We merely know that there are present in the intestine,
-enzymes capable of splitting up proteid into these small fragments, and
-that substances of this type when made to circulate through the liver
-are transformed into urea. These facts, coupled with the well-known
-tendency of the nitrogen of proteid food to appear in the excretions
-a few hours after the food in question has been consumed, naturally
-suggests a direct breaking down of proteid along the lines indicated,
-with a possible retention of a carbonaceous residue (nitrogen-free)
-for subsequent oxidation, as a source of energy for heat or work.
-Obviously, all of the proteid food cannot behave in this manner, for
-if such were the case there would be no proteid available for making
-good the normal waste incidental to tissue changes. Either a certain
-amount of proteid escapes this profound alteration produced by the
-proteolytic enzymes in question, or else a certain proportion of these
-simple decomposition products is synthesized in the intestine, or in
-the tissues of the body, to form new proteid for the regeneration of
-cell protoplasm. However this may be, we have presented in this view
-a plausible explanation of the prompt appearance of food nitrogen in
-the excretions, and without compelling belief in a theory, such as
-Pflüger’s, which taxes one’s credulity to the utmost. To be sure,
-as a prominent writer on physiology has recently said, such a view
-stands opposed to our conceptions of the importance of proteid food;
-but it seems possible, in the light of accumulating knowledge, that
-our conceptions of the part played by proteid foods in the nutrition
-of man have not been strictly logical, or quite in accord with true
-physiological reasoning.
-
-Again, in this connection, we may ask the question, why is it that the
-body provides such an effective method for the speedy breaking down
-of proteid food and the prompt elimination of the contained nitrogen?
-Whatever the means made use of by the organism in accomplishing this,
-the result is the same; the nitrogen of the ingested food is, in large
-measure, quickly gotten rid of. We clearly recognize the all-important
-position of proteid foods in the nutrition of the body, but there
-appears a certain inconsistency in this prompt removal of the
-nitrogen-containing portion of the proteid molecule. The nitrogenous
-part of the proteid food is, physiologically considered, the
-all-important part. It is the only source of nitrogen available to the
-system, and yet apparently the larger proportion of this nitrogenous
-material is not utilized in any recognizable way, but is eliminated as
-quickly as possible. Is it not within the limits of possibility that
-these methods, whatever may be the exact mechanism involved, are merely
-a means of getting rid of a surplus of proteid for which the body has
-no real need? This question I shall try to answer later on in another
-connection, but we may advantageously keep this possibility in mind
-while we are discussing these theories of proteid metabolism.
-
-It is obvious, in the light of present knowledge, that there must
-be a certain amount of true tissue proteid broken down each day,
-independent of that larger metabolism coincident with the intake of
-proteid food. However much this more voluminous proteid katabolism may
-fluctuate, owing to variations in the intake of proteid, and whatever
-the significance of this latter phase of metabolism, it is self-evident
-that there must be a steady, constant metabolism, upon which the life
-of the various tissues and organs of the body depends, and by which
-the proteid integrity of the tissue cells is maintained. This implies
-a certain degree of true tissue change, in which definite amounts of
-proteid material are broken down and the resultant loss made good from
-the proteid intake. No matter what specific name be applied to this
-form of proteid katabolism, its existence is clearly recognized. It is
-obviously a form of metabolism distinct, and probably quite different,
-from that form, more variable in extent, which is associated with the
-intake of proteid food. Plainly, if there is truth in these statements,
-there should be some data available by means of which these two lines
-of proteid katabolism can be more or less sharply differentiated.
-
-Thanks especially to the work of Folin,[52] these data are now
-apparently at hand, and the facts which he has accumulated with
-painstaking care seem destined to throw additional light upon our
-conception of proteid metabolism. It will be remembered that in the
-breaking down of proteid, the great bulk of its contained nitrogen is
-eliminated in the form of urea. In addition, a certain smaller amount
-of nitrogen is excreted in the forms of creatinin and uric acid. As
-we have seen, the total output of nitrogen, which measures the extent
-to which proteid is decomposed in the body, varies with the intake of
-proteid food; but it is found that the proportion of nitrogen excreted
-in the forms of urea and uric acid varies with the extent of the
-metabolism. In other words, quantitative changes in the daily proteid
-katabolism are accompanied by pronounced changes in the distribution of
-the excreted nitrogen. Let us take a single illustration from Folin’s
-results; the case of a healthy man who on one day--July 13--consumed
-a proteid-rich diet, and on the other day--July 20--was living on a
-diet containing only about 1 gram of nitrogen. The composition of
-the excretion through the kidneys on these two days is shown in the
-following table:
-
- [52] Otto Folin: Laws Governing the Chemical Composition of Urine.
- American Journal of Physiology, vol. 13, p. 66. A theory of Protein
- Metabolism. Ibid., vol. 13, p. 117.
-
- +--------------------+-----------------------+---------------------+
- | | July 13. | July 20. |
- +--------------------+-----------------------+---------------------+
- | Volume of urine | 1170 c.c. | 385 c.c. |
- | Total nitrogen | 16.80 grams | 3.60 grams |
- | Urea-nitrogen | 14.70 " = 87.5% | 2.20 " = 61.7% |
- | Uric acid-nitrogen | 0.18 " = 1.1% | 0.09 " = 2.5% |
- | Creatinin-nitrogen | 0.58 " = 3.6% | 0.60 " = 17.2% |
- +--------------------+-----------------------+---------------------+
-
-Here we see, as would be expected, that on the high proteid diet, there
-was a large excretion of total nitrogen and of urea; while on the low
-proteid diet, nitrogen and urea were correspondingly diminished. The
-point to attract our attention, however, is the marked difference in
-the percentage of urea-nitrogen in the two cases; a difference which
-amounts to about 26 per cent. A similar difference is to be noted in
-the percentage of uric acid-nitrogen. Lastly, it is to be observed that
-in spite of the great difference in the extent of metabolism on the
-two days--an excretion of 16.8 grams of nitrogen, as contrasted with
-3.6 grams--the _amount_ of creatinin-nitrogen is essentially the same.
-Folin finds that these peculiarities in the percentage distribution
-of excreted nitrogen hold good in all cases where there is this wide
-divergence in the amount of proteid katabolized, and, further, that
-there is a gradual and regular transition from the one extreme to the
-other. He sees in these results evidence that there are in the body
-two forms of proteid katabolism, essentially independent and quite
-different. One kind is extremely variable in quantity, while the other
-tends to remain constant. The variable form has its own particular
-kind of waste products, of which urea is the chief. The constant
-katabolism, on the other hand, is largely represented by creatinin
-and to a lesser degree by uric acid. The more the total katabolism is
-reduced, the more prominent become creatinin and uric acid, products
-of the constant katabolism; while urea, as chief representative of the
-variable katabolism, becomes less conspicuous. Folin suggests the term
-_endogenous_ or _tissue_ metabolism for the constant variety, while the
-variable form he would name _exogenous_ or _intermediate_ metabolism.
-
-In these suggestions we have not theory only, but a number of very
-important facts which plainly must have some significance. Take,
-for example, the excretion of creatinin. It is a characteristic
-nitrogenous waste product, but its elimination from the body is wholly
-independent of quantitative changes in the total amount of nitrogen
-excreted. In other words, the amount of creatinin eliminated is a
-constant quantity for a given individual under ordinary conditions,
-no matter how great the variation in the amount of proteid food,
-provided no meat is eaten. Meat must be avoided in testing this point,
-since meat contains a certain amount of creatin, or other components,
-which would be excreted as creatinin. Further, it is found that every
-individual has his own specific creatinin excretion, which fact again
-emphasizes the idea that this substance is a product of true tissue
-katabolism, having no connection with that variable metabolism, of
-which urea is the striking representative. These are facts which cannot
-be ignored. They are well established by the careful observations of
-Folin, and they are confirmed by a large number of observations made in
-our own laboratory. Turn now to that other, more conspicuous, product
-of proteid katabolism, urea. With a so-called average proteid intake,
-about 88–90 per cent of the excreted nitrogen will be in the form of
-urea, but, as Folin states, “with every decided diminution in the
-quantity of total nitrogen eliminated, there is a pronounced reduction
-in the per cent of that nitrogen represented by urea. When the daily
-total nitrogen elimination has been reduced to 3 grams or 4 grams,
-about 60 per cent of it only is in the form of urea.” Here, we have the
-chief product of exogenous metabolism, a substance quite distinct from
-creatinin, just as the process by which it originates is likewise quite
-distinct.
-
-Exogenous metabolism is plainly a process of quite a different order
-from that of endogenous, or tissue metabolism. The latter involves
-oxidation, while the former consists essentially of a series of
-hydrolytic cleavages which result in a rapid elimination of the
-proteid-nitrogen as urea. In this conception of exogenous katabolism,
-we have essentially the same viewpoint as was previously taken in
-attempting to explain how excess of proteid food can be so quickly
-decomposed, and its nitrogen removed from the body. Whether the
-hydrolytic cleavage is accomplished solely by trypsin and erepsin,
-whether it takes place only in the intestine and in the liver,
-or whether other glands and tissues are involved, is at present
-immaterial; the essential point is that we have in the body a variety
-of proteid katabolism, quite different from true tissue katabolism, the
-extent of which is dependent primarily upon the amount of proteid food
-consumed. The process involved is one which aims at the rapid removal
-of the proteid-nitrogen as urea; without incorporation of the absorbed
-proteid, or its decomposition products, either as an integral or
-adherent part of the tissue proteid. Hydrolytic cleavage is eminently
-fitted to accomplish this with the least expenditure of energy, while
-the carbonaceous residue of the proteid thus freed from nitrogen can be
-transformed into carbohydrate, or directly oxidized as the needs of the
-body demand.
-
-As one considers these views so admirably worked out by Folin, the
-question naturally arises, if the real demands of the body for proteid
-food will not be adequately met by the quantity necessary to satisfy
-the true tissue metabolism? We may well believe, with Folin, that “only
-a small amount of proteid, namely, that necessary for the endogenous
-metabolism, is needed. The greater part of the proteid furnished with
-so-called standard diets, like Voit’s, _i. e._, that part representing
-the exogenous metabolism, is not needed; or, to be more specific, its
-nitrogen is not needed. The organism has developed special facilities
-for getting rid of such excess of nitrogen, so as to get the use of
-the carbonaceous part of the proteid containing it.” In endogenous
-metabolism, we have a steady, constant process quite independent of
-the amount of proteid food, and absolutely indispensable for the
-maintenance of life. So far as we know at present, its representative
-creatinin is, for a given individual, the same in amount during
-fasting as when a rich, meat-free, proteid diet is taken. The one
-factor that seemingly determines the amount of creatinin eliminated is
-the weight of the individual, or more exactly the weight of the true
-tissue elements of the body, as distinct from fat or adipose tissue.
-Endogenous or tissue katabolism obviously calls for a certain quantity
-of proteid to maintain equilibrium, but this is small in amount as
-compared with the usual intake of proteid foods. The average man, with
-his ordinary dietetic habits, consumes more nitrogen than the body can
-possibly make use of. The excess is not stored up, “because the actual
-need of nitrogen is so small that an excess is always furnished with
-the food, except, of course, in carefully planned experiments” (Folin).
-
-We have seen at what low levels of proteid intake, nitrogen equilibrium
-can be established, and we may well have faith in the conception of an
-endogenous proteid katabolism which involves only minimal quantities of
-proteid. Further, we have observed the constant tendency of the body
-to maintain a condition of nitrogenous equilibrium, even with varying
-income, and how slow the body is to lay by nitrogen on a rich proteid
-diet, even when long deprived of proteid food; a fact difficult of
-explanation except on the assumption that the real need of the body for
-nitrogen is small, and that the tissues habitually carry a relatively
-large reserve of nitrogenous material. We may assume with Folin that
-“all the living protoplasm in the animal organism is suspended in a
-fluid very rich in proteid, and on account of the habitual use of more
-nitrogenous food than the tissues can use as proteid the organism
-is ordinarily in possession of approximately the maximum amount of
-reserved proteid in solution that it can advantageously retain.
-When the supply of food proteid is stopped, the excess of reserve
-proteid inside the organism is still sufficient to cause a rather
-large destruction of proteid during the first day or two of proteid
-starvation, and after that the proteid katabolism is very small,
-provided sufficient non-nitrogenous food is available. But even then,
-and for many days thereafter, the protoplasm of the tissues has still
-an abundant supply of dissolved proteid, and the normal activity of
-such tissues as the muscles is not at all impaired or diminished. When
-30 grams or 40 grams of nitrogen have been lost by an average-sized
-man during a week or more of abstinence from nitrogenous food the
-living muscle tissues are still well supplied with all the proteid
-they can use. That this is so, is indicated on the one hand by the
-unchanged creatinin elimination, and on the other by the fact that one
-experiences no feeling of unusual fatigue or of inability to do one’s
-customary work. Because the organism at the end of such an experiment
-still has an abundance of available proteid in the nutritive fluids,
-it is at once seemingly wasteful with nitrogen when a return is made
-to nitrogenous food. This is why it only gradually, and only under
-the prolonged pressure of an excessive supply of food-proteid again
-acquires its original maximum store of this reserve material.”
-
-We may reasonably suppose that the reserve of proteid present in the
-body is contained in the fluid media, and not as a part of the living
-protoplasm. Further, we are apparently justified in the belief that
-the sole form of proteid katabolism which is vitally important for the
-welfare of the body is the endogenous katabolism. This must be provided
-for adequately and indeed liberally, and in addition there should be
-sufficient intake to keep up an abundant supply of reserve proteid, but
-beyond these necessities there would seem to be no legitimate demand
-for additional proteid. The voluminous exogenous proteid katabolism so
-conspicuous in most individuals would seem to have no justification
-in fact, or in physiological reasoning. What good, for example, can
-be accomplished by this constant splitting off of nitrogen, with its
-subsequent speedy removal from the body? The organism can neither use
-it nor store it up, and why therefore should this daily burden of an
-excessive and accelerated proteid katabolism be borne? As we have seen,
-the energy of muscle work is derived mainly, and can come wholly, from
-the breaking down of non-nitrogenous materials, fats and carbohydrates.
-The very fact that an intake of say 120 grams of proteid is followed
-at once by the removal of the larger part of the contained nitrogen,
-as a result of the exogenous katabolism of the body, would seemingly
-warrant the view that the proteid so decomposed might advantageously be
-replaced by a corresponding amount of carbohydrate. In muscle work, as
-in heat production, carbohydrate and fat are the materials burned up,
-or oxidized. Proteid, on the other hand, is not so oxidized, at least
-not the nitrogen-containing portion of the molecule.
-
-There are apparent only two possible reasons for assuming a need on
-the part of the body for the high exogenous katabolism of proteid so
-commonly observed. The one is that the carbonaceous residue left after
-the cleavage of nitrogen from the proteid molecule is better adapted
-for the needs of the body than either carbohydrate or fat. Although
-this does not seem very probable, it is of course a possibility and
-merits consideration. Feeding experiments, with a comparatively small
-proteid intake, continued over a sufficient length of time, would show
-conclusively how much weight should be attached to this hypothesis. The
-other possibility is that the body may derive some advantage from the
-presence, in the tissues and fluids, of the varied nitrogenous cleavage
-products split off from proteid so abundantly in exogenous katabolism.
-These substances are mainly amino-acids on their way to urea, and there
-is no apparent reason why they should be of service to the organism.
-Still, the processes going on in the tissues and organs of the body are
-intricate and not wholly understood, and we can conceive of some useful
-function of which as yet we have no knowledge. In the construction of
-tissue proteid, for example, as in a possible synthesis out of the
-fragments formed by hydrolytic cleavage, it is not impossible that
-certain corner-stones are needed, and that in order to obtain these
-there must be a more or less wasteful breaking down of food-proteid.
-However improbable this may seem, it, like the preceding hypothesis,
-can be tested in a way by adequate feeding experiments, which shall
-determine the effect on the body of a low proteid intake continued over
-a long period of time. On the other hand, it is equally plausible, and
-for some reasons more probable, to assume that this excessive exogenous
-katabolism may be in a measure prejudicial to the best interests of the
-body; that the many nitrogenous fragments formed in the efforts of the
-organism to prevent undue accumulation of reserve proteid may in the
-long run do as much harm as good.
-
-Further, there is reason in the question whether the continual carrying
-of excessive amounts of nitrogen reserves in the shape of soluble
-proteid in the blood and lymph, and in the meshes of tissue and cell
-protoplasm, is advantageous for the maintenance of the highest degree
-of efficiency? We all recognize that an excessive accumulation of fat
-is distinctly disadvantageous to the welfare of the body, and there
-is, physiologically speaking, equally good ground for considering that
-the storage of unorganized proteid in amounts beyond all possible
-requirements of the body may be equally undesirable. Because less
-tangible to the eye, the accumulation of unnecessary proteid is not
-so easily recognizable, but this fact does not diminish the possible
-danger which such accumulation may constitute. It must be granted,
-however, that we are dealing here with hypotheses and not facts, but
-though hypothetical the suggestions made are of sufficient moment to
-merit attention and experimental study. In a later chapter, we shall
-have occasion to present some facts bearing on these questions.
-
-In the meantime, we may lay due stress upon the significance of these
-views regarding proteid katabolism. We must accept as settled the
-general idea that there are two distinct forms of proteid katabolism
-within the body; one form representing the decay of tissue or cell
-protoplasm, small in amount, with its own particular decomposition
-products, and absolutely essential for the continuance of life.
-The other form, the so-called exogenous katabolism, runs a totally
-different course with distinctive side-products and end-products; it
-is variable in extent, in harmony with variations in proteid intake,
-and subject to the suspicion that at the level ordinarily maintained
-it constitutes a menace to the preservation of that high degree of
-efficiency which is an attribute of good health.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-DIETARY HABITS AND TRUE FOOD REQUIREMENTS
-
- TOPICS: Dietetic customs of mankind. Origin of dietary standards.
- True food requirements. Arguments based on custom and habit.
- Relationship between food consumption and prosperity. Erroneous
- ideas regarding nutrition. Commercial success and national wealth
- not the result of liberal dietary habits. Instinct and craving not
- wise guides to follow in choice and quantity of food. Physiological
- requirements and dietary standards not to be based on habits and
- cravings. Old-time views regarding temperate use of food. The sayings
- of Thomas Cogan. The teachings of Cornaro. Experimental results
- obtained by various physiologists. Work of the writer on true proteid
- requirements. Studies with professional men. Nitrogen equilibrium
- with small amounts of food. Sample dietaries. Simplicity in diet.
- Nitrogen requirement per kilogram of body-weight. Fuel value of the
- daily food. Experiments with university athletes. Nitrogen balance
- and food consumption. Sample dietaries. Adequacy of a simple diet.
-
-
-Having acquired information regarding the principles of metabolism
-and the general laws governing the nutrition of the body, we may
-next consider briefly the dietetic habits of mankind, with a view
-to learning how far such habits coincide with actual nutritive
-requirements. Eventually, we shall need to ask the questions: What are
-the _true_ nutritive requirements of the body? How much food and what
-kinds of food does the ordinary individual doing an average amount
-of work need each day in order to preserve body equilibrium, and to
-maintain health, strength, and vigor under the varying conditions
-of life? What amount of nitrogen or proteid, and what the total
-calorific value required to supply the physiological needs of the
-body? How closely do the so-called “normal diets” and “standard diets,”
-which have met with such general acceptance, conform to a rational
-conception of true physiological needs? These are vital questions of
-great physiological and economic importance, and they are not easily
-answered; but theoretical considerations based on scientific data, and
-experimental evidence combined with practical experience, should point
-the way to some very definite conclusions.
-
-Observations made in many countries regarding the dietetic customs and
-habits of the people have resulted in the establishment of certain
-dietary standards, which have been more or less generally adopted
-as representing the requirements of the body. As a prelude to the
-discussion of this question, let us consider briefly some of the
-results of these dietary studies. In Sweden, laborers doing hard work
-were found by Hultgren and Landergren to consume daily, on an average,
-189 grams of proteid, 714 grams of carbohydrate, and 110 grams of fat,
-with a total fuel value for the day’s ration of 4726 large calories.
-In Russia, workmen at moderately hard labor, having perfect freedom of
-choice in their food, were found by Erisman to take daily 132 grams of
-proteid, 584 grams of carbohydrate, and 79 grams of fat, this ration
-having a fuel value of 3675 calories. In Germany, soldiers in active
-service consumed daily, according to Voit, 145 grams of proteid, 500
-grams of carbohydrate, and 100 grams of fat, with a fuel value of 3574
-calories. In Italy, laborers doing a moderate amount of work were found
-by Lichtenfelt to consume daily 115 grams of proteid, 696 grams of
-carbohydrate, and 26 grams of fat, with a fuel value of 3655 calories.
-In France, Gautier states that the ordinary laborer working eight
-hours a day must have 135 grams of proteid, 700 grams of carbohydrate,
-and 90 grams of fat daily, with a fuel value of 4260 calories. In
-England, weavers were found to take daily 151 grams of proteid, with
-carbohydrates and fats sufficient to make the total fuel value of the
-day’s ration equal to 3475 calories. In Austria, farm laborers consumed
-daily 159 grams of proteid, with carbohydrates and fats sufficient to
-raise the fuel value of the food to 5096 calories.
-
- +----------------------------------+----------------+----------------+
- | Subjects. |Proteid consumed|Total Fuel Value|
- | | Daily. | of Daily Food. |
- +----------------------------------+----------------+----------------+
- | | grams | calories |
- |Swedish laborers, at hard work | 189 | 4726 |
- |Russian workmen, moderate work | 132 | 3675 |
- |German soldiers, active service | 145 | 3574 |
- |Italian laborers, moderate work | 115 | 3655 |
- |French laborers, eight hours’ work| 135 | 4260 |
- |English weavers | 151 | 3475 |
- |Austrian farm laborers | 159 | 5096 |
- | | | |
- | American Subjects. | | |
- | | | |
- |Man with very hard muscular work | 175 | 5500 |
- |Man with hard muscular work | 150 | 4150 |
- |Man with moderately active | | |
- | muscular work | 125 | 3400 |
- |Man with light to moderate | | |
- | muscular work | 112 | 3050 |
- |Man at “sedentary” or woman with | | |
- | moderately active work | 100 | 2700 |
- +----------------------------------+----------------+----------------+
-
-Observations of this order might be multiplied indefinitely, but
-the above will suffice to give a general idea of the average food
-consumption of European peoples doing a moderate amount of work. These
-data, however, must be supplemented by the observations made in our own
-country, which have been very extensive, through the “investigations on
-the nutrition of man in the United States,” carried on by the Office
-of Experiment Stations in the Department of Agriculture, under the
-efficient leadership of Atwater. As stated by Messrs. Langworthy and
-Milner, in an official bulletin issued in 1904, dietary studies of the
-actual food consumption of people of different classes in different
-parts of the United States have been made during the years 1894 to
-1904 on about 15,000 persons,--men, women, and children,--as a result
-of which it is indicated that “the actual food requirements of persons
-under different conditions of life and work” vary from 100 to 175 grams
-of proteid per day, with a total fuel value ranging from 2700 to 5500
-calories. For comparison, the various data may be tabulated as shown on
-page 155.
-
-These figures by no means represent maximum food consumption. Thus,
-studies have been made on fifty Maine lumbermen,[53] where the intake
-of proteid food averaged 185 grams per day, with a total fuel value of
-6400 calories. Further, dietary studies of university boat crews[54]
-have shown fairly high results. The Yale University crew, while at
-Gales Ferry, averaged per man during seven days 171 grams of proteid,
-171 grams of fat, and 434 grams of carbohydrate, with a total fuel
-value of 4070 calories per day. The members of the Harvard University
-crew showed an average daily consumption of 160 grams of proteid, 170
-grams of fat, and 448 grams of carbohydrate, with a total fuel value
-of 4074 calories. It is also reported that a football team of college
-students in the University of California consumed daily, per man, 270
-grams of proteid, 416 grams of fat, and 710 grams of carbohydrate, with
-a total fuel value of 7885 calories. These figures may be contrasted,
-however, with the data obtained in a study of the dietary habits of
-fourteen professional men’s families, where the average amount of
-proteid consumed daily was 104 grams, fat 125 grams, and carbohydrate
-423 grams, with a total fuel value of 3325 calories.
-
- [53] Bulletin No. 149. Woods and Mansfield. Studies of the Food of
- Maine Lumbermen. U. S. Department of Agriculture, 1904.
-
- [54] Bulletin No. 75. Atwater and Bryant. Office of Experiment
- Stations, U. S. Department of Agriculture, 1900.
-
-Leaving out of consideration the extremes given, it is undoubtedly true
-that, within certain rather wide limits, there is an apparent tendency
-for people of different nations, having a free choice of food and not
-restricted by expense, to consume daily approximately the same amounts
-of nutrients; to use what may be called liberal rather than small
-amounts of food; and, lastly, to consume food somewhat in proportion
-to the amount of work done. It is perhaps, therefore, not strange that
-students of nutrition should have taken these results, obtained by the
-statistical method, as indicating the actual needs of the body for
-food, and that so-called “standard diets” and “normal diets” should
-have been constructed, based upon these and corresponding data. Thus,
-we have the widely adopted “Voit standard,” composed of proteid 118
-grams, carbohydrate 500 grams, and fat 56 grams, with a total fuel
-value of 3055 calories, as the amount of food required daily by a man
-of 70 kilos body-weight doing a moderate amount of work. These figures
-were obtained by Voit as an average of the food consumption of a large
-number of laboring men in Germany, and they carried additional weight
-because at that time Voit and others thought they had evidence that
-nitrogenous equilibrium could not be maintained for any length of time
-on smaller amounts of proteid.
-
-The figures given in the preceding table under the head of American
-subjects constitute the “Atwater standards,” and as already indicated,
-are based upon the dietetic habits of over 15,000 persons under
-different conditions of life and physical activity. In the words of
-the official Bulletin, these standards covering the quantities of food
-per day “are intended to show the actual food requirements of persons
-under different conditions of life and work.” Here, however, lies an
-assumption which seems to meet with wide acceptance, but for which it
-is difficult to conceive any logical reason. The thousands of dietary
-studies made on peoples all over the world, affording more or less
-accurate information regarding the average amounts of proteid, fat,
-and carbohydrate consumed under varying conditions, are indeed most
-interesting and important, as affording information regarding dietetic
-customs and habits; but, the writer fails to see any reason why such
-data need be assumed to throw any light on the actual food requirements
-of the body. In the words of another, “Food should be ingested in just
-the proper amount to repair the waste of the body; to furnish it with
-the energy it needs for work and warmth; to maintain it in vigor;
-and, in the case of immature animals, to provide the proper excess
-for normal growth, in order to be of the most advantage to the body”
-(Benedict).
-
-Any habitual excess of food, over and above what is really needed
-to meet the actual wants of the body, is not only uneconomical, but
-may be distinctly disadvantageous. Voit, among others, has clearly
-emphasized the general principle that the smallest amount of proteid,
-with non-nitrogenous food added, that will suffice to keep the body in
-a state of continual vigor is the ideal diet. My own conception of the
-true food requirements of the body has been expressed in the statement
-that man needs of proteids, fats, and carbohydrates sufficient to
-establish and maintain physiological and nitrogen equilibrium;
-sufficient to keep up that strength of body and mind that is essential
-to good health, to maintain the highest degree of physical and mental
-activity with the smallest amount of friction and the least expenditure
-of energy, and to preserve and heighten, if possible, the ordinary
-resistance of the body to disease germs. The smallest amount of food
-that will accomplish these ends is, I think, the ideal diet. There must
-truly be enough to supply the real needs of the body, but any great
-surplus over and above what is actually called for may in the long run
-prove an undesirable addition. With these thoughts in mind, may we
-not reasonably ask why it should be assumed that there is any tangible
-connection between the dietetic habits of a people and their true
-physiological needs?
-
-Arguments predicated on custom, habit, and usage have no physiological
-basis that appeals strongly to the impartial observer. Man is
-a creature of habits; he is quick to acquire new ones when his
-environment affords the opportunity, and he is prone to cling to old
-ones when they minister to his sense of taste. The argument that
-because the people of a country, constituting a given class, eat
-a certain amount of proteid food daily, the quantity so consumed
-must be an indication of the amount needed to meet the requirements
-of the body, is as faulty as the argument that because people of a
-given community are in the habit of consuming a certain amount of
-wine each day at dinner their bodies must necessarily be in need of
-the stimulant, and that consequently alcohol is a true physiological
-requirement. A large proportion of mankind is addicted to the tobacco
-habit, and to many persons the after-dinner cigar is as essential to
-comfort as the dinner itself; but would any one think of arguing that
-tobacco is one of the physiological needs of the body?
-
-It is said that dietary studies made all over the civilized world
-“show that a moderately liberal quantity of protein is demanded by
-communities occupying leading positions in the world.... It certainly
-seems more than a remarkable coincidence that peoples varying so widely
-in regard to nationality, climatic and geographical conditions, and
-dietetic habits, should show such agreement in respect to consumption
-of protein and energy.” Again, we hear it said that “whatever may be
-true of a few individuals, with communities a generally low condition
-of mental and physical efficiency, thrift, and commercial success, is
-coincident with a low proportion of protein in the diet.” The writer,
-however, fails to find evidence in the results afforded by dietary
-studies that there is any causal relationship between the amount of
-proteid food consumed and the mental or physical supremacy of the
-people of a given nation or community. Cause and effect are liable to
-become reversed in arguments of this kind. It is certainly just as
-plausible to assume that increase in the consumption of proteid follows
-in the footsteps of commercial and other forms of prosperity, as to
-argue that prosperity or mental and physical development are the result
-of an increased intake of proteid food.
-
-Proteid foods are usually costly, and the ability of a community to
-indulge freely in this form of dietetic luxury depends in large measure
-upon its commercial prosperity. The palate is an extremely sensitive
-organ, and the average individual properly derives great satisfaction
-from the pleasurable effects of tasty articles of food. Furthermore,
-there are many curious and quite unphysiological notions abroad
-regarding foods, which tend to incite persons to unnecessary excess
-and extravagance whenever they acquire the means to do so. The latter
-point is well illustrated by the more or less prevalent opinion that a
-cut of tenderloin steak is more nutritious than a cut of round steak.
-It is true that the former is apt to be more tender, to have a little
-finer flavor; but the round steak, when properly prepared, is just as
-nutritious, and equally capable of meeting the needs of the body, as
-the more expensive tenderloin. With increasing prosperity, we turn at
-once, as a rule, to the more tasty and appetizing viands, partly to
-satisfy the craving of appetite and palate, and partly because there
-is an inherent belief that these varied delicacies, accessible to the
-prosperous community, count as an aid to health and strength. The poor
-laborer, with his small wage, is restricted to a certain low level
-of dietary variety, and must likewise be economical as to quantity,
-but on the first opportunity afforded by a fuller purse he is apt
-to pass from corned beef to a fresh roast with its more appetizing
-flavor; to eschew brown bread in favor of the white loaf, and in many
-other ways to evince his desire for a dietary which, though perhaps no
-more nutritious, appeals because of its finer flavor, more appetizing
-appearance, and greater variety. He is in the same position as the
-smoker who, limited by his purse to a five-cent cigar after dinner,
-quickly passes to a cigar of better flavor as soon as his finances
-warrant the indulgence. At the same time, if prosperity continues, our
-laborer will speedily pass to a higher level of proteid intake and
-greater fuel value, through increased consumption of meat and butter,
-together with other articles rich in proteid and fat.
-
-In this connection, we may emphasize a fact of some significance in its
-bearing on dietetic customs; viz., that ever since Liebig advanced his
-theory that proteid material is the sole source of muscular energy,
-there has been a deep-rooted belief that meat is the most efficient
-kind of food for keeping up the strength of the body, and hence
-especially demanded by all whose work is mainly physical. Although this
-view, as we have seen, has been thoroughly disproved, the idea is still
-more or less generally held that an abundance of meat is a necessary
-requisite for a good day’s work, a view which undoubtedly accounts in
-some measure for the tendency toward a high proteid intake, evinced by
-many of the laboring class whose means will permit the necessary outlay.
-
-Increased consumption of proteid food may be coincident with thrift and
-commercial success, but there is no justification for the belief that
-these are the result of changed dietary conditions. The dietary of our
-New England forefathers was, according to all accounts, exceedingly
-limited as compared with that of to-day, but it is doubtful if the
-present generation is any better developed, physically or mentally,
-than the stalwart and vigorous people who opened up this country to
-civilization. To-day, as a nation, we have greater wealth, and our
-commercial prosperity has become phenomenal; but would any one think
-for a moment that these characteristics are attributable to the
-large consumption of proteid food so common to this generation of
-the American people? No, increased wealth simply paves the way for
-greater freedom in the choice of food; increased commercial success
-and business prosperity throw open avenues which formerly were closed;
-greater variety of animal foods, and vegetable foods as well, rich in
-proteid, are made easily accessible, and appeal to eye and palate on
-all sides; appetite and craving for food are abnormally stimulated,
-and dietetic habits and customs change accordingly. In the words of
-another, “the one thing that primitive, barbarous, and civilized man
-alike long for is an abundance of the ‘flesh-pots of Egypt.’ The
-very first use the latter makes of his increased power and financial
-resources is to buy new, rare, and expensive kinds of meat.” With these
-facts before us, it is difficult to accept the assumption that dietetic
-customs afford any indication of the food requirements of the body. To
-the physiologist such a view does not appeal, since there is a lack of
-any scientific evidence that carries conviction.
-
-But it may be asked, is not appetite a safe guide to follow? Do not
-the cravings of the stomach and the so-called pangs of hunger merit
-consideration? Is it not the part of wisdom to follow inclination in
-the choice and quantity of our food? Can we not safely rely upon these
-factors as an index of the real needs of the body? If these questions
-are to be answered in the affirmative, then it is plain that a study
-of dietetic customs will tell us definitely how much food and what
-kinds of food are required daily to supply the true wants of the body.
-There are writers who claim that instinct is a perfectly safe guide to
-follow; that it is far superior to reason; but it is to be noticed
-that most of these writers, if they have any physiological knowledge
-to draw upon, are sooner or later prone to admit that the body has
-certain definite needs which it is the purpose of food to supply, with
-the added implication that any surplus of food over and above what is
-necessary to meet these demands is entirely uncalled for. Thus, one
-such writer states that “the man in the street follows his God-given
-instincts and plods peacefully along to his three square meals a day,
-consisting of anything he can find in the market, and just as much of
-it as he can afford, with special preference for rich meats, fats, and
-sugars.” Yet this same writer, a little later, emphasizes the fact that
-“every particle of the energy which sparkles in our eyes, which moves
-our muscles, which warms our imaginations, is sunlight cunningly woven
-into our food by the living cell, whether vegetable or animal. Every
-movement, every word, every thought, every aspiration represents the
-expenditure of precisely so much energy derived from food.” Why, then,
-would it not be wise to ascertain how much energy is so expended, on
-an average, during the day’s activity and govern the intake of food
-accordingly? Why not apply an intelligent supervision in place of
-following an instinct which, in the words of the author just quoted,
-leads one on to consume “anything he can find in the market and just as
-much of it as he can afford”? Truly, if dietetic customs and the habits
-of mankind are the results of instinct working in this fashion, there
-cannot be much value in the data obtained by observing the quantities
-of food mankind is in the habit of eating. Dietary standards based on
-such observations must be open to the suspicion of representing values
-far above the actual needs of the body.
-
-Habits and cravings are certainly very unreliable indices of true
-physiological requirements. Man is constantly acquiring new habits, and
-these in time become second nature, forcing him to practise that which
-he has become accustomed to, regardless of whether it is beneficial
-or otherwise. The celebrated philosopher, John Locke, in his essay on
-education, says: “I do not think all people’s appetites are alike ...
-but this I think, that many are made gourmands and gluttons by custom,
-that were not so by nature; and I see in some countries, men as lusty
-and strong, that eat but two meals a day, as others that have set their
-stomachs by a constant usage, like Larums, to call on them for four or
-five.” Again, the so-called cravings of appetite are largely artificial
-and mainly the result of habit. A habit once acquired and persistently
-followed soon has us in its grasp, and then any deviation therefrom is
-very apt to disturb our physiological equilibrium. The system makes
-complaint, and we experience a craving, it may be, for that to which
-the body has become accustomed. There has thus come about a sentiment
-that the cravings of the appetite for food are to be fully satisfied,
-that this is merely obedience to nature’s laws. In reality, there is
-no foundation for such a belief; any one with a little persistence can
-change his or her habits of life, change the whole order of cravings,
-thereby indicating that the latter are essentially artificial, and that
-they have no necessary connection with the welfare or needs of the
-body. The man who for some reason deems it advisable to adopt two meals
-a day in place of three or four, at first experiences a certain amount
-of discomfort, but eventually the new habit becomes a part of the daily
-routine, and the man’s life moves forward as before, with perfect
-comfort and without a suggestion of craving, or a pang of hunger.
-Dietetic requirements, and standard dietaries, are not to be founded
-upon the so-called cravings of appetite and the instinctive demands
-for food, but upon reason and intelligence, reinforced by definite
-knowledge of the real necessities of the bodily machinery.
-
-The standards which have been adopted more or less generally throughout
-the civilized world, based primarily on the assumption that man
-instinctively and independently selects a diet that is best adapted
-to his individual needs, are open to grave suspicion. The view that
-the average food consumption of large numbers of individuals and
-communities must represent the true nutritive requirements of the
-people is equally untenable. Naturally, there is general recognition
-of the principle that food requirements are necessarily modified by
-a variety of circumstances, such as age, sex, body-weight, bodily
-activity, etc. It is obvious that the man of 140 pounds body-weight
-needs less proteid than the man of 170 pounds, and that the man who
-does a large amount of physical work demands a larger calorific
-value in his daily diet, _i. e._, more carbohydrate and fat, than
-the sedentary individual. The growing child, in proportion to his
-body-weight, plainly needs more proteid for the upbuilding of tissue,
-and there are many conditions of disease where special dietetic
-treatment is undoubtedly called for. Our contention, however, and one
-which we believe to be perfectly justifiable, is that the true food
-requirements of the body, under any conditions, cannot be ascertained
-with any degree of accuracy by observations of what people are in the
-habit of eating; that customs and habits are not a safe index of true
-physiological needs. On the contrary, we are inclined to the belief
-that direct physiological experimentation, covering a sufficient length
-of time and with an adequate number of individuals, will prove far more
-efficient in affording a true estimate of the quality and quantity of
-food best adapted for the maintenance of good health, strength, and
-vigor.
-
-Before considering these latter points, it is interesting to note, in
-passing, that during the last four centuries many thoughtful men have
-called attention to the apparent excessive use of food. There seems
-to have been in many quarters a more or less prevalent opinion that
-custom and habit were leading people on to methods of living, which
-were not in accord with the best interests of the community. It must be
-remembered, however, that arguments of this kind, even fifty years ago,
-could have been founded only on general observation and the application
-of common sense, since there were then no sound physiological data
-on which to predicate an opinion, or base a conclusion. Still, there
-were men of authority who attempted to lay before the people a proper
-conception of the temperate use of food. We have not the time here to
-consider many of these pleas, but I venture to call attention to the
-somewhat celebrated book published by the physician Thomas Cogan in
-1596, under the title “The Haven of Health,” and dedicated “to the
-right honorable and my verie good lord, Sir Edward Seymour, Knight and
-Earl of Hertford.” Under the subject of diet, this old-time writer
-says: “The second thing that is to be considered of meates is the
-quantitie, which ought of all men greatly to be regarded, for therein
-lyeth no small occasion of health or sickness, of life or death. For
-as want of meate consumeth the very substance of our flesh, so doth
-excesse and surfet extinguish and suffocate naturall heat wherein life
-consisteth.” Again, “Use a measure in eating, that thou maist live
-long: and if thou wilst be in health, then hold thine hands. But the
-greatest occasion why men passe the measure in eating, is varitie of
-meats at one meale. Which fault is most common among us in England
-farre above all other nations. For such is our custome by reason of
-plentie (as I think) that they which be of abilitie, are served with
-sundry sortes of meate at one meale. Yea the more we would welcome our
-friends the more dishes we prepare. And when we are well satisfied with
-one dish or two, then come other more delicate and procureth us by that
-meanes, to eate more than nature doth require. Thus varietie bringeth
-us to excesse, and sometimes to surfet also. But Phisicke teacheth
-us to faede moderately upon one kinde of meate only at one meale, or
-at leastwise not upon many of contrarie natures.... This disease, (I
-mean surfet) is verie common: for common is that saying and most true:
-That more die by surfet than by the sword. And as Georgius Pictorius
-saith, all surfet is ill, but of bread worst of all. And if nature be
-so strong in many, and they be not sicke upon a full gorge, yet they
-are drowsie and heavie, and more desirous to loyter than to labor,
-according to that old maeter, when the belly is full, the bones would
-be at rest. Yea the minde and wit is so oppressed and overwhelmed with
-excesse that it lyeth as it were drowned for a time, and unable to use
-his force.”
-
-Cogan likewise makes some interesting statements regarding the effects
-of custom on the consumption of proteid food, especially meats. Quoting
-further from this author: “The fourth thing that is to be considered
-in meats is custome. Which is of such force in man’s bodie both in
-sicknesse and in health, that it countervaileth nature itselfe, and is
-therefore called of Galen in sundry places, an other nature. Whereof he
-giveth a notable example, where he sheweth that an olde woman of Athens
-used a long time, to eate Hemlocke (which is a ranke poison) first a
-little quantitie, and afterwarde more, till at length she could eate so
-much without hurt as would presently poison another.... So that custome
-in processe of time may alter nature.” Finally, we may quote one last
-saying of Cogan’s, because of the good sense and wisdom displayed
-in the sentiment, as true to-day as when it was written more than
-three hundred years ago: “Neither is it good for any man that is in
-perfect health, to observe any custome in dyet precisely, as Arnoldus
-teacheth upon the same verses in these wordes: Every man should so
-order himselfe, that he might be able to suffer heate and cold, and
-all motions, and meats necessary, so as he might change the houres of
-sleeping and waking, and his dwelling and lodging without harme: which
-thing may be done if we be not too precise in keeping custome, but
-otherwise use things unwonted. Which sentence of Arnoldus agraeth verie
-well to that of Cornelius Celsus: He that is sound and in good health,
-and at libertie, should bind himselfe to no rules of dyet. To need
-neither Phisition or Chirurgion, he must use a diverse order of life,
-and be sometimes in the countrie, sometime in the towne, sometimes
-hunt, and sometime hawke. But some man may demand of me how this may
-agree with that saying of the scholar of Salernus ‘if you would be free
-from physicians, let these three be your physician, a cheerful mind,
-rest, and a moderate diet.’ Whereunto I answer, that a moderate dyet
-is alwaies good, but not a precise dyet: for a moderate diet is, as
-Terence speaketh in Andria: To take nothing too much: which alwaies
-is to be observed. But if a man accustome himselfe to such meats and
-drinks as at length will breed some inconvenience in his bodie, or to
-sleepe or to watch, or any other thing concerning the order of his
-life, such custome must naedes be amended and changed, yet with good
-discretion, and not upon the sudden: because sudden changes bring harme
-and weaknesse, as Hippocrates teacheth. He therefore that will alter
-any custome in dyet rightly, must do it with three conditions, which
-are expressed by Hippocrates. Change is profitable, if it be rightly
-used, that is, if it be done in the time of health, and at leisure, and
-not upon the sudden.”
-
-This noteworthy book written by Cogan was preceded by the writings
-of Louis Cornaro, the Venetian, who forty years before had published
-the first edition of his celebrated book, “The Temperate Life,” and
-who was a most ardent advocate of the benefits to be derived by
-living temperately, especially in matters of diet. The simple diet
-which served for the nourishment of the oldest peoples of Syria,
-Greece, Egypt, and of the Romans when they were at the height of
-their prosperity and culture, was advocated by Cornaro as conducing
-to longevity, better health, and greater comfort of mind and body.
-Himself a striking example of the effects of a reasonable abstinence in
-diet (the last edition of his book having been written at the age of
-ninety-five), his teachings have continued to attract attention down to
-the present day; and although we have no values in grams or calories
-expressive of his average food consumption, it is quite evident that
-Cornaro lived a very abstemious life, eating little of the heavier
-articles of diet common to his time and country. It is perhaps not
-strictly physiological to refer to these cases, yet they have value
-as representing a sentiment, common to the centuries now passed, that
-benefit was to be derived by mankind from greater care in the taking of
-food; that prevalent customs and habits were leading the people into
-intemperate modes of life, and that these were surely tending toward
-the physical and mental deterioration of the nation. We may attach much
-or little weight to these conclusions, but there is a certain degree of
-significance in the views, current then as now, that dietetic customs
-and habits have no real connection with bodily requirements.
-
-Passing down to our own times, we find physiologists, by the aid
-of scientific methods, studying the effects of smaller amounts of
-food (smaller than custom prescribes) on the condition of the body,
-thereby evincing a certain degree of skepticism concerning the dietary
-standards based on habit and usage. This has been especially true
-regarding the nitrogen requirement, or the need for proteid food.
-As has been clearly pointed out in other connections, there are
-two distinct needs which the body has for food; one for proteid or
-nitrogen, the other for energy-yielding material. According to the
-Voit standard, a man of average body-weight doing a moderate amount
-of work requires daily 118 grams of proteid food, or about 16 grams of
-metabolizable nitrogen, with fat and carbohydrate sufficient to yield
-a total fuel value of over 3000 large calories. As we have seen, the
-fuel value of the food must of necessity be a variable quantity because
-of variations in bodily activity. The more muscular work performed,
-the greater must be the intake of carbohydrate and fat, if the body
-is to be kept in equilibrium. With proteid or nitrogen, however, the
-case is quite different, since with adequate amounts of non-nitrogenous
-food, proteid is not drawn upon for the energy of muscular work.
-We can conceive of the nitrogen requirement, therefore, as being
-a constant factor in the well-nourished individual and dependent
-primarily upon body-weight, or more exactly, upon the weight of true
-proteid-containing tissue. Obviously, whatever else happens, there must
-be enough proteid food taken daily to maintain the body in nitrogen
-equilibrium. If this can be accomplished only by the ingestion of 16
-grams of metabolizable nitrogen, then it is plain that the daily ration
-must contain at least 118 grams of proteid food; _i. e._, it must
-conform approximately at least to ordinary usage.
-
-This question has been studied by many investigators, with very
-interesting and suggestive results. Thus, in 1887, Hirschfeld[55]
-reported some experiments on himself, twenty-four years of age and
-weighing 73 kilos. His ordinary diet contained daily 100 to 130 grams
-of proteid, and the amount of nitrogen excreted varied from 16 to 20
-grams per day, corresponding to a metabolism of proteid equal to the
-amount ingested. In other words, the body was essentially in nitrogen
-equilibrium. Then, for a period of fifteen days, during which he was
-unusually active, he lived on a diet in which the content of proteid
-corresponded to only 6 grams of nitrogen per day, and yet he remained
-in nitrogen equilibrium. The diet made use of was composed essentially
-of milk, eggs, rice, potatoes, bread, butter, sugar, and coffee, with
-some wine and beer, and on two days a little meat. It is to be observed
-that the nitrogen or proteid intake per day was only one-third of what
-he was accustomed to consume. In a second experiment, covering ten
-days, similar results were obtained. So that evidence was afforded that
-a young and vigorous man can maintain his body in nitrogen equilibrium,
-for fifteen consecutive days at least, on an amount of proteid food
-equal to only one-third of the minimal requirement called for by common
-usage. Plainly, the difference between a daily consumption of 118 grams
-of proteid food and 40 grams represents a large percentage saving,
-both of proteid and in the metabolism of proteid matter with all the
-attendant transformations. In these experiments, however, the subject
-consumed relatively large amounts of non-nitrogenous food, notably
-butter, of which on some days he took as much as 100 grams. The average
-fuel value of his food ranged from 3750 to 3916 calories per day; a
-fact of some importance, since it is to be remembered that both fat and
-carbohydrate tend to protect proteid metabolism.
-
- [55] Felix Hirschfeld: Untersuchungen über den Eiweissbedarf des
- Menschen. Pflüger’s Archiv f. d. gesammte Physiologie, Band 41, p.
- 533.
-
-In an experiment reported in 1889 by Carl Voit[56], on a vegetarian
-weighing about 57 kilos, it was found that with a purely vegetable
-diet the subject was able, for a few days at least, to maintain his
-body in essentially a condition of nitrogen equilibrium on a daily
-diet containing 8.4 grams of nitrogen, corresponding to 52.5 grams
-of proteid. In addition, there was a large consumption of starchy
-food with some fat. Klemperer,[57] experimenting with two young men,
-having a body-weight of 64 and 65.5 kilos, respectively, was able to
-keep them in a condition of nitrogenous equilibrium for a period of
-eight days on 4.38 grams and 3.58 grams of nitrogen per day. The diet,
-however, had a large fuel value, 5020 calories per day, and contained
-in addition to the small amount of proteid, 264 grams of fat, 470
-grams of carbohydrate, and 172 grams of alcohol. Breisacher,[58] in an
-experiment on himself, using a mixed diet composed of 67.8 grams of
-proteid, 494.2 grams of carbohydrate, and 60.5 grams of fat per day,
-with a total fuel value of 2866 calories, observed a daily excretion
-of nitrogen during thirty days of 8.23 grams. This corresponds to a
-metabolism of 51.4 grams of proteid, thus showing that the 67 grams
-of food-proteid taken was quite sufficient to maintain nitrogen
-equilibrium for the above length of time.
-
- [56] Carl Voit: Ueber die Kost eines Vegetariers. Zeitschrift für
- Biologie, Band 25, p. 232.
-
- [57] Klemperer: Untersuchungen über Stoffwechsel und Ernährung in
- Krankheiten. Zeitschrift für klin. Medizin, Band 16, p. 550.
-
- [58] L. Breisacher: Ueber die Grösse des Eiweissbedarfs beim
- Menschen. Deutsche med. Wochenschrift. 1891. No. 48.
-
-Caspari and Glässner[59] have reported observations made on two
-vegetarians, a man and his wife, aged 49 and 48 years respectively, who
-had lived for some years exclusively on a vegetable diet. The man had
-a body-weight of 68.8 kilos, while the woman weighed 58 kilos. During
-five days, the man consumed per day, on an average, 7.83 grams of
-nitrogen and 4559 calories. This corresponds to 0.114 gram of nitrogen
-per kilo of body-weight, and 66 calories per kilo. On this diet, the
-man gained slightly in weight and showed a plus nitrogen balance of
-5.2 grams for the five days. In other words, even this low nitrogen or
-proteid intake was more than sufficient to meet the wants of his body.
-The wife, during the same period of time, consumed per day 5.33 grams
-of nitrogen and 2715 calories, corresponding to 0.092 gram of nitrogen
-per kilo of body-weight and 47 calories per kilo. On this diet, the
-woman gained 0.9 kilo in weight during the five days, and like the
-man, she showed a plus nitrogen balance of 2.45 grams for the entire
-period. The somewhat noted experiments of Sivén have been referred to
-in another connection, and it will suffice to recall the fact that
-he was able, with a body-weight of 60 kilos, to establish nitrogen
-equilibrium on 6.26 grams of nitrogen, and for a day or two on 4.5
-grams of nitrogen, with a total fuel value of only 2444 calories in the
-day’s ration.
-
- [59] W. Caspari: Physiologische Studien über Vegetarianismus. Bonn.
- 1905. p. 13.
-
-These few illustrations will serve to indicate that, so far as the
-maintenance of nitrogen equilibrium is concerned during short periods
-of time, there is no necessity for the consumption of proteid food in
-such amounts as common usage dictates. The high proteid intake called
-for by the “standard dietaries,” and the ordinary practices of mankind,
-is not needed to establish a condition of nitrogen equilibrium. It
-would seem, however, as if results of this nature, presented from
-time to time by various investigators, have been considered more in
-the light of scientific curiosities than as data having an important
-bearing on physiological processes. So strong has been the hold upon
-the medical and physiological mind of the necessity of high proteid
-that such figures as the above have merely excited comment, without
-weakening in any measure the prevalent conviction that health,
-strength, and the power to work necessitate a high rate of proteid
-exchange.
-
-To one willing to accept the data as having possible significance there
-arises at once the question, How long can the body be maintained in
-nitrogen equilibrium on such relatively small quantities of proteid
-food? In other words, can experiments of this nature, extending over
-comparatively short periods of time, be safely accepted as a reliable
-means of measuring the proteid requirements of the body for indefinite
-periods? Suppose, says the critic, we grant that the body can maintain
-itself in nitrogen equilibrium for a week or two on a very small amount
-of proteid food, what proof have we that in the long run the body will
-be benefited thereby, or even able to exist in a condition of normal
-strength and vigor? In other words, is a low proteid diet, one that
-seems sufficient to maintain the body in nitrogen equilibrium, a wholly
-safe one to follow? May there not be other elements to be considered,
-aside from nitrogen equilibrium, which, if fully understood, would
-satisfactorily account for the customs of mankind, in which perhaps
-man’s instincts have been followed for the betterment of the race? It
-was with a view to learning more concerning these questions that five
-years ago the writer commenced systematic, experimental, work upon the
-nutrition of man, with special reference to his nitrogen requirements.
-The experiments and observations have been continued up to the present
-time, with many suggestive results, some of which will now be referred
-to.[60]
-
- [60] In presenting the general results of these experiments, the
- writer has drawn freely from his book, “Physiological Economy in
- Nutrition,” published by the Frederick A. Stokes Company, New York,
- 1904.
-
-One group of subjects was composed of professional men, professors and
-instructors in the university, whose work was mainly mental rather
-than physical, though by no means excluding the latter. Of this group,
-two cases will be referred to with some regard for detail, since in
-no other way can so striking a picture be presented of the effects
-produced. The first subject weighed 65 kilos in the fall of 1902, and
-at that time was nearly 47 years of age. His dietetic habits were in
-accord with common practice, and his daily consumption of proteid food
-averaged close to 118 grams. With a clear recognition of the principle
-that the habits of a lifetime should not be too suddenly changed, a
-very gradual reduction in the total amount of food, and especially of
-proteid matter, was made. This finally resulted, with this particular
-subject, in the complete abolition of breakfast, with the exception of
-a small cup of coffee. A light lunch was taken at noontime, followed by
-a more substantial dinner at night. There was no change to a vegetable
-diet, but naturally any attempt to cut off largely the amount of
-proteid food necessarily results in a marked diminution in the quantity
-of animal food or meats. It is a somewhat singular though suggestive
-fact, that a change of this order gradually results in a stronger
-liking for simple foods, with their more delicate flavor, accompanied
-by a diminished desire for the heavier animal foods.
-
-As the day’s ration was gradually reduced in amount, the body-weight
-began to fall off, until after some months it became stationary at 57
-kilos, at which point it has remained practically constant for over
-three years. The sixteen pounds of weight lost was composed, mainly at
-least, of superfluous fat. For a period of nine months, from October,
-1903, to the end of June, 1904, the amount of proteid material broken
-down in the body was determined each day. The average daily metabolism
-of nitrogen for the entire period of nearly nine months amounted to
-5.69 grams. For the last two months, it averaged 5.4 grams per day.
-Analyses made from time to time since these figures were obtained show
-that the subject is still living at the same low level of nitrogen
-metabolism. In fact, the data available afford satisfactory proof
-that for a period covering over three years this particular person
-has subsisted on an amount of proteid food equal to a metabolism of
-not more than 5.8 grams of nitrogen per day. It may be asked why the
-subject should have continued such a low proteid diet after the nine
-months’ period was completed? In reply, it may be said that the new
-habit has taken a firm hold, and entirely supplanted the dietetic
-desires and cravings of the preceding years. Further, the improved
-condition of health, freedom from minor ailments that formerly caused
-inconvenience and discomfort, and the greater ability to work without
-fatigue, have all combined to place the new habit on a firm basis, from
-which there is no desire to change.
-
-Consider for a moment what this lowered consumption of proteid food
-really amounts to, as compared with ordinary usage and the so-called
-dietary standards. The latter call for at least 118 grams of proteid
-or albuminous food daily, of which 105 grams should be absorbable, in
-order to maintain the body in a condition of nitrogen equilibrium,
-and in a state of physical vigor and general tone. This would mean a
-daily metabolism and excretion of at least 16 grams of nitrogen. Our
-subject, however, excreted per day, during nine months, only 5.69 grams
-of nitrogen, which means a metabolism of 35.6 grams of proteid; _i.
-e._, about one-third the amount ordinarily deemed necessary to meet
-man’s requirement for proteid food. But was our subject in nitrogen
-equilibrium on this small amount of proteid food? We answer yes, as the
-following balance period shows:
-
- Output.
- Nitrogen in Nitrogen through Weight of Excrement
- Food. Kidneys. (dry).
- March 20 6.989 grams. 5.91 grams. 3.6 grams.
- 21 6.621 5.52 ..
- 22 6.082 5.94 12.0
- 23 6.793 5.61 18.5
- 24 5.057 4.31 23.0
- 25 6.966 5.39 16.9
- ----- ---- ----
- 74.0 grams contain
- 6.42% N.
-
- 38.508 32.68 + 4.75 grams nitrogen.
- ------ --------------------------
- 38.508 grams nitrogen. 37.43 grams nitrogen.
-
- Nitrogen balance for six days = +1.078 grams.
- Nitrogen balance per day = +0.179 gram.
-
-In this particular period of six days, the body was really gaining a
-little nitrogen, _i. e._, storing away a small amount of proteid for
-future use, although it may be granted that the amount was too small to
-have any special significance. During this period, the average daily
-intake of nitrogen was 6.4 grams, equal to 40 grams of proteid food.
-The average daily output of nitrogen through kidneys and excrement was
-6.24 grams. The average daily output of metabolized nitrogen, through
-the kidneys, was 5.44 grams, corresponding to the breaking down of 34
-grams of proteid material. Further, it should be stated that the total
-calorific value of the daily food during this period was less than 2000
-calories. Let me add now a final balance period taken at the close of
-the nine months’ trial:
-
- Output.
- Nitrogen in Nitrogen through Weight of Excrement
- Food. Kidneys. (dry).
- June 23 6.622 grams. 5.26 grams. 10.6 grams.
- 24 6.331 5.30 30.7
- 25 4.941 4.43 14.2
- 26 5.922 4.66 11.9
- 27 5.486 4.98 15.2
- ----- ---- ----
- 82.6 grams contain
- 6.08% N.
-
- 29.302 24.63 + 5.022 grams nitrogen.
- ------ --------------------------
- 29.302 grams nitrogen. 29.652 grams nitrogen.
-
-
- Nitrogen balance for five days = -0.350 gram.
- Nitrogen balance per day = -0.070 gram.
-
-In this period of five days, the average daily intake of nitrogen was
-5.86 grams, corresponding to 36.6 grams of proteid food. The average
-daily output of metabolized nitrogen was 4.92 grams, implying the
-breaking down in the body of only 30.7 grams of proteid material
-per day. The fuel value of the daily food, calculated as closely as
-possible, was less than 2000 calories. The body was essentially in
-nitrogen equilibrium, the minus balance being too small to have any
-special significance.
-
-It will be instructive to consider next the actual character and amount
-of the diet made use of on several of these balance days:
-
-
-_March 21._
-
- Breakfast.--Coffee 119 grams, cream 30 grams, sugar 9 grams.
-
- Lunch.--One shredded wheat biscuit 31 grams, cream 116 grams, wheat
- gem 33 grams, butter 7 grams, tea 185 grams, sugar 10 grams, cream
- cake 53 grams.
-
- Dinner.--Pea soup 114 grams, lamb chop 24 grams, boiled sweet potato
- 47 grams, wheat gems 76 grams, butter 13 grams, cream cake 52 grams,
- coffee 61 grams, sugar 10 grams, cheese crackers 16 grams.
-
- Total nitrogen content of the day’s food = 6.621 grams.
-
-
-_June 24._
-
- Breakfast.--Coffee 96 grams, cream 32 grams, sugar 8 grams.
-
- Lunch.--Creamed codfish 89 grams, baked potato 95 grams, butter 10
- grams, hominy gems 58 grams, strawberries 86 grams, sugar 26 grams,
- ginger snaps 47 grams, water.
-
- Dinner.--Cold tongue 14 grams, fried potato 48 grams, peas 60 grams,
- wheat gems 30 grams, butter 11 grams, lettuce-orange salad with
- mayonnaise dressing 155 grams, crackers 22 grams, cream cheese 14
- grams, ginger snaps 22 grams, coffee 58 grams, sugar 10 grams.
-
- Total nitrogen content of the day’s food = 6.331 grams.
-
-
-_June 25._
-
- Breakfast.--Coffee 101 grams, cream 36 grams, sugar 13 grams.
-
- Lunch.--Omelette 50 grams, bacon 9 grams, French fried potato 23
- grams, biscuit 29 grams, butter 8 grams, ginger snaps 42 grams, cream
- cheese 17 grams, iced tea 150 grams, sugar 15 grams.
-
- Dinner.--Wheat popovers 57 grams, butter 10 grams, lettuce-orange
- salad with mayonnaise dressing 147 grams, crackers 22 grams, cream
- cheese 21 grams, cottage pudding 82 grams, coffee 48 grams, sugar 11
- grams.
-
- Total nitrogen content of the day’s food = 4.941 grams.
-
-
-_June 27._
-
- Breakfast.--Coffee 112 grams, cream 22 grams, sugar 10 grams.
-
- Lunch.--Roast lamb 9 grams, baked potato 90 grams, wheat gems 47
- grams, butter 12 grams, iced tea 250 grams, sugar 25 grams, vanilla
- éclair 47 grams.
-
- Dinner.--Lamb chop 32 grams, creamed potato 107 grams, asparagus 49
- grams, bread 35 grams, butter 17 grams, lettuce-orange salad with
- mayonnaise dressing 150 grams, crackers 21 grams, cream cheese 12
- grams, coffee 63 grams, sugar 9 grams.
-
- Total nitrogen content of the day’s food = 5.486 grams.
-
-
-It can be seen that there was nothing especially peculiar in these
-dietaries, aside from their simplicity, except that the quantities
-were small. Meat was not excluded; there was no approach to a cereal
-diet; there were no fads involved, nothing but simple moderation
-in the amounts of nitrogen-containing foods. Further, there was
-perfect freedom of choice; full latitude to consider personal likes
-and dislikes in the selection of foods; anything that appealed to
-the appetite could be eaten, with the simple restriction that the
-amount taken must be small. During the balance days, naturally, every
-article of food had to be carefully weighed and analyzed, which fact
-undoubtedly tended to limit in some degree the variety of foods chosen,
-since increase in the number of articles meant increased labor in
-analysis. Quite noticeable, however, was the extreme constancy in the
-nitrogen-content of the daily diet, even on those days when the food
-was not weighed. In other words, there had been gradually acquired
-a new habit of food consumption, and the individual, unconsciously
-perhaps, rarely overstepped the limits fixed by the new level of
-proteid metabolism. This is a fact that has been conspicuous in nearly
-all of our experiments, where freedom of choice in the taking of food
-has been followed; and is in harmony with the view that after a lower
-level of proteid metabolism has once been established, and the body has
-become accustomed to the new conditions, there is little tendency for
-any marked deviation from the new standards of food consumption.
-
-With maintenance of body-weight, together with nitrogen equilibrium
-through all these months; and with health, strength, and mental and
-physical vigor unimpaired, there is certainly ground for the belief
-that the real needs of the body were as fully met by the lowered
-consumption of proteid food as by the quantities called for by the
-customary standards. Finally, it should be noted that this particular
-subject was small in weight, and hence did not need so much proteid
-as a man of heavier body-weight would require. In recognizing this
-principle, we may for future comparison calculate the nitrogen
-requirement of the body, on the basis of the present results, per kilo
-of body-weight. With the weight of the subject placed at 57 kilos, and
-with an average daily excretion of nitrogen amounting to practically
-5.7 grams, it is plain that this individual was quite able to maintain
-a condition of equilibrium with a metabolism of 0.1 gram of nitrogen
-per kilo of body-weight. Translated into terms of proteid matter, this
-would mean a utilization by the body of 0.625 gram of proteid daily
-per kilo of body-weight. Regarding the fuel value of the daily food,
-we need not be more precise than to emphasize the fact that so far as
-could be determined, on the basis of chemical composition, the heat
-value of the food rarely exceeded 1900 calories per day. If we make a
-liberal allowance, for the sake of precaution, it would seem quite safe
-to say that this particular individual, under the conditions of life
-and bodily activity prevailing, did not apparently need of fuel value
-more than 2000 calories per day, which would correspond to 35 calories
-per kilo of body-weight.
-
-Let us turn now to the second subject in this group, a man of 76 kilos
-body-weight, 32 years of age, and of strong physique. His active life
-in the laboratory called for greater physical exertion than the former
-subject, and consequently there was need for greater consumption of
-non-nitrogenous food, with the accompanying increase in fuel value of
-the day’s ration. As in the preceding case, there was no prescribing
-of food, but a gradual and voluntary diminution of proteid material.
-During the last seven months and a half of the experiment, the average
-daily excretion of nitrogen through the kidneys amounted to 6.53 grams,
-equivalent to a metabolism of 40.8 grams of proteid matter daily; a
-little more than one-third the minimal quantity called for by common
-usage. At first, the body-weight of the subject gradually fell until it
-reached 70 kilos, at which point it remained fairly constant during the
-last five months. That the quantity of food taken was quite sufficient
-to maintain the body in a condition of nitrogen equilibrium is apparent
-from the results of a comparison of income and outgo of nitrogen, as
-shown in the following table:
-
- Output.
- Nitrogen in Nitrogen through Weight of Excrement
- Food. Kidneys. (dry).
- May 18 8.668 grams. 6.06 grams. 14 grams.
- 19 6.474 7.17 39
- 20 6.691 6.33 30
- --
- 21 8.345 6.78 83 contain 6.06% N.
- = 5.03 grm. N.
- 22 7.015 5.70 ..
- 23 9.726 5.75 38
- 24 10.424 6.39 57
- ------ ---- --
- 95 contain 5.76% N.
- = 5.47 grm. N.
- ----
- 10.50 grm. N.
-
- 57.343 44.18 + 10.50 grams nitrogen.
- ------ -------------
- 57.343 grams N. 54.68 grams nitrogen.
-
- Nitrogen balance for seven days = +2.663 grams.
- Nitrogen balance per day = +0.380 gram.
-
-The average daily intake of nitrogen was 8.192 grams, equivalent to
-51.2 grams of proteid food. The average amount of nitrogen excreted
-through the kidneys each day was 6.31 grams, corresponding to a
-metabolism of 39.43 grams of proteid matter. The plus balance of 0.380
-gram of nitrogen per day shows that not only was the amount of proteid
-food consumed quite adequate to meet the demands of the body, but the
-latter was able to store up 2.3 grams of proteid per day. Regarding
-the character of the food taken by this subject, it should be stated
-that there was gradually developed a tendency toward a pure vegetarian
-diet. During the last seven months of the experiment, meats were
-almost entirely excluded. The diet voluntarily selected thus differed
-decidedly from that of the preceding subject in that it was much more
-bulky, contained a larger proportion of undigestible vegetable matter,
-and was richer in fats and carbohydrates, with a corresponding increase
-in fuel value. The exact character of the daily dietary is indicated
-by the following data of food consumption, on four of the days of the
-above balance period:
-
-
-_May 19._
-
- Breakfast.--Banana 102 grams, wheat rolls 50 grams, coffee 150 grams,
- cream 50 grams, sugar 21 grams.
-
- Lunch.--Omelette 20 grams, bread 57 grams, hominy 137 grams, syrup 68
- grams, potatoes 128 grams, coffee 100 grams, cream 50 grams, sugar 21
- grams.
-
- Dinner.--Tomato purée 200 grams, bread 24 grams, fried sweet potato
- 100 grams, spinach 70 grams, Indian meal 100 grams, syrup 25 grams,
- coffee 100 grams, cream 40 grams, sugar 21 grams.
-
- Total nitrogen content of the day’s food = 6.474 grams.
-
-
-_May 20._
-
- Breakfast.--Sliced orange 140 grams, coffee 100 grams, cream 30
- grams, sugar 21 grams.
-
- Lunch.--Lima beans 40 grams, mashed potato 250 grams, bread 28 grams,
- fried hominy 115 grams, syrup 48 grams, coffee 100 grams, cream 30
- grams, sugar 21 grams.
-
- Dinner.--Consommé 150 grams, string beans 140 grams, mashed potato
- 250 grams, rice croquette 93 grams, syrup 25 grams, cranberry jam 95
- grams, bread 19 grams, coffee 100 grams, cream 30 grams, sugar 21
- grams.
-
- Total nitrogen content of the day’s food = 6.691 grams.
-
-
-_May 21._
-
- Breakfast.--Banana 153 grams, coffee 150 grams, cream 30 grams, sugar
- 21 grams.
-
- Lunch.--Potato croquette 229 grams, bread 25 grams, tomato 123 grams,
- Indian meal 109 grams, syrup 48 grams, coffee 100 grams, cream 20
- grams, sugar 14 grams.
-
- Dinner.--Bean soup 100 grams, bacon 5 grams, fried potato 200 grams,
- bread 31 grams, lettuce-orange salad 47 grams, prunes 137 grams,
- coffee 100 grams, cream 25 grams, sugar 21 grams, banana 255 grams.
-
- Total nitrogen content of the day’s food = 8.345 grams.
-
-
-_May 23._
-
- Breakfast.--Banana 229 grams, coffee 125 grams, cream 25 grams, sugar
- 21 grams.
-
- Lunch.--Consommé 75 grams, scrambled egg 15 grams, bread 58 grams,
- apple sauce 125 grams, fried potato 170 grams, rice croquette 197
- grams, syrup 68 grams, coffee 100 grams, cream 30 grams, sugar 21
- grams.
-
- Dinner.--Vegetable soup 100 grams, potato croquette 198 grams, bread
- 73 grams, bacon 7 grams, string beans 120 grams, water ice 77 grams,
- banana 270 grams, coffee 100 grams, cream 30 grams, sugar 14 grams.
-
- Total nitrogen content of the day’s food = 9.726 grams.
-
-
-While the critic might justly say that these dietaries lack variety
-and would not appeal to a fastidious taste, there is force in the
-illustration which they afford of a simple diet being quite adequate
-to meet the wants of the body. Further, it should be emphasized that
-there is no special virtue in any of these dietaries, aside from their
-simplicity and low content of nitrogen. They represent individual
-taste and selection. Any other form of diet would answer as well,
-provided there was not too large an intake of proteid, and provided
-further the fuel value of the day’s ration was sufficient to meet the
-requirements for heat and work. Again, it might be said that with this
-latter subject the daily consumption of proteid food was considerably
-larger than with the first subject. This is indeed true, but it must be
-remembered that the second subject had a body-weight of 70 kilos during
-the last seven months, while the first subject weighed only 57 kilos.
-Obviously, with this marked difference in the weight of living tissue
-there must be a corresponding difference in the extent of proteid
-katabolism, and consequently a difference in the demand for proteid
-food.
-
-As we have seen, the smaller subject for a period of many months
-showed a proteid katabolism equal to 0.1 gram of nitrogen, per kilo
-of body-weight, daily. The second and larger subject, on a totally
-different diet, for seven months and a half, metabolized daily, on
-an average, 6.53 grams of nitrogen. Taking the weight of the body at
-70 kilos, it is readily seen that the nitrogen metabolized daily per
-kilo of body-weight was 0.093 gram, almost identical with the rate of
-nitrogen exchange found with the first subject. It is certainly very
-suggestive that these two individuals with their marked difference
-in body-weight, under different degrees of physical activity, and
-living on different forms of diet, with only the one point in common
-of voluntary restriction in the amount of proteid food, until a new
-habit had been acquired and a new level of proteid metabolism attained,
-should have quite independently reached exactly the same level of
-nitrogen exchange per kilo of body-weight. And when it is remembered
-that this was attained by the daily consumption of not more than
-one-third to one-half the minimal amount of proteid food called for
-by the dietetic customs of mankind, and with maintenance of all the
-characteristics of good health through this comparatively long period
-of time, there certainly seems to be justification for the opinion
-that the consumption of proteid food, as practised by the people of
-the present generation, is far in excess of the needs of the body.
-Referring for a moment to the calorific value of the food used by the
-second subject, in the last balance period, it is to be noted that the
-heat value per day averaged 2448 calories, as estimated on the basis of
-the chemical composition of the food. This would amount to 34 calories
-per kilo. Whether this figure is strictly correct is immaterial; it is
-certainly sufficiently so to warrant the statement that the needs of
-the body were fully met by an intake of food below the standards set
-by usage, and that maintenance of nitrogen equilibrium on a greatly
-diminished consumption of proteid food is possible without increasing
-the intake of non-nitrogenous matter.
-
-Finally, as affording additional evidence, we may refer to a third
-subject in this group, a man of 65 kilos body-weight, 26 years of age,
-who for a period of six consecutive months maintained body-weight,
-nitrogen equilibrium, and a general condition of good health, with a
-proteid metabolism equal to 7.81 grams of nitrogen per day. During the
-last two months of the experiment, the average excretion of nitrogen
-per day amounted to 6.68 grams, corresponding to a metabolism of
-0.102 gram of nitrogen per kilo of body-weight. This figure, it will
-be noted, is practically identical with the values obtained with the
-preceding subjects, calculated to the same unit of weight. Further,
-this third subject did not reduce his nitrogen intake by an exclusion
-of meat, but made use of his ordinary diet gradually reduced in amount.
-His daily consumption of proteid food averaged 55 grams, or 8.83 grams
-of nitrogen, and on this amount of proteid, without increasing the
-intake of fats and carbohydrates, he was quite able to do his work with
-preservation of physiological equilibrium.
-
-Views so radically different from those commonly accepted can be made
-to carry weight, only by the accumulation of supporting evidence
-obtained under widely different conditions of life, and by methods
-which will defy criticism. It might be argued, and with perhaps some
-justification, that while professional men, with freedom from muscular
-work, may be able to live without detriment on a relatively small
-amount of proteid food, such a conclusion would not be warranted for
-the great majority of mankind with their necessarily greater muscular
-activity. We are confronted at once with the oft-heard statement that
-the laboring man requires more proteid food; he has a more vigorous
-appetite, and he must take an abundance of meat and other foods
-rich in proteid, if he is to maintain his ability as a worker. Note
-the statements already made in other connections regarding the food
-consumption of Maine lumbermen, of men on the football team, of trained
-athletes in general. These men consume large amounts of proteid daily,
-because their work demands it. If the demand did not really exist, they
-would not so agree in the use of high proteid standards, so runs the
-argument. The custom certainly does exist and is almost universally
-followed; men in training for athletic events deem it necessary to
-consume large amounts of proteid food. Custom and long experience
-sanction a high proteid diet, rich in nitrogen, for the development
-and maintenance of that strength and vigor that help to make the
-accomplished athlete. It is common knowledge to-day, however, that the
-energy of muscle work does not have its origin in the breaking down of
-proteid material, certainly not when there is an adequate amount of
-fat and carbohydrate in the diet. A high proteid intake must therefore
-be called for because of some subtle quality, not at present fully
-understood. It must not be subjected to criticism, however, because it
-is sanctioned by custom, habit, and common usage.
-
-Still, I have ventured to experiment somewhat with a group of eight
-university athletes, all trained men, and with some surprising results.
-We have not space for details, but it may be mentioned that the men
-were young, from 22 to 27 years of age, and were experts in some field
-of athletic work. By a preliminary study of their ordinary dietetic
-habits, it was found that they were all large consumers of proteid
-food, with a corresponding high rate of proteid katabolism. One subject
-of 92 kilos body-weight, during ten days, showed an average daily
-excretion through the kidneys of 22.79 grams of nitrogen, implying a
-metabolism of 142 grams of proteid matter per day. On one of these
-days, the nitrogen excretion reached the high figure of 31.99 grams,
-corresponding to a metabolism of about 200 grams of proteid matter.
-Calculated per kilo of body-weight, this means a metabolism of 0.35
-gram of nitrogen, or three and a half times the amount needed by the
-three professional men for the maintenance of nitrogen equilibrium.
-These subjects, with an intelligent comprehension of the point
-at issue, and with full freedom in the choice of food, gradually
-diminished their daily consumption of proteid material, at the same
-time cutting down very markedly the total consumption of food. The
-experiment extended through five months, and during the last two
-months, the average daily excretion of metabolized nitrogen of the
-eight men amounted to 8.81 grams per man. This corresponds to a
-metabolism of 55 grams of proteid matter.
-
-Further, the average daily output of nitrogen through the kidneys
-during the preceding two months was in many cases nearly, if not quite,
-as low as during the last two months of the experiment. If we contrast
-this average daily exchange of 8.81 grams of nitrogen with the average
-output prior to the change in diet, it is easy to see that the men were
-living on about one-half the amount of proteid food they were formerly
-accustomed to take. Moreover, if the metabolized nitrogen for each
-individual, with one exception, is calculated per kilo of body-weight,
-it is seen to vary from 0.108 gram to 0.134 gram; somewhat higher than
-was observed with the older professional men, but not conspicuously so.
-Again, it is to be emphasized that the lowered intake of proteid food
-with these men was quite adequate to maintain their bodies in nitrogen
-equilibrium. We may cite a single case by way of illustration:
-
- Output.
- Nitrogen of Nitrogen through Weight of Excrement
- Food. Kidneys. (dry).
- May 18 8.119 grams. 5.75 grams. .. grams.
- 19 9.482 6.64 15
- 20 10.560 8.45 ..
- 21 8.992 8.64 ..
- 22 9.025 8.53 ..
- 23 8.393 7.69 89
- 24 7.284 7.34 24
- ----- ---- ---
- 128 grams contain
- 6.40 % N.
-
- 61.855 53.04 + 8.192 grams nitrogen.
- ------ -----------------
- 61.855 grams nitrogen. 61.232 grams nitrogen.
-
- Nitrogen balance for seven days = +0.623 gram.
- Nitrogen balance per day = +0.089 gram.
-
-The daily intake of nitrogen during this balance period averaged 8.83
-grams, corresponding to 55.1 grams of proteid food. The metabolized
-nitrogen eliminated through the kidneys averaged 7.58 grams per day,
-thus showing a daily average metabolism of 47.37 grams of proteid
-matter. With a body-weight of 63 kilos, this individual was maintaining
-equilibrium on a metabolism of 0.120 gram of nitrogen per kilo of
-body-weight. The fuel value of the day’s food as estimated did not
-exceed 2800 calories, thus substantiating the general statement that
-there is no need for increasing the fuel value of the food in any
-attempt to maintain a lower nitrogen level. This particular individual,
-in his choice of food, unconsciously drifted--as he expressed
-it--toward a simple vegetable diet, without, however, excluding meat
-entirely. The following four dietaries will serve to illustrate the
-character and amount of his daily food:
-
-
-_May 21._
-
- Breakfast.--Banana 106 grams, boiled Indian meal 150 grams, cream 50
- grams, sugar 21 grams, bread 59 grams, butter 16 grams.
-
- Lunch.--Lamb chop 37 grams, potato croquette 105 grams, tomato 216
- grams, bread 55 grams, butter 13 grams, sugar 14 grams, water ice 143
- grams.
-
- Dinner.--Bean soup 100 grams, bacon 10 grams, fried egg 22 grams,
- fried potato 100 grams, lettuce salad 63 grams, coffee 100 grams,
- cream 50 grams, sugar 21 grams, stewed prunes 247 grams.
-
- Total nitrogen content of the day’s food = 8.992 grams.
-
-
-_May 22._
-
- Breakfast.--Orange 60 grams, oatmeal 207 grams, roll 46 grams, butter
- 14 grams, coffee 150 grams, cream 150 grams, sugar 35 grams.
-
- Lunch.--Boiled potato 150 grams, boiled onions 145 grams, macaroni
- 130 grams, fried rice 138 grams, syrup 48 grams, ice cream 160 grams,
- cake 26 grams.
-
- Dinner.--Celery soup 150 grams, spinach 100 grams, mashed potato 100
- grams, bread 19 grams, coffee 100 grams, cream 50 grams, sugar 7
- grams, strawberry short-cake 169 grams.
-
- Total nitrogen content of the day’s food = 9.025 grams.
-
-
-_May 23._
-
- Breakfast.--Sliced banana 201 grams, cream 100 grams, sugar 28 grams,
- griddle cakes 103 grams, syrup 48 grams.
-
- Lunch.--Consommé 150 grams, rice croquette 140 grams, syrup 48 grams,
- fried potato 100 grams, bread 36 grams, butter 15 grams, apple sauce
- 90 grams, coffee 75 grams, sugar 7 grams.
-
- Dinner.--Vegetable soup 100 grams, bacon 20 grams, potato croquette
- 50 grams, string beans 120 grams, macaroni 104 grams, bread 26 grams,
- water ice 184 grams.
-
- Total nitrogen content of the day’s food = 8.393 grams.
-
-
-_May 24._
-
- Breakfast.--Orange 80 grams, fried rice 186 grams, syrup 72 grams,
- coffee 100 grams, cream 50 grams, sugar 21 grams.
-
- Lunch.--Celery soup 125 grams, bread 34 grams, butter 19 grams,
- boiled onion 127 grams, boiled potato 150 grams, tomato sauce 50
- grams, stewed prunes 189 grams, cream 50 grams.
-
- Dinner.--Tomato soup 125 grams, bread 21 grams, fried potato 100
- grams, spinach 130 grams, cream pie 158 grams, coffee 100 grams,
- cream 50 grams, sugar 14 grams.
-
- Evening.--Ginger ale 250 grams.
-
- Total nitrogen content of the day’s food = 7.284 grams.
-
-
-Here, again, we have dietaries not particularly attractive to every
-one, but they represent the choice of an individual who was following
-his own preferences, and like the preceding dietaries they are
-characterized by simplicity. In any event, they were quite adequate
-for the wants of the body, and their value to us lies in the proof
-they afford that a relatively small intake of proteid food will not
-only bring about and maintain nitrogen equilibrium for many months,
-and probably indefinitely, but that such a form of diet is equally as
-effective with vigorous athletes, accustomed to strenuous muscular
-effort, as with professional men of more sedentary habits. Further,
-these many months of observation with different individuals all lead to
-the opinion that there are no harmful results of any kind produced by
-a reduction in the amount of proteid food to a level commensurate with
-the actual needs of the body. Body-weight, health, physical strength,
-and muscular tone can all be maintained, in partial illustration of
-which may be offered two photographs of one of the eight athletes
-taken toward the end of the experiment; pictures which are certainly
-the antithesis of enfeebled muscular structure, or diminished physical
-vigor.
-
-[Illustration: STAPLETON
-
-_Photograph taken in the middle of the experiment, in April_]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-FURTHER EXPERIMENTS AND OBSERVATIONS BEARING ON TRUE FOOD REQUIREMENTS
-
- TOPICS: Dietary experiments with a detail of soldiers from the United
- States army. General character of the army ration. Samples of the
- daily dietary adopted. Rate of nitrogen metabolism attained. Effect
- on body-weight. Nitrogen balance with lowered proteid consumption.
- Influence of low proteid on muscular strength of soldiers and
- athletes. Effect on fatigue. Effect on physical endurance. Fisher’s
- experiments on endurance. Dangers of underfeeding. Dietary
- observations on fruitarians. Observations on Japanese. Recent dietary
- changes in Japanese army and navy. Observations of Dr. Hunt on
- resistance of low proteid animals to poisons. Conclusions.
-
-
-General acceptance of a new theory, or a new point of view, can be
-expected only when there is an adequate amount of scientific evidence
-on which the theory can safely rest. Facts cannot be ignored, and the
-larger the amount of supporting evidence the more certain becomes
-the general truth of the theory to which it points. Corroborative
-evidence, therefore, is always desirable, and he who would open up a
-new point of view must be zealous in accumulating facts to uphold his
-position. Critics there are without number who are ever ready to pick
-flaws in an argument or overturn a theory, especially if the one or
-the other stands opposed to their own point of view. This, however,
-is highly advantageous for the advance of sound knowledge, since it
-necessarily prompts the advocate to search in all directions for added
-data, by which he can build a bulwark of fact sufficient to defy just
-criticism. Further, the true scientific spirit demands persistent
-and painstaking effort in the search after truth, that error and
-misconception may be avoided.
-
-In harmony with these ideas, our attempt to ascertain the real needs of
-the body for proteid food led us to enlarge our evidence by a series
-of experiments with still another body of men, _i. e._, a detail of
-soldiers from the United States army.[61] This was a somewhat more
-difficult and ambitious undertaking, since the number of subjects
-involved was larger, and because with this group of men we could not
-expect quite that high degree of intelligent co-operation afforded by
-the preceding subjects. Still, this very fact was in a sense an added
-inducement, since it offered the opportunity of experimenting with a
-body of men who naturally would not take kindly to anything that looked
-like deprivation, and whose continued co-operation could be expected
-only by satisfying their natural demands for food. If this could be
-accomplished by an intelligent prescription in their daily diet, and
-the experiment brought to a successful conclusion, with maintenance of
-body-weight, nitrogen equilibrium, health, strength, and general vigor;
-with an intake of proteid food essentially equal to that adopted by the
-preceding subjects, corroborative evidence of the highest value would
-be obtained.
-
- [61] In presenting the general results of these experiments, the
- writer has drawn freely from his book, “Physiological Economy in
- Nutrition,” published by the Frederick A. Stokes Company, New York,
- 1904.
-
-The detail was composed of a detachment of twenty men from the
-Hospital Corps of the army, under the command of a first lieutenant
-and assistant surgeon. They were located in a convenient house near
-to the laboratory, where they lived during their six months’ stay in
-New Haven, under military discipline, and subject to the constant
-surveillance of the commanding officer and the non-commissioned
-officers. Having well-trained cooks and assistants, with all necessary
-facilities for preparing and serving their food, with members of
-the laboratory staff to superintend the weighing of the food as it
-was placed before the men, and with intelligent clerks to attend
-to the many details connected with such an undertaking, a somewhat
-unique physiological experiment was started. Thirteen members of the
-detachment really took part in the experiment as subjects, and they
-represented a great variety of types: of different ages, nationalities,
-temperaments, and degrees of intelligence. They were men accustomed
-to living an active life under varying conditions, and they naturally
-had great liking for the pleasures of eating. Further, it should be
-remembered that, although the men had volunteered for the experiment,
-they had no personal interest whatever in the principles involved,
-and it could not be expected that they would willingly incommode
-themselves, or suffer any great amount of personal inconvenience.
-Again, there were necessary restrictions placed upon their movements,
-when relieved from duty, which constituted something of a hardship in
-the minds of many of the men and added to the irksomeness and monotony
-of their daily life. Regularity of life was insisted upon, and this
-was a condition which brought to some of the men a new experience.
-These facts are mentioned because their recital will help to make clear
-that, from the standpoint of the men, there were certain depressing
-influences connected with the experiment which would add to any
-personal discomfort caused by restriction of diet.
-
-The ordinary army ration to which these men were accustomed was rich in
-proteid, especially in meat, and during the first few days they were
-allowed to follow their usual dietary habits, in order that data might
-be obtained bearing on their average food consumption. The details of
-one day’s food intake will suffice to show the average character and
-amount of the food eaten per man:
-
- Breakfast.--Beefsteak 222 grams, gravy 68 grams, fried potatoes 234
- grams, onions 34 grams, bread 144 grams, coffee 679 grams, sugar 18
- grams.
-
- Dinner.--Beef 171 grams, boiled potatoes 350 grams, onions 55 grams,
- bread 234 grams, coffee 916 grams, sugar 27 grams.
-
- Supper.--Corned beef 195 grams, potatoes 170 grams, onions 21 grams,
- bread 158 grams, fruit jelly 107 grams, coffee 450 grams, sugar 21
- grams.
-
-It is not necessary to comment upon the large proportion of proteid
-matter in the day’s ration; the three large portions of meat testify
-clearly enough to that fact, while the three equally large volumes of
-coffee indicate a natural disposition toward generous consumption of
-anything available. Habit, reinforced by inclination, had evidently
-placed these men on a high plane of food consumption.
-
-For a period of six months, a daily dietary was prescribed for the
-subjects; the food for each meal and for every man being of known
-composition, each article being carefully weighed, while the content of
-nitrogen in the day’s ration was so graded as to bring about a gradual
-reduction in the amount of proteid ingested. The rate of proteid
-katabolism was likewise determined each day by careful estimation of
-the excreted nitrogen, balance experiments being made from time to
-time in order to ascertain if the men were in a condition of nitrogen
-equilibrium. Finally, it should be mentioned that the subjects lived
-a fairly active life, having each day a certain amount of prescribed
-exercise in the university gymnasium, in addition to the regular drill
-and other duties associated with their usual work.
-
-[Illustration: _Photograph of the soldiers taken at the close of the
-experiment_]
-
-[Illustration: _Photograph of the soldiers taken at the close of the
-experiment_]
-
-As just stated, the amount of proteid food was gradually reduced,
-three weeks being taken to bring the amount down to a level somewhat
-commensurate with the estimated needs of the body. This naturally
-resulted in diminishing largely the intake of meat, though by no means
-entirely excluding it. Effort was constantly made to introduce as
-much variety as was possible with simple foods, though the main problem
-with this group of men was to keep the volume of the food up to such
-a point as would dispel any notion that they were not having enough
-to eat. A second problem, which at first threatened trouble, was the
-fear of the men, as they saw the proportion of meat gradually drop
-off, that they were destined to lose their strength; but fortunately,
-they very soon began to realize that their fears in this direction
-were groundless, and a little later their personal experience opened
-their eyes to possible advantages which quickly drove away all further
-thought of danger, and made them quite content to continue the
-experiment. We may introduce here a few samples of the daily food given
-to the men after they had reached their lower level of proteid intake:
-
-
-_January 15._
-
- Breakfast.--Wheat griddle cakes 200 grams, syrup 50 grams, one cup
- coffee[62] 350 grams.
-
- Dinner.--Codfish balls (4 parts potato, 1 part fish, fried in pork
- fat) 150 grams, stewed tomato 200 grams, bread 75 grams, one cup
- coffee 350 grams, apple pie 95 grams.
-
- Supper.--Apple fritters 200 grams, stewed prunes 125 grams, bread 50
- grams, butter 15 grams, one cup tea 350 grams.
-
- Total nitrogen content of the day’s food = 8.560 grams.
-
-
- [62] The coffee was prepared with milk and sugar.
-
-
-_January 16._
-
- Breakfast.--Soft oatmeal 150 grams, milk 100 grams, sugar 30 grams,
- bread 30 grams, butter 10 grams, one cup coffee 350 grams.
-
- Dinner.--Baked macaroni with a little cheese 200 grams, stewed tomato
- 200 grams, bread 50 grams, tapioca-peach pudding 150 grams, one cup
- coffee 350 grams.
-
- Supper.--Fried bacon 20 grams, French fried potato 100 grams, bread
- 75 grams, jam 75 grams, one cup tea 350 grams.
-
- Total nitrogen content of the day’s food = 7.282 grams.
-
-
-_March 1._
-
- Breakfast.--Fried rice 150 grams, syrup 50 grams, baked potato 150
- grams, butter 10 grams, one cup coffee 350 grams.
-
- Dinner.--Thick pea soup 250 grams, boiled onions 150 grams, boiled
- sweet potato 150 grams, bread 75 grams, butter 20 grams, one cup
- coffee 350 grams.
-
- Supper.--Celery-lettuce-apple salad 120 grams, crackers 32 grams,
- American cheese 20 grams, potato chips 79 grams, one cup tea 350
- grams, rice custard 100 grams.
-
- Total nitrogen content of the day’s food = 7.825 grams.
-
-
-_March 3._
-
- Breakfast.--Boiled hominy 175 grams, milk 125 grams, sugar 25 grams,
- baked potato 150 grams, butter 10 grams, one cup coffee 350 grams.
-
- Dinner.--Hamburg steak with much bread, fat, and onions 150 grams,
- boiled potato 250 grams, bread 75 grams, butter 10 grams, one cup
- coffee 350 grams.
-
- Supper.--Tapioca-peach pudding 250 grams, bread 75 grams, butter 20
- grams, jam 75 grams, one cup tea 350 grams.
-
- Total nitrogen content of the day’s food = 8.750 grams.
-
-
-_March 6._
-
- Breakfast.--Sliced banana 100 grams, fried Indian meal 150 grams,
- syrup 50 grams, baked potato 150 grams, butter 10 grams, one cup
- coffee 350 grams.
-
- Dinner.--Corned beef 50 grams, boiled cabbage 200 grams, mashed
- potato 250 grams, bread 75 grams, fried rice 100 grams, jam 75 grams,
- one cup coffee 350 grams.
-
- Supper.--Crackers 32 grams, butter 10 grams, sardine 14 grams, sponge
- cake 150 grams, apple sauce 150 grams, one cup tea 350 grams.
-
- Total nitrogen content of the day’s food = 10.265 grams.
-
-
-_March 30._
-
- Breakfast.--Sliced banana 250 grams, fried hominy 150 grams, butter
- 10 grams, syrup 75 grams, one cup coffee 350 grams.
-
- Dinner.--Codfish balls 125 grams, mashed potato 250 grams, stewed
- tomato 200 grams, bread 35 grams, apple sauce 200 grams, one cup
- coffee 350 grams.
-
- Supper.--Chopped fresh cabbage with salt, pepper, and vinegar 75
- grams, bread 50 grams, butter 20 grams, fried sweet potato 250 grams,
- cranberry sauce 200 grams, sponge cake 50 grams, one cup tea 350
- grams.
-
- Total nitrogen content of the day’s food = 9.356 grams.
-
-
-_March 31._
-
- Breakfast.--Fried Indian meal 100 grams, syrup 75 grams, baked potato
- 250 grams, butter 20 grams, one cup coffee 350 grams.
-
- Dinner.--Tomato soup, thick, with potatoes and onions boiled in, 300
- grams, scrambled egg 50 grams, mashed potato 200 grams, bread 50
- grams, butter 10 grams, one cup coffee 350 grams.
-
- Supper.--Fried bacon 20 grams, boiled potato 200 grams, butter 10
- grams, bread pudding 150 grams, sliced banana 200 grams, one cup tea
- 350 grams.
-
- Total nitrogen content of the day’s food = 8.420 grams.
-
-
-_April 1._
-
- Breakfast.--Fried hominy 150 grams, syrup 75 grams, baked potato 200
- grams, butter 20 grams, one cup coffee 350 grams.
-
- Dinner.--Baked spaghetti 200 grams, mashed potato 250 grams, boiled
- turnip 150 grams, bread 35 grams, butter 10 grams, apple sauce 200
- grams, one cup coffee 350 grams.
-
- Supper.--Fried bacon 25 grams, fried sweet potato 200 grams, bread
- 35 grams, butter 20 grams, jam 100 grams, apple-tapioca pudding 300
- grams, one cup tea 350 grams.
-
- Total nitrogen content of the day’s food = 7.342 grams.
-
-
-These dietaries are fair samples of the daily food given the men
-during the last five months of the experiment. If we place the intake
-of nitrogen at 8.5 grams per day, or even 9 grams daily, it would
-mean at the most an average daily consumption of 56 grams of proteid;
-viz., about one-third the amount they were accustomed to take under
-their ordinary modes of life. Of greater interest, however, is
-the rate of proteid katabolism shown by these men under the above
-conditions of diet, during the five months’ period. The average
-daily output of metabolized nitrogen for each man ranged from 7.03
-grams--the lowest--to 8.91 grams--the highest. An excretion of 7.03
-grams of nitrogen per day means a katabolism, or breaking down, of
-43.9 grams of proteid matter; while the excretion of 8.91 grams of
-nitrogen corresponds to a katabolism of 55.6 grams of proteid. The
-grand average, _i. e._, the average daily output of nitrogen of all
-the men for the five months’ period amounted to 7.8 grams per man,
-corresponding to an average daily katabolism of 48.75 grams of proteid.
-The heaviest man of the group had a body-weight of 74 kilograms, while
-his average daily output of metabolized nitrogen amounted to 7.84
-grams. This corresponds to 0.106 gram of metabolized nitrogen per kilo
-of body-weight; a figure which agrees quite closely with the lowest
-figures obtained with the preceding subjects when calculated to the
-same unit of weight. Many of the men, however, metabolized considerably
-more nitrogen or proteid in proportion to their body-weight, due in a
-measure at least to the fact that they were being fed more liberally
-with proteid food than was really necessary for the needs of the body.
-In this group, we have a body of men doing a reasonable amount of
-physical work, who lived without discomfort for five consecutive months
-on a daily consumption of proteid food not much, if any, greater than
-one-third the amount called for by common usage, and the average fuel
-value of which certainly did not exceed 3000 calories per day. Indeed,
-so far as could be determined on the basis of chemical composition, the
-heat value of the food was quite a little less than this figure would
-imply.
-
-If the relatively small amount of proteid food made use of in this
-trial was inadequate for the real necessities of the body, some
-indication of it would be expected to reveal itself, with at least some
-of the men, by the end of the period. One criticism frequently made is
-that the subject draws in some measure upon his store of body material.
-Should this be the case, it is evident that body-weight--in such a
-long experiment as this--will gradually but surely diminish. Further,
-the subject will show a minus nitrogen balance, _i. e._, there will
-be a constant tendency for the body to give off more nitrogen than it
-takes in. As bearing on the first point, the following table showing
-the body-weights of the men at the commencement of the experiment
-in October, and at the close of the experiment in April will be of
-interest:
-
-
-TABLE OF BODY-WEIGHTS
-
- +-------------+----------------+----------------+
- | | October, 1903 | April, 1904 |
- +-------------+----------------+----------------+
- | | kilos | kilos |
- | Steltz | 52.3 | 53.0 |
- | Zooman | 54.0 | 55.0 |
- | Coffman | 59.1 | 58.0 |
- | Morris | 59.2 | 59.0 |
- | Broyles | 59.4 | 61.0 |
- | Loewenthal | 60.1 | 59.0 |
- | Sliney | 61.3 | 60.6 |
- | Cohn | 65.0 | 62.6 |
- | Oakman | 66.7 | 62.1 |
- | Henderson | 71.3 | 71.0 |
- | Fritz | 76.0 | 72.6 |
- | Bates | 72.7 | 64.3 (Feb.) |
- | Davis | 59.3 | 57.2 (Jan.) |
- +-------------+----------------+----------------+
-
-As is readily seen, five of the men practically retained their weight
-or made a slight gain. Of the others, Coffman, Loewenthal, Sliney, and
-Cohn lost somewhat, but the amount was very small. Further, the loss
-occurred during the first few weeks of the experiment, after which
-their weight remained practically stationary. Fritz and Oakman lost
-weight somewhat more noticeably, but this loss likewise occurred during
-the earlier part of the trial. The accompanying photographs of Fritz,
-taken at the close of the experiment, show plainly that such loss
-of weight as he suffered did not detract from the appearance of his
-well-developed musculature. Certainly, the photographs do not show any
-signs of nitrogen starvation, or suggest the lack of any kind of food.
-
-Of all the men, Bates was the only one who underwent any great loss of
-weight. He, however, was quite stout, and the work in the gymnasium,
-reinforced by the change in diet, brought about what was for him a very
-desirable loss of body-weight. It is evident, therefore, that there was
-no marked or prolonged loss of body-weight as a result of the continued
-use of the low proteid diet. Regarding the second point, viz., nitrogen
-equilibrium, the following illustrations will suffice to indicate the
-relationship existing between the income and outgo of nitrogen. A
-balance experiment with each of the men, lasting seven days, February
-29 to March 6, is here shown, the figures given being the daily
-averages for the period:
-
- +-------------+----------+-----------+-------------+----------+
- | | Nitrogen | Nitrogen | Nitrogen of | Nitrogen |
- | | of Food. | of Urine. | Excrement. | Balance. |
- +-------------+----------+-----------+-------------+----------+
- | | grams | grams | grams | grams |
- | Oakman | 9.52 | 7.24 | 1.76 | +0.52 |
- | Henderson | 9.40 | 7.90 | 1.00 | +0.50 |
- | Morris | 9.49 | 6.05 | 2.30 | +1.14 |
- | Coffman | 9.53 | 7.92 | 1.47 | +0.14 |
- | Steltz | 9.62 | 7.16 | 1.95 | +0.51 |
- | Loewenthal | 9.64 | 7.00 | 1.71 | +0.95 |
- | Cohn | 9.27 | 7.63 | 1.41 | +0.23 |
- | Zooman | 9.49 | 7.13 | 1.76 | +0.60 |
- | Sliney | 9.52 | 8.08 | 1.92 | -0.48 |
- | Broyles | 9.43 | 7.01 | 1.19 | +1.23 |
- | Fritz | 9.37 | 6.36 | 1.81 | +1.20 |
- +-------------+----------+-----------+-------------+----------+
-
-[Illustration: FRITZ
-
-_At the close of the experiment_]
-
-With one exception, all of the men were plainly having more proteid
-food than was necessary to maintain the body in nitrogen
-equilibrium, the plus nitrogen balance in most cases being fairly
-large. It is only necessary to remember that a gain to the body of 1
-gram of nitrogen means a laying by of 6.25 grams of proteid, and with
-such a gain per day it is apparent that the men were really being
-supplied with an excess of proteid food. This view is supported by the
-fact that a later balance experiment, when considerably less proteid
-food was being given, still showed many of the men in a condition
-of plus balance, or with a minus balance so small as to indicate
-essentially nitrogen equilibrium. The following figures, being daily
-averages of a balance period about the first of April, may be offered
-in evidence:
-
- +-------------+----------+-----------+-------------+----------+
- | | Nitrogen | Nitrogen | Nitrogen of | Nitrogen |
- | | of Food. | of Urine. | Excrement. | Balance. |
- +-------------+----------+-----------+-------------+----------+
- | | grams | grams | grams | grams |
- | Broyles | 8.66 | 6.63 | 1.87 | +0.16 |
- | Fritz | 8.13 | 5.77 | 1.63 | +0.73 |
- | Loewenthal | 8.51 | 6.51 | 2.02 | -0.02 |
- | Steltz | 8.32 | 6.50 | 1.88 | -0.06 |
- | Cohn | 8.29 | 6.25 | 1.55 | +0.49 |
- | Morris | 8.45 | 6.49 | 2.27 | -0.31 |
- | Oakman | 8.62 | 7.04 | 1.87 | -0.29 |
- +-------------+----------+-----------+-------------+----------+
-
-A daily intake of 8.5 grams of nitrogen means the consumption of
-53 grams of proteid. Under these conditions of diet, the average
-daily amount of nitrogen metabolized was 6.45 grams, corresponding
-to 40.3 grams of proteid. The men were practically in a condition
-of nitrogen equilibrium, so that we are apparently justified in the
-general statement that the simple dietary followed with these men
-during the six months’ experiment, and which was accompanied by an
-average daily metabolism, after the first three weeks, of 7.8 grams of
-nitrogen, was certainly sufficient to maintain both body-weight and
-nitrogen equilibrium. Lastly, emphasis may be laid upon the fact that
-these values for nitrogen do not necessarily represent the minimal
-proteid requirement of the human body, since it is a well-established
-physiological principle that by increase of non-nitrogenous food
-the rate of proteid katabolism can always be further diminished; a
-principle which is plainly in harmony with the view that a high rate of
-proteid exchange is not a necessary requisite for the welfare of the
-body.
-
-The experimental results presented afford very convincing proof that
-so far as body-weight and nitrogen equilibrium are concerned, the
-needs of the body are fully met by a consumption of proteid food
-far below the fixed dietary standards, and still further below the
-amounts called for by the recorded habits of mankind. General health
-is equally well maintained, and with suggestions of improvement that
-are frequently so marked as to challenge attention. Most conspicuous,
-however, though something that was entirely unlooked for, was the
-effect observed on the muscular strength of the various subjects.
-When the experiments were planned, it was deemed important to arrange
-for careful quantitative tests of the more conspicuous muscles of the
-body, with a view to measuring any loss of strength that might occur
-from the proposed reduction in proteid food. The thought that prompted
-this action was a result of the latent feeling that somehow muscular
-strength must be dependent more or less upon the proteid constituents
-of the muscles, and that consequently the cutting down of proteid food
-would inevitably be felt in some degree. The most that could be hoped
-for was that muscle tone and muscular strength might be maintained
-unimpaired. Hence, we were at first quite astonished at what was
-actually observed.
-
-With the soldier detail, fifteen distinct strength tests were made
-with each man during the six months’ period, by means of appropriate
-dynamometer tests applied to the muscles of the back, legs, chest,
-upper arms, and forearms, reinforced by quarter-mile run, vault, and
-ladder tests, etc. The so-called “total strength” of the man was
-computed by multiplying the weight of the body by the number of times
-the subject was able to push up (strength of triceps muscles) and pull
-up (strength of biceps muscles) his body while upon the parallel bars,
-to this product being added the strength (dynamometer tests) of hands,
-legs, back, and chest. It should be added that all of these tests were
-made quite independently in the university gymnasium by the medical
-assistants and others in charge of the work there. It will suffice for
-our purpose to give here the strength tests of the various members of
-the soldier detail at the beginning and close of the experiment.
-
-
-TOTAL STRENGTH
-
- +------------+----------+---------+
- | | October. | April. |
- +------------+----------+---------+
- | Broyles | 2560 | 5530 |
- | Coffman | 2835 | 6269 |
- | Cohn | 2210 | 4002 |
- | Fritz | 2504 | 5178 |
- | Henderson | 2970 | 4598 |
- | Loewenthal | 2463 | 5277 |
- | Morris | 2543 | 4869 |
- | Oakman | 3445 | 5055 |
- | Sliney | 3245 | 5307 |
- | Steltz | 2838 | 4581 |
- | Zooman | 3070 | 5457 |
- +------------+----------+---------+
-
-Without exception, we note with all of the men a phenomenal gain in
-strength, which demands explanation. Was it all due to the change in
-diet? Probably not, for these men at the beginning of the experiment
-were untrained, and it is not to be assumed that months of practical
-work in the gymnasium would not result in a certain amount of physical
-development, with corresponding gain in muscular skill and power.
-Putting this question aside for the moment, however, it is surely
-proper to emphasize this fact; viz., that although the men for a
-period of five months were restricted to a daily diet containing
-only one-third to one-half the amount of proteid food they had been
-accustomed to, there was no loss of physical strength; no indication
-of any physical deterioration that could be detected. In other words,
-the men were certainly not being weakened by the lowered intake of
-proteid food. This is in harmony with the principle, already discussed,
-that the energy of muscle work comes primarily from the breaking down
-of non-nitrogenous material, and consequently a diminished intake of
-proteid food can have no inhibitory effect, provided, of course, there
-is an adequate amount of proteid ingested to satisfy the endogenous
-requirements of the tissues.
-
-On the other hand, recalling the large number of nitrogenous cleavage
-products which result from the breaking down of proteid material, we
-can conceive of an exaggerated exogenous proteid katabolism which
-may flood the tissues and the surrounding lymph with a variety of
-nitrogenous waste products, having an inhibitory effect upon the
-muscle fibres themselves, or upon the peripheral endings of the motor
-nerves, by which the muscles are prevented, directly or indirectly,
-from working at their highest degree of efficiency. This being true,
-a reduction of the exogenous katabolism to a level more nearly
-commensurate with the real needs of the body might result in a marked
-increase in the functional power of the tissue. However this may
-be, the fact remains that all of the subjects showed this great
-gain in strength; and furthermore, there was a noticeable gain in
-self-reliance and courage in their athletic work, both of which are
-likewise indicative of an improved condition of the body. How far these
-improvements are attributable to training and to the more regular life
-the men were leading, and how far to the change in diet, cannot be
-definitely determined. We may venture the opinion, however, for reasons
-to be made clear shortly, that the change in diet was in a measure
-at least responsible for the increased efficiency. As the writer has
-already expressed it, there must be enough food to make good the
-daily waste of tissue, enough food to furnish the energy of muscular
-contraction, but any surplus over and above what is necessary to supply
-these needs is not only a waste, but may prove an incubus, retarding
-the smooth working of the machinery and detracting from the power of
-the organism to do its best work.
-
-Let us now turn our attention for a moment to the group of university
-athletes, remembering that these men had been in training for many
-months, and some of them for several years, prior to the commencement
-of the trial with a reduced proteid intake. In the words of the
-director of the gymnasium, “These eight men were in constant practice
-and in the pink of condition; they were in ‘training form’ when they
-began the changed diet.” Some of them had gained marked distinction for
-their athletic work; one during the early months of the test won the
-Collegiate and All-around Inter-collegiate Championship of America.
-Compare now the strength tests of these men as taken at the beginning
-and end of the five months’ experiment, during which they reduced their
-daily intake of proteid food more than fifty per cent:
-
-
-TOTAL STRENGTH
-
- +----------------+----------+----------+
- | | January. | June. |
- +----------------+----------+----------+
- | G. W. Anderson | 4913 | 5722 |
- | W. L. Anderson | 6016 | 9472 |
- | Bellis | 5993 | 8165 |
- | Callahan | 2154 | 3983 |
- | Donahue | 4584 | 5917 |
- | Jacobus | 4548 | 5667 |
- | Schenker | 5728 | 7135 |
- | Stapleton | 5351 | 6833 |
- +----------------+----------+----------+
-
-It is to be observed that the majority of these trained men showed at
-the first trial in January a total strength test approximately equal to
-that of the soldier detail at the close of their experiment. This by no
-means implies that the latter men owed their gain in strength wholly
-to the systematic training they had undergone, but it is certainly
-plausible to assume that in a measure this was the case. In any event,
-it is plain that the long-continued low proteid diet of the soldiers
-had not interfered with a progressive muscular development, and the
-attainment of a high degree of muscular strength.
-
-The noticeable feature in the figures obtained with the athletes,
-however, is the striking difference between the January and June
-results. Every man, without exception, showed a decided gain in his
-muscular power as measured by the strength tests. This improvement, to
-be sure, was not so marked as with the soldiers; a fact to be expected,
-since with these men the element of training and the acquisition
-of proficiency in athletic work could have played no part in the
-observed gain. Further, most of the tests indicated that the gain was
-progressive, each month showing an improvement, in harmony with the
-growing effect of the diminished proteid intake. With these subjects,
-the only tangible change in their mode of life which could in any sense
-be considered as responsible for their gain in strength was the change
-in diet. Consequently, it seems perfectly justifiable to conclude that
-the observations presented afford reasonable proof of the beneficial
-effects of a lowered proteid intake upon the muscular strength of man.
-
-The significance of such a conclusion is manifestly obvious. It
-confirms and gives added force to the observations that man can
-profitably maintain nitrogen equilibrium, and body-weight, upon a
-much smaller amount of proteid food than he is accustomed to consume.
-It harmonizes with the view that the normal requirements of the body
-for food, under which health, strength, and maximum efficiency are
-best maintained, are on a far lower level than the ordinary practices
-of mankind would lead one to believe. The widespread opinion that
-a rich proteid diet, with the correspondingly high rate of proteid
-metabolism, is a necessity for the preservation of bodily strength and
-vigor, is seen to be without foundation; for even the most conservative
-estimate of the real value of these strength tests must carry with
-it the conviction that lowering the consumption of proteid food does
-not at least result in any weakening of the body. This is a fact of
-vital importance, for it needs no argument to convince even the most
-optimistic that while it might be possible to maintain body-weight
-and nitrogen equilibrium on a small amount of proteid food, such a
-form of physiological economy would not only be of no advantage to
-the individual, but would be positively injurious if there was a
-gradual weakening of the muscles of the body with decrease of physical
-strength, vigor, and endurance.
-
-Another fact to be emphasized in this connection was the conviction,
-gradually acquired by many of the subjects, that they suffered
-less from fatigue after vigorous muscular effort than formerly.
-This was especially conspicuous in the case of Donahue, whose work
-on the Varsity basket-ball team called for vigorous exercise. It is
-interesting to note that this athlete, of 63 kilos body-weight, for the
-last four months of the experiment showed an average daily katabolism
-of 7.45 grams of nitrogen, corresponding to a breaking down of 46.5
-grams of proteid material daily. Yet, with this low rate of proteid
-exchange, he maintained his position on the team with satisfaction to
-all, and with the consciousness of improved physical condition and
-greater freedom from fatigue. Other subjects, as the laboratory workers
-of the professional group, observed that the customary late afternoon
-fatigue, coincident with the continued walking and standing about the
-laboratory, gradually became far less conspicuous than usual; so that
-there seemed to be a consensus of opinion that in some way the change
-in diet was conducive to greater freedom from muscular weariness.
-
-It is well understood by physiologists that the ability of a muscle
-to do work is inhibited by any condition that tends to depress the
-general nutritive state of the body, or that interferes with the local
-nutrition of the muscle or muscles involved. On the other hand, there
-are certain well-recognized conditions that tend to augment the power
-of the muscle, notably an increased circulation of blood through the
-tissue, the taking of food, and especially the introduction of sugar.
-Further, experiments have shown that when a given set of muscles has
-been made to work excessively, other muscles of the body quite remote
-will share in the fatigue, thus implying that muscular weariness and
-the diminished power to do work are connected with what may be termed
-fatigue products, which are distributed by means of the circulation. In
-this way, muscles and nerve endings alike are exposed to the inhibitory
-influence of waste products of unknown composition, formed in the
-muscle, and as previously stated, we may conceive of an exaggerated
-exogenous katabolism, with excessive proteid intake, by which muscular
-fatigue and weariness may be augmented; hence, the beneficial effect in
-this direction of a more rational food consumption, by which proteid
-katabolism shall be reduced to a true physiological level.
-
-With these marked effects on strength and fatigue, it is reasonable
-to assume that some corresponding action may be exerted on physical
-endurance. As is well known, strength and endurance, though related,
-are quite distinct and can be separately measured. Strength tests,
-however, as usually carried out in gymnasium work, do involve in
-considerable degree the question of endurance, since it is customary to
-use as one of the factors in estimating total strength the number of
-times the man can pull up, or push up, his body on the parallel bars.
-Strictly speaking, however, the strength of a muscle is measured by the
-maximum force it can exert in a single contraction, while its endurance
-is estimated from the number of times it can contract well within the
-limit of its strength.
-
-It is well known that endurance, both physical and mental, is one of
-the most variable of the human faculties, and it is usually considered
-that exercise or training is the chief cause of the differences so
-frequently seen. The Maine guide will row a boat or paddle a canoe
-for the entire day without undue fatigue, while the novice, though
-he may have the necessary strength, lacks the endurance to continue
-the task longer than a few hours. As expressed by Professor Fisher,
-“Some persons are tired by climbing a flight of stairs, whereas the
-Swiss guides, throughout the summer season, day after day spend the
-entire time in climbing the Matterhorn and other peaks; some persons
-are ‘winded’ by running a block for a street car, whereas a Chinese
-coolie will run for hours on end; in mental work, some persons are
-unable to apply themselves more than an hour at a time, whereas
-others, like Humboldt, can work almost continuously through eighteen
-hours of the day.” Again, Fisher states that “among some 75 tests
-of different persons holding their arms horizontal, many were found
-whose arms actually dropped against their will inside of 10 minutes,
-whereas several were able to hold them up over 1 hour, and one man held
-them 3 hours and 20 minutes, or a round 200 minutes, and then dropped
-them voluntarily. Similarly with deep knee-bending, some persons were
-found physically unable to rise again from the stooping posture after
-accomplishing less than 500 bendings, whereas several succeeded in
-stooping 1000 times, and in one case, 2400.” Here, we have inherent
-differences in endurance not associated with training or exercise, and
-the question may well be asked, What is the cause of these radical
-variations in the ability to repeat a simple muscular exertion?
-
-Hitherto, little attention has been paid to the possible influence of
-diet upon this faculty. It has always been assumed that endurance,
-like physical strength, is augmented by a rich proteid diet, but it
-has never been considered that diet by itself was a factor of any
-great moment as compared with training or persistent exercise. It is
-true that claims have been advanced from time to time concerning the
-beneficial effects on endurance of a vegetable diet, and vegetarians
-have frequently presented glowing reports of the great increase in
-endurance they have experienced, but little attention has been given to
-such statements, and the matter has remained more or less in obscurity.
-
-Recently, Professor Irving Fisher,[63] of Yale, has conducted an
-interesting experiment on the influence of a change in diet on
-endurance, having the co-operation of nine healthy students as
-subjects. The experiment extended through five months, with endurance
-tests at the beginning, middle, and end of the period. At the outset,
-the men consumed daily an average of 2830 calories, of which 210
-were in the form of flesh foods, such as meats, poultry, fish and
-shell-fish; 2.6 calories of proteid being ingested for each pound of
-body-weight. At the close of the experiment, the per capita calories
-had fallen to 2220, of which only 30 were in flesh foods, and the
-proteid had fallen to 1.4 calories per pound of body-weight. In other
-words, the total calories of the daily ration had dropped off about 25
-per cent, the proteid about 40 per cent, and the flesh foods over 80
-per cent, or to about one-sixth of their original amount.
-
- [63] Through the kindness of Professor Fisher, the writer has had the
- opportunity of reading the report of this work, which at this writing
- is not published, and he has drawn upon it freely for the following
- statements of fact.
-
-To determine the endurance of the subjects, six simple gymnastic
-tests were employed, and one of mental endurance. The physical tests
-consisted of (1) in rising on the toes as often as possible; (2) deep
-knee-bending, or stooping as far as possible and rising to the standing
-posture, repeating as often as possible; (3) while lying on the back,
-raising the legs from the floor to a vertical position and lowering
-them again, repeating to the point of physical exhaustion; (4) raising
-a 5-lb. dumb-bell (with the triceps) in each hand from the shoulder up
-to the highest point above the head, repeating to the point of physical
-exhaustion; (5) holding the arms from the sides horizontally for as
-long a time as possible; (6) raising a dumb-bell (with the biceps) in
-one hand from a position in which the arm hangs free, to the shoulder
-and back, repeating to the point of physical exhaustion. This test was
-taken with four successive dumb-bells of decreasing weight, viz., 50,
-25, 10, and 5 pounds respectively. The mental test consisted in adding
-specified columns of figures as rapidly as possible, the object being
-to find out whether the rapidity of performing such work tended to
-improve during the experiment.
-
-The following table shows the results of the three sets of physical
-tests made in January, March, and June:
-
-
-TESTS OF PHYSICAL ENDURANCE WITH THE NINE SUBJECTS
-
- +-------------+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+
- | |Time.| B. | E. | Lq. | Lw. | M. | P. | R. | T. | W. |
- +-------------+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+
- |1. Rising on |Jan. | 300 |1007 | 333 | 69 | 127 |1482 | 702 | 900 |1263 |
- | toes |Mar. | 400 |1265 |2620 | 65 | 400 | | 831 |1500 | |
- | |June | 500 |1061 |3000 | 85 |1500 |1800 |1263 |1800 |3350 |
- | | | | | | | | | | | |
- |2. Deep knee-|Jan. | 82 | 142 | 70 | 48 | 132 | 208 | 374 | 129 | 404 |
- | bending |Mar. | | | 191 | 47 | | | | | |
- | |June | 200 | 81 | 202 | 58 | 155 | 230 | 453 | 250 | 508 |
- | | | | | | | | | | | |
- |3. Leg |Jan. | 25 | 52 | 9 | 22 | 30 | 27 | 50 | 23 | 30 |
- | raising |Mar. | | | | 33 | | 34 | | | 40 |
- | |June | 33 | 38 | 20 | 35 | 31 | 37 | 103 | 19 | 53 |
- | | | | | | | | | | | |
- |4. 5lb. |Jan. | 75 | 138 | 78 | 38 | 51 | 44 | 100 | 83 | 185 |
- | Dumb-bell |Mar. | | | 106 | | | | | | |
- | (triceps) |June | 127 | 59 | 80 | 51 | 75 | 56 | 104 | 101 | 501 |
- | | |m. s.|m. s.|m. s.|m. s.|m. s.|m. s.|m. s.|m. s.|m. s.|
- |5. Holding |Jan. | 5–0 | 1–33| 4–7 | 3–37| 3–30| 5–39| 2–5 | 3–22|11–0 |
- | arms |Mar. | | | | | 5–49| | | |15–35|
- | horizontal|June | 9–36| 2–56| 3–50| 3–0 | 6–5 |10–1 | 3–16| 3–24|23–45|
- | | | | | | | | | | | |
- |6. 25lb. |Jan. | 50 | 18 | 16 | 6 | 20 | 11 | 10 | 25 | 54 |
- | Dumb-bell |June | 105 | 10 | 26 | 33 | 30 | 29 | 27 | 75 | 108 |
- | (biceps) | | | | | | | | | | |
- +-------------+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+
-
-The data presented show a marked improvement in March and June over the
-record made at the beginning of the experiment in January, except in
-the case of one subject, E. As Fisher states, the increased endurance
-observed can be ascribed only to dietetic causes, since no other
-factors of known significance could have aided in the result. The
-dietetic changes, as we have seen, consisted in a slight reduction of
-the total amount of food consumed daily, but with a large reduction of
-the proteid element, especially from flesh foods. It is significant,
-says Fisher, that the only man whose strength and endurance showed any
-decrease was E, “whose case was exceptional in almost all respects.
-His reduction in quantity of food, except for a spurt at the end, was
-less than of most of the men; his reduction in proteid, with the same
-exception, was the least of all; his reduction in quantity of flesh
-foods was the least of all.” He stands out conspicuously as the one man
-whose endurance failed to improve. The mental test carried out with the
-subjects pointed to “a slight increase in mental quickness,” but the
-adding test was too short to be of great value.
-
-We see in these results another confirmation of the view that the
-welfare of the body is not impaired by a marked reduction in the amount
-of proteid food; on the contrary, benefit results in the increased
-efficiency which manifests itself in various directions. Physical
-endurance is an asset not to be ignored, and like the strength of an
-individual, it may well be fostered by the recognition and practice of
-a principle which seemingly has a firm physiological basis. Whether
-the fatigue poisons come from the excessive exogenous katabolism of
-proteids in general, or whether they are derived directly in a measure
-from flesh foods, need not be considered here; the main point is that
-by lowering the rate of proteid katabolism, which necessarily compels a
-reduction in the amount of flesh foods, there is a diminished quantity
-of nitrogenous waste floating about in the body. Further, we need
-not criticise too closely the method by which the reduction of food
-is accomplished; whether it be by encouraging mastication, with a
-view to better tasting and fuller enjoyment of the food, to the point
-of involuntary swallowing; or whether we follow natural taste and
-appetite, reinforced by the use of reason, with a full appreciation
-of the principle that the welfare of the body is best subserved by a
-quantity of food commensurate with true physiological needs.
-
-In making this presentation of the true food requirements of the
-body as based on the results of physiological experimentation and
-observation, I am by no means unmindful of the dangers of underfeeding;
-but this is a condition comparatively rare. When occurring, as stated
-by Dr. Curtis, “it is either because of dyspepsia, in which case it
-really is involuntary, or comes from some silly notion born of a
-combination of innate mental crookedness and that ‘little knowledge’
-that is a dangerous thing.” Overfeeding is the predominant dietetic
-sin, and with the prevailing dietary standards, as fixed by common
-usage, there is good ground for believing that it will continue for
-many years to come. Reason tells us, however, in the practice of our
-personal nutrition, to steer a middle course between physiological
-excess on the one side, and the minimal food requirement on the other.
-To quote again from Dr. Curtis,[64] who has expressed the matter very
-forcibly, “The physiological chemist can easily draw a line on the
-Scylla (starvation) side of the channel. A dietary whereby the system
-gets less than it pays out is, obviously, a dangerous veer toward
-starvation rock. But on the Charybdis (stuffing) side, just as the
-whirlpool itself has no well-defined border, the channel boundary is
-not so easily marked. The case is exactly analogous to the stoking of
-a furnace. The proportion of ash to live coals is a telltale as to
-_under_feeding, but not as to _over_feeding. With undersupply of fuel
-the ashes overbalance the live coals, and the fire is thus foretold to
-be going out. But with an oversupply the fire simply burns the faster:
-all the fuel continues to be consumed; the more coal simply makes the
-more ash, so that equilibrium is not disturbed, although maintained
-at a higher level. To argue, therefore, that a given dietary is none
-too large, because the balance between the material receipts and
-expenditures of the economy is not upset, would be like saying that a
-given furnace-fire is certainly none too hot, since the ashes raked
-out of the fire-box just correspond to the amount of coal shovelled
-in. The same would be equally true of a slower fire consuming much
-less fuel. The philosophy of the matter is, then, to find the minimum
-of steam that will run the engine, and then maintain a fire somewhat
-hotter than the exact requirement, in order to run no risk of failure;
-or, to return to the metaphor already employed, the would-be careful
-liver must simply note how close to Scylla other voyagers have sailed
-with safety, and then steer his own bark accordingly.”
-
- [64] Edward Curtis, M. D.: Nature and Health. New York, Henry Holt &
- Co. 1906. p. 71.
-
-As one looks through the many careful dietary studies that have been
-made in recent years, it is easy to find striking illustrations of
-people, and communities of people, who have lived for long periods
-of time on dietaries so strikingly simple and meagre that it seems
-difficult at first glance to believe their daily needs could have been
-entirely satisfied. Yet, such observations are quite in accord with
-the facts we have been presenting, and they afford additional evidence
-that the artificial dietary standards that have been set up are widely
-at variance with the real requirements of the body for food. It may
-be quite true that many of the people referred to have been and are
-faddists, with peculiar notions regarding food, based on religious or
-other scruples, but that has no bearing on the main contention that
-they have lived for many years on amounts of food ridiculously small
-as compared with the ordinary customs of mankind. Thus, in Professor
-Jaffa’s report[65] of investigations made among fruitarians and Chinese
-of California is an interesting account of a dietary study of a family
-of fruitarians, consisting of two women and three children. They had
-all been fruitarians from five to seven years, their diet being limited
-to nuts and fruit, except for the addition of celery, honey, olive
-oil, and occasionally a small amount of prepared cereal food. This
-family was in the habit of taking only two meals a day; at 10.30 in
-the morning and at 5 o’clock in the afternoon. The first meal always
-consisted of nuts and fruit, the nuts being eaten first. At the second
-meal, nuts were usually replaced by olive oil and honey. The nuts made
-use of were almonds, Brazil nuts, pine nuts, pignolias (a variety of
-pine nuts), and walnuts. Fruits, both fresh and dried, were used,
-the former including apples, apricots, bananas, figs, grapes, olives
-(pickled), oranges, peaches, pears, plums, and tomatoes. The dried
-fruits were dates and raisins.
-
- [65] Bulletin No. 107, Office of Experiment Stations, U. S.
- Department of Agriculture, 1901, from which the descriptions given
- have been taken.
-
-On this limited dietary of raw, uncooked food, with a complete absence
-of the high-proteid animal foods, and the ordinary vegetables, legumes,
-etc., and without eggs or milk, this family, with three growing
-children, had lived all these years. Note now what Jaffa observed
-regarding their food consumption. The first subject, a woman 33 years
-of age and weighing 90 pounds, was studied for twenty consecutive days,
-all the food eaten being carefully weighed and its chemical composition
-determined. As a result, it was found that the average amount of food
-consumed per day was: proteid, 33 grams; fat, 59 grams; carbohydrate,
-150 grams; with a total fuel value of 1300 calories. The other members
-of the family were studied in a similar manner, one of the children
-being the subject on two separate occasions. The table (on page 217),
-showing the average daily food consumption, gives a summary of the
-results obtained.
-
- +--------------------------------+--------+-----+------+--------+--------+
- | | | | | |Proteid |
- | | | |Carbo-| Fuel |per Kilo|
- | |Proteid.|Fat. | hyd- | Value. | Body- |
- | | | | rate.| |weight. |
- +--------------------------------+--------+-----+------+--------+--------+
- | | grams |grams|grams |calories| grams |
- |Woman, 33 years old, | | | | | |
- | Weight 90 lbs. (40.9 kilos) | 33 | 59 | 150 | 1300 | 0.80 |
- |Woman, 30 years old, | | | | | |
- | Weight 104 lbs. (47.3 kilos) | 25 | 57 | 90 | 1040 | 0.52 |
- |Girl, 13 years old, | | | | | |
- | Weight 75-1/2 lbs. (34.3 kilos)| 26 | 52 | 157 | 1235 | 0.75 |
- |Boy, 9 years old, | | | | | |
- | Weight 43 lbs. (19.5 kilos) | 27 | 56 | 152 | 1255 | 1.38 |
- |Girl, 6 years old, | | | | | |
- | Weight 30-1/2 lbs. (13.9 kilos)| 24 | 58 | 134 | 1190 | 1.72 |
- |Girl, 7 years old, | | | | | |
- | Weight 34 lbs. (15.4 kilos) | 40 | 72 | 134 | 1385 | 2.59 |
- +--------------------------------+--------+-----+------+--------+--------+
-
-As Professor Jaffa states, the tentative dietary standard for a
-woman at light work calls for 90 grams of proteid daily, with a fuel
-value of 2500 calories. Both of these women were light in weight,
-and furthermore had no occasion to do much physical work; but even
-so, a daily consumption of only 0.8 gram and 0.52 gram of proteid,
-respectively, per kilo of body-weight, with the small calorific values
-indicated, represents a phenomenally small amount of food. And yet
-Jaffa, in referring to the woman with the lowest intake of food, states
-that even this small quantity of food, judging from the appearance
-and manner of the subject, “seemed sufficient for her needs, enabling
-her to do her customary housework and take care of her two nieces
-and nephew.” Regarding the children, it is stated that the commonly
-accepted American dietary standard for a child 13 years old and of an
-average activity calls for about 90 grams of proteid and 2450 calories.
-As is seen from the table, however, the 13-year-old girl consumed of
-proteid less than one-third, and of fuel value only about 60 per cent
-of the amount called for; yet, says Jaffa, “notwithstanding the facts
-brought out by this comparison, the subject had all the appearances of
-a well-fed child in excellent health and spirits.”
-
-We need not consume time in discussing the details of this experimental
-study, though the facts are interesting and suggestive, for it is only
-the general question of proteid requirement and calorific value that
-has interest for us at present. The fact is perfectly clear that this
-family of fruitarians, young and old, were quite able to live and
-thrive on a diet, the value of which in proteid and calories was at as
-low a level as was attained in our experimental studies. The rock of
-starvation, however, was not touched or even sighted by the voyagers
-down this stream of nutrition. We may all agree that it would be
-preferable, as a rule, to acquire the proteids, fats, and carbohydrates
-of our diet from a greater variety of sources than did the fruitarians;
-we might well complain at a dietary so limited in quality; but the
-point to be emphasized is that the low intake of proteid and the low
-fuel value were quite adequate for meeting the needs of the body. “It
-is a difficult matter,” says Professor Jaffa, “to draw any general
-conclusions from the foregoing dietaries without being unjust to
-the subjects. It would appear, upon examining the recorded data and
-comparing the results with commonly accepted standards, that all the
-subjects were decidedly undernourished, even making allowances for
-their light weight. But when we consider that the two adults have lived
-upon this diet for seven years, and think they are in better health
-and capable of more work than they ever were before, we hesitate to
-pronounce judgment. The three children, though below the average in
-height and weight, had the appearance of health and strength. They ran
-and jumped and played all day like ordinary healthy children, and were
-said to be unusually free from colds and other complaints common to
-childhood.”
-
-Turning now to a larger community,--the island nation of Japan,--whose
-exploits in war have recently attracted the attention of the civilized
-world, we find a people the great majority of whom have remained
-untouched by the prodigality of western civilization, and whose customs
-and habits still bear the imprint of simplicity and frugality. After
-the restoration of Japan and the reorganization of the government in
-1867, much attention was directed to the methods of living and to the
-dietary habits of the people, with the result that during the last
-twenty-five years there have been slowly accumulating many important
-data bearing on the food consumption of the people. These have recently
-been brought together in an interesting volume by Kintaro Oshima, and
-published[66] in the English language.
-
- [66] A Digest of Japanese Investigations on the Nutrition of Man.
- Bulletin No. 159, Office of Experiment Stations, U. S. Department of
- Agriculture, 1905.
-
- +-----------------------+--------+--------------------------------+
- | | |Digestible Nutrients and Energy |
- | | | per Man per Day. |
- | Subjects. | Body- +--------+-----+--------+--------+
- | |weight. |Proteid.| Fat.| Carbo- | Fuel |
- | | | | |hydrate.| Value. |
- +-----------------------+--------+--------+-----+--------+--------+
- | | kilos | grams |grams| grams |calories|
- |School business agent |57.5 | 65.3 |11.3 | 493.8 | 2467 |
- |Physician |.... | 61.9 | 8.0 | 468.5 | 2315 |
- |Merchant |47.6 | 81.5 |19.6 | 366.2 | 2082 |
- |Medical student |49.0 | 74.8 |11.2 | 326.9 | 1811 |
- |Medical student |48.5 | 64.7 | 5.1 | 469.6 | 2305 |
- |Military cadets |.... | 72.3 |11.7 | 618.1 | 3021 |
- |Prisoners without work |47.6[67]| 36.3 | 5.6 | 360.4 | 1726 |
- |Prisoners at light work|48.0[67]| 43.1 | 6.2 | 443.9 | 2112 |
- |Prisoners at hard work |.... | 56.7 | 7.5 | 610.8 | 2884 |
- |Physician |40.2 | 48.3 |15.5 | 438.2 | 2201 |
- |Hygienic assistant |40.5 | 46.5 |19.7 | 485.3 | 2430 |
- |Medical student |51.0 | 42.8 |14.0 | 438.2 | 2163 |
- |Police prisoners |.... | 42.7 | 8.7 | 387.3 | 1896 |
- |Army surgeon |54.0 | 79.3 |11.7 | 502.0 | 2567 |
- |Soldier |66.7 | 75.8 |13.5 | 563.8 | 2828 |
- |Soldier |61.0 | 58.8 |11.3 | 467.8 | 2330 |
- |Soldier |56.7 | 55.2 |10.9 | 459.6 | 2276 |
- +-----------------------+--------+--------+-----+--------+--------+
-
- [67] Average weight of twenty subjects.
-
-As is well known, the great majority of the people of Japan live
-mainly on a vegetable diet. It is also known to physiologists at least
-that Japanese dietaries are characterized by a relatively small amount
-of proteid, though since the passage of the Food Supply Act of the navy
-in 1884, the proteid-content of the navy ration has been decidedly
-increased. It will be interesting to note a few of the results collated
-by Oshima, and some of the conclusions that he draws from the data
-presented. The foregoing table shows a few of the more striking results
-of the dietary studies obtained with various classes of people, where
-the food used was largely vegetable, but generally with some admixture
-of fish or meat.
-
-The figures presented, which represent the actual amounts of food
-consumed, with proper correction for the indigestible portion, show
-a much smaller intake of proteid than is common with European and
-American people; indeed, both proteid and fuel value are very much
-less than common practices call for among western peoples, even when
-due allowance is made for differences in body-weight. To quote from
-Oshima, “Probably the most interesting of the dietary studies are
-those with poorer classes, which comprise by far the larger part of
-the population. The dietaries of the miscellaneous class, including
-employees, prisoners, etc., consisted largely of vegetable foods
-and supplied on an average 59 grams of proteid and 2190 calories of
-energy per man per day.” Especially suggestive were the results of
-a study made with a military colonist, a type of man very common in
-Japan; in reality farmers who live at home, but have military drill at
-certain fixed times. The subject was carefully selected under advice
-of officers in charge of the district, and weighed 59.9 kilograms. His
-diet consisted solely of cereals and vegetables, being identical with
-that of the people in the rural districts of Japan. His daily food was
-found to be composed of 46.3 grams of digestible proteid, with a fuel
-value of 2703 calories.
-
-Even more striking were the results obtained in a study of the dietary
-habits of three healthy natives of Formosa, employed as day laborers
-at the military hospital. They weighed respectively 60.9, 55, and 54.8
-kilograms. The main portion of their diet was rice, supplemented,
-however, by a little salt fish, salted melon, spinach, ginger, and
-greens. The daily amount of proteid ingested was 48.0 grams (37.4 grams
-of digestible proteid), with a total fuel value of 1948 calories. A
-composite sample of urine covering seven days showed an average daily
-output of metabolized nitrogen of 6.93 grams, corresponding to a
-breaking down of 43.3 grams of proteid.
-
-Especially interesting also is a series of experiments with
-professional men, reported by Oshima, in which attention was paid to
-nitrogen balance. The following table shows the essential results:
-
- +--------+-------+----------+-----------------------------------------+
- | | | | Digestible Nutrients and Energy |
- | | | | per Man per Day. |
- |Subject.| Body- |Character +--------+-----+--------+--------+--------+
- | |weight.| of Food. |Proteid.| Fat.| Carbo- | Fuel |Nitrogen|
- | | | | | |hydrate.| Value. |Balance.|
- +--------+-------+----------+--------+-----+--------+--------+--------+
- | | kilos | | grams |grams| grams |calories| |
- | N. K. | 43.1 |mixed diet| 72.7 |18.3 | 380.7 | 2091 | + |
- | S. A. | 49.5 |mixed diet| 69.8 |20.2 | 410.7 | 2222 | + |
- | N. K. | 42.9 |mixed diet| 64.4 | 8.5 | 396.3 | 2028 | + |
- | N. K. | 43.2 |mixed diet| 62.8 | 8.7 | 433.2 | 2178 | + |
- | N. K. | 43.0 |vegetable | 68.5 |19.7 | 433.0 | 2303 | + |
- | N. K. | 43.9 |vegetable | 36.8 | 6.6 | 381.0 | 1824 | - |
- | N. K. | 42.4 |vegetable | 40.5 | 8.7 | 462.6 | 2200 | + |
- | S. A. | 49.6 |vegetable | 34.4 | 7.5 | 451.9 | 2119 | - |
- | S. A. | 49.9 |vegetable | 43.5 | 9.1 | 500.0 | 2376 | + |
- +--------+-------+----------+--------+-----+--------+--------+--------+
-
-It is to be observed that in all of the above experiments, excepting
-two, the subjects gained nitrogen even with the low proteid intake and
-the small fuel value of the day’s food. Particularly noteworthy, in
-harmony with previous statements, are the results of the sixth and
-seventh experiments. In the sixth experiment, the subject was not able
-to maintain nitrogen equilibrium on a diet containing 36.8 grams of
-digestible proteid and having a fuel value of 1825 calories, but by
-raising the intake of carbohydrate food (seventh experiment) to 462
-grams daily, thereby increasing the fuel value of the daily ration
-to 2200 calories (with a slight increase in the proteid incidental
-thereto), the body was able to change its previous loss of nitrogen
-into a gain; in other words, the added carbohydrate served as a
-protector of proteid.
-
-The series of experiments as a whole, however, is to be considered
-in the light of additional data bearing on the dietary customs of a
-people who for generations have apparently lived and thrived on a daily
-ration noticeably low in its content of proteid, as well as low in its
-calorific value. As Oshima states, “It is probably fair to infer that
-the amount of proteid in the dietaries of the classes living largely on
-vegetable foods (and they constitute the larger part of the population)
-may not be very far from 60 grams per day,” or 45 grams of digestible
-proteid. It is reasonable to assume that the people live in this way
-from force of habit or of necessity, and we may agree with Baelz, a
-professor connected with the medical faculty of Tokyo University, “that
-their diet is sufficient from a physiological standpoint.” Doubtless a
-mixed diet, with a larger proportion of animal food, did their means
-readily permit, would offer some advantages from the standpoint of
-palatability and variety, but it is questionable if any material gain
-in health or strength would result. “It is sometimes remarked,” says
-Oshima, “that the peasants in the rural districts of Japan, living
-largely on vegetable food, are really healthier and stronger than
-people of the better classes, who live on a mixed diet, and the better
-physical condition of the former is commonly believed to be due to
-their diet.” This, however, is a difficult matter to decide, since
-there are so many other factors that are liable to play a part, such as
-the general conditions of life which are so widely different in the two
-classes.
-
-It is plainly evident that the daily diet of the great bulk of the
-Japanese people has been characterized by a very low proteid standard,
-as contrasted with the standards and usages of the majority of
-European and American people. The fact is brought forward merely as
-confirmatory evidence, on a large scale, of the perfect safety of
-lowering the consumption of proteid food to somewhere near the level of
-the physiological requirements of the body. Generations of low proteid
-feeding, with the temperance and simplicity in dietary matters thereby
-implied, have certainly not stood in the way of phenomenal development
-and advancement when the gateway was opened for the ingress of modern
-ideas from western civilization. Many changes are sure to follow in
-the footsteps of the nation’s progress, and among these it is safe to
-prophesy that as public and private wealth, and resources in general,
-increase, the dietary of the people will gradually assume a more varied
-character with corresponding increase in volume. Whether such a change
-will prove of real benefit to the race, time alone can determine.
-
-Having said so much concerning the Japanese, it is proper that a few
-additional statements should be made. The stature and general physique
-of the people could be advantageously improved. Is this a question of
-dietary, or is it connected with some condition of life on which the
-daily food has no bearing; or is it, perchance, a racial characteristic
-so deeply ingrained that conditions of environment are without
-noticeable influence? These questions cannot be definitely answered
-at present. Finally, we may call attention to the dietary changes
-inaugurated in recent years in connection with the new organization of
-the imperial army and navy. With a view to increasing the efficiency of
-the men, following the customs of other countries, an act was passed
-increasing the amount of proteid food in the navy dietary. Oshima’s
-report of the various steps taken to accomplish this end, with the
-results that followed, is interesting in several ways.
-
-“A large part of the rice was to be replaced by bread, and meats were
-to be used liberally. The experience, during the first year that
-this ration was tried, indicated that bread and meat could not be
-advantageously substituted immediately for the rice, because most of
-the marines were unaccustomed to these food materials; consequently,
-a modification of the ration was introduced in 1885, whereby a
-rice-barley mixture was adopted in place of the bread. Barley was
-considered at that time as a better article of food than rice, on
-account of its higher proteid content, but later investigations showed
-that the digestibility of the nutrients of barley was small. In 1886,
-an effort was again made to substitute bread for the rice-barley
-mixture. In 1890, the ration allowance was reduced by one-fifth and
-an amount of money equivalent to the cost of the reduction in diet
-was given to each marine with which to buy accessory food according
-to his own choice. In 1898, the reduction was made one-tenth, instead
-of one-fifth as in previous years. In 1900, the cash allowance was
-abolished and a new ration adopted.” This ration contains about 150
-grams of proteid (animal and vegetable food) and has a fuel value of
-over 3000 calories. In all of these changes, the proportion of rice was
-greatly reduced.
-
-Probably, one of the chief reasons why persistent efforts were made
-to improve the dietary of the navy was the prevalence among the men
-of the disease known as beriberi. “While no satisfactory explanation
-as to the cause of the disease was offered, it was generally believed
-that there was some very close relation between the disease and the
-rice diet” (Oshima). During the years 1878–1883 inclusive, nearly 33
-per cent of the marines suffered from beriberi. With the adoption of
-the new ration in 1884, in which a large part of the rice was replaced
-by bread and other articles, and with better hygienic conditions,
-this disease immediately began to disappear, and during the six years
-after the adoption of the new diet only 16 per cent of the marines
-were affected by the disease. Later on, hardly more than two or three
-cases a year were recorded. Advocates of a high proteid diet bring
-forward this illustration as an evidence of the danger connected with
-a lowered proteid intake; _i. e._, that the nutrition of the body
-will be impaired and diseases of various sorts liable to follow. Yet,
-Oshima is very careful to state, “It should be especially noted that
-here no attempt has been made to indicate the cause of beriberi or the
-relation between the disease and the diet.” That rice in itself can be
-a cause of the disease is not to be considered for a moment. Further,
-so far as any facts are concerned, the writer can see no ground for
-considering that a low rate of proteid metabolism has in itself any
-direct connection with the disease. From a dietary standpoint, it seems
-far more plausible to assume that the great restriction in variety of
-foods, so strikingly manifest in the dietary of the poorer people of
-Japan, results in a lack of some one or more elements which conduces to
-the disease, just as in scurvy the lack of _fresh_ vegetables on long
-voyages was liable to be followed by an epidemic of this disease.
-
-Consider the natural character of the dietary of the great bulk
-of the Japanese people, determined as it was by adverse financial
-circumstances. As Oshima states, “The rural population of the
-interior depends very largely or entirely upon a vegetable diet.
-Fish is eaten perhaps once or twice a month, and meat once or twice
-a year, if at all. The poorer working classes in the cities also
-use very little animal food. But the poorer classes in the city and
-the peasantry of the rural districts comprise nearly 75 per cent of
-the total population, and it is therefore safe to assume that this
-proportion lives chiefly, or wholly, upon vegetable diet. And this,
-it may be observed, means vegetarianism literally. The so-called
-lacto-vegetarianism is unknown in Japan. Cows are scarce, and milk
-and other dairy products are expensive, and such as are available are
-consumed almost entirely by the wealthier people in the cities.” It is
-also to be noted that the amount of fat in Japanese dietaries is very
-small. The reported data indicate that the usual vegetable dietaries
-contain only about 10 grams of fat per day, while even in the average
-mixed dietaries the amount rarely rises above 20 grams per day. In
-other words, the ordinary food of the Japanese was characterized by
-great lack of variety, and with such a preponderance of carbohydrate
-materials of a limited kind that it is easy to conceive of a possible
-dearth of some essential or accessory element, necessary for the
-preservation of that nutritive balance which aids in protection against
-disease.
-
-If the resistance of the body to disease germs and toxic influences in
-general is really diminished by reducing the consumption of proteid
-food below the set dietary standards, then obviously here lies a
-tangible reason for the maintenance of a high proteid intake. I know
-of only one series of scientific observations that bears directly on
-this question. Dr. Reid Hunt of Washington has studied recently the
-power of resistance to the poison acetonitrile of animals kept for some
-time upon a reduced proteid diet. “My experiments,” says Dr. Hunt,
-“showed in all cases that the resistance was much increased.” In other
-words, the animals that had been fed a low proteid ration were able to
-endure a much larger dose of the poison than corresponding animals on
-their customary diet; “they resisted 2–3 times the ordinary fatal dose
-of acetonitrile.” This general subject, however, is obviously a very
-important one, and merits further experimental study under a diversity
-of conditions.
-
-In conclusion, the facts here presented bearing on food requirements,
-especially those that relate to the need for proteid food, are
-seemingly harmonious in indicating that the physiological necessities
-of the body are fully met by a much more temperate use of food than is
-commonly practised. Dietary standards based on the habits and usages
-of prosperous communities are not in accord with the data furnished
-by exact physiological experimentation. Nitrogen equilibrium can be
-maintained on quantities of proteid food fully fifty per cent less
-than the every-day habits of mankind imply to be necessary, and this
-without increasing unduly the consumption of non-nitrogenous food. A
-daily metabolism of proteid matter equal to an exchange of 0.10–0.12
-gram of nitrogen per kilogram of body-weight is quite adequate for
-physiological needs, provided a sufficient amount of non-nitrogenous
-foods--fats and carbohydrates--is taken to meet the energy requirements
-of the body.
-
-The long-continued experiments on many individuals, representing
-different types and degrees of activity, all agree in indicating that
-equilibrium can be maintained indefinitely on these smaller quantities
-of food, and that health and strength can be equally well preserved,
-to say nothing of possible improvement. The lifelong experience of
-individuals and of communities affords sufficient corroborative
-evidence that there is perfect safety in a closer adherence to
-physiological needs in the nutrition of the body, and that these needs,
-so far as proteid food is concerned, are in harmony with the theory
-of an endogenous metabolism, or true tissue metabolism, in which the
-necessary proteid exchange is exceedingly limited in quantity. There
-are many suggestions of improvement in bodily health, of greater
-efficiency in working power, and of greater freedom from disease, in
-a system of dietetics which aims to meet the physiological needs of
-the body without undue waste of energy and unnecessary drain upon the
-functions of digestion, absorption, excretion, and metabolism in
-general; a system which recognizes that the smooth running of man’s
-bodily machinery calls for the exercise of reason and intelligence, and
-is not to be intrusted solely to the dictates of blind instinct or to
-the leadings of a capricious appetite.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII
-
-THE EFFECT OF LOW PROTEID DIET ON HIGH PROTEID ANIMALS
-
- TOPICS: A wide variety of foods quite consistent with temperance in
- diet. Safety of low proteid standards considered. Arguments based
- on the alleged effects of low proteid diet on high proteid animals.
- Experiments of Immanuel Munk with dogs. Experiments of Rosenheim.
- Experiments of Jägerroos. Comments on the above experiments. The
- experiments of Watson and Hunter on rats. The writer’s experiments
- with dogs. Details of the results obtained with six dogs. Comparison
- of the results with those of previous investigators. Effect of a
- purely vegetable diet on dogs. Different nutritive value of specific
- proteids considered. Possible influence of difference in chemical
- constitution of individual proteids. Effect of low proteid diet on
- the absorption and utilization of food materials in the intestine
- of dogs. General conclusions from the results of experiments with
- animals.
-
-
-Man is by choice an omnivorous creature; he reaches out ordinarily in
-all directions for as wide a variety of foods as his circumstances and
-surroundings will allow. He rightly cultivates a taste for foods that
-have individuality of flavor, and derives pleasure and satisfaction
-from the eating of delicacies that appeal to palate and to reason.
-All this he can do without becoming an epicure or a glutton, and
-without violation of physiological laws or disregard of the teachings
-of temperance. As a being endowed with reason and intelligence he is,
-however, necessarily mindful of the possible deleterious effect of
-undue quantities of food, as he is likewise mindful of the desirability
-of avoiding certain varieties of food which personal experience has
-taught him are fraught with possible danger. Care and prudence in diet
-are legitimate outcomes of a reasonable interest in the welfare of the
-body, upon which so largely depend the happiness and working power of
-the individual.
-
-The adoption of dietary habits that aim to accord with the
-physiological requirements of the body does not compel a crucifying of
-the flesh or a disregard of personal likes and dislikes. A reasonable
-intelligence combined with a disposition to exercise the same degree
-of judgment and care in the nutrition of the body as is expended on
-other matters, of no greater importance, pertaining to the individual,
-to the household, or to business interests, are all that is needed to
-bring about harmony between every-day dietary habits and the nutritive
-requirements of the body. There is no occasion, unless one finds
-pleasure and satisfaction in so doing, to resort to a limited dietary
-of nuts and fruits, to become an ardent disciple of vegetarianism,
-to adopt a cereal diet, to abjure meats entirely, or to follow in an
-intensive fashion any particular dietary hobby, except so far as may
-be necessary to insure an adequate amount of non-nitrogenous foods to
-meet the energy requirements of the body without unduly increasing
-the intake of proteid or nitrogenous food. Naturally, a man leading
-a life of great physical activity with the consequent demand for a
-large energy-yielding intake will be compelled to resort largely to
-vegetable foods, rich in starch and poor in proteid, or to eat largely
-of fatty foods. Reliance on meats and animal foods in general, under
-such conditions, would plainly involve a high proteid intake with a
-consequent high nitrogen metabolism, with the chance that even then the
-energy requirement would not be fully met.
-
-In view of all that has been said, reinforced by the various facts
-brought forward as evidence, we must recognize the value of the
-non-nitrogenous foods as a source of energy, and this means plainly
-food from the plant kingdom. In any rational diet, vegetable foods of
-low nitrogen-content must predominate, while animal foods with their
-higher nitrogen values must be greatly subordinate in amount, if the
-nitrogen or proteid metabolism of the body is to be maintained at a
-level commensurate with true physiological requirements. But there
-comes the ever-recurring question, Are the lower proteid standards
-quite safe to follow? Are we warranted in turning aside from the
-teachings based on the habits and customs of mankind? Many reasons have
-already been presented which seemingly justify an affirmative answer,
-while the experimental results and the observations on various groups
-of people, covering years of time, speak with no uncertainty regarding
-the element of safety, and indicate clearly that the absolute proteid
-requirement of the body is quite small; much smaller indeed than
-the amount of proteid food consumed by the average individual would
-seemingly imply.
-
-Probably the most striking evidence, certainly of an experimental
-nature, so far presented against the safety of a relatively low
-proteid diet for man is that based on the results of several studies
-made to ascertain the effect of a reduced proteid intake on so-called
-high proteid animals. Animal kind may be divided into three groups
-according to the nature of their food, viz., high proteid feeders, such
-as carnivorous animals in general, of which the dog is a good type;
-omnivorous or moderate proteid consumers, to which class man belongs;
-and low proteid consumers, such as herbivorous animals. Three series of
-experiments have been reported by independent workers on the effects of
-reducing the amount of proteid food in the diet of dogs. The results
-of these experiments were of such a character that it has come to be
-understood that animals of this type cannot exist for any great length
-of time on a low proteid diet. It is affirmed that in a relatively
-short period the animals reach such a state that they either die, or
-are in such poor condition that they must be fed a more liberal amount
-of proteid to maintain them alive. The explanation offered is that the
-low proteid diet results “in a loss of the power of absorption from the
-intestinal tract, caused apparently by a change in the condition of the
-epithelial cells, as well as by a diminished secretion of the digestive
-juices.”
-
-The argument based on this evidence is that while a high proteid animal
-feels at once, or almost immediately, the deleterious effect of a
-reduction in the amount of proteid food, an omnivorous animal may be
-more tardy in manifesting the injurious action, which, however, is sure
-to follow sooner or later from any material reduction of proteid below
-the customary standards. In other words, man as a moderate proteid
-consumer can endure for a time even large reductions in the amount
-of proteid food, but eventually there will be manifested some of the
-disastrous results obtained with dogs. Here, we have a somewhat serious
-indictment, one that merits careful consideration. To be sure, it may
-be objected that between dog and man there is a wide gulf, and that
-there is no justification for assuming that these two types of animal
-life have anything in common. Still, the experience of many years
-has taught the physiologist that much light can be thrown upon the
-processes of higher types of life by a study of what occurs in lower
-forms, and on the subject of nutrition any one of experience would
-hesitate to cast out of court the evidence gathered from observation of
-what occurs among the higher animals. It will be the part of wisdom,
-therefore, to scrutinize somewhat carefully the character of this
-evidence obtained from a study of the behavior of dogs toward a low
-proteid diet.
-
-The first series of experiments was made in 1891 by the late Immanuel
-Munk of Berlin, privat docent of physiology at the University, followed
-by further experiments in 1893.[68] Four dogs in all were studied. The
-diet made use of was “fleischmehl” (dried meat ground to a powder),
-fat (suet), and rice boiled together with water. We may refer briefly
-to the details of one experiment. The dog weighed 10.4 kilograms, and
-at first was given a daily diet composed of 85 grams of rice, 29 grams
-of fat, and 30 grams of the flesh meal. This ration contained 30.3
-grams of proteid, 31 grams of fat, and 66 grams of carbohydrate, with
-a total fuel value of 663 calories, or 63 calories per kilogram of
-body-weight. On this diet, there was at the outset a slight loss of
-body-weight, after which both body equilibrium and nitrogen equilibrium
-were practically maintained. After this preliminary period of three
-weeks, the day’s diet was altered by replacing 15 grams of the proteid
-by 15 grams of rice, so that the daily ration consisted of 15.3 grams
-of proteid (with 2.42 grams of nitrogen), 31 grams of fat, and 81 grams
-of carbohydrate, with essentially the same fuel value per kilo of
-body-weight as before. Later, the fuel value of the food was further
-increased by raising the amount of rice to 125 grams per day, the day’s
-ration then consisting of 15.5 grams of proteid, 37 grams of fat, and
-96 grams of carbohydrate, with a total fuel value of 780 physiological
-heat units, or 78 calories per kilo. On this diet, nitrogen equilibrium
-was maintained and the animal gained somewhat in body-weight. By the
-seventh week, however, Munk reports that the animal began to show
-signs of change; there was loss of appetite, absorption of the daily
-food was impaired, both proteid and fat failing in large degree to be
-utilized, while nitrogen equilibrium could no longer be maintained.
-This condition continued during the next week, aggravated by vomiting
-and accompanied by loss of strength and vigor. At the beginning of
-the tenth week of this low proteid ration, the animal was in a very
-poor condition, with complete loss of appetite, little inclination to
-take food, etc. On feeding a liberal diet of fresh meat, as much as
-250 grams per day, with some fat (50 grams a day), the animal speedily
-recovered its appetite, and in a short time was in normal condition,
-absorption of food and utilization of the same being as complete as at
-the beginning of the experiment.
-
- [68] Ueber die Folgen einer ausreichenden, aber eiweissarmen Nahrung.
- Ein Beitrag zur Lehre vom Eiweissbedarf. Virchow’s Archiv für
- pathologische Anatomie und Physiologie, Band 132, p. 91.
-
-It is not necessary to give further details bearing on the three
-additional experiments. It will suffice to quote the general
-conclusions which Munk drew from the various results obtained, viz.,
-that a low proteid intake in the case of dogs causes a loss of
-appetite, weakness, vomiting, etc., while body-weight and nitrogen
-equilibrium are difficult or impossible to maintain. More specifically,
-Munk’s observations led him to state that for dogs of ten kilograms
-body-weight a daily intake of 0.255 gram of nitrogen per kilo of
-body-weight is not sufficient to maintain the normal condition of the
-body, even when the fuel value of the day’s food amounts to more than
-100 calories per kilo. In order to have the animal continue in nitrogen
-and body equilibrium, the daily food must contain at least 0.31 gram of
-nitrogen per kilogram of body-weight, with sufficient non-nitrogenous
-food to yield over 100 calories per kilo.
-
-Let us now pass to the experiments made by Rosenheim,[69] which were
-carried on at about the same date as Munk’s. In the first experiment,
-the dog weighed 11.3 kilograms, and was fed daily a low proteid ration
-having a fuel value of 1447 calories and containing 2.825 grams of
-nitrogen. This ration was reduced in a short time to a still lower
-plane, viz., to 1066 calories and 2.525 grams of nitrogen daily. The
-food as then given was composed of 170 grams of rice, 50 grams of
-fat, and 25 grams of chopped meat, on which the dog gained weight and
-preserved nitrogen equilibrium. For six weeks, or thereabouts, the
-animal maintained its normal condition, after which it began to show
-symptoms of a general disturbance, with lack of appetite and weakness
-accompanied by a condition of icterus. Addition of meat extract to
-the diet to improve the flavor was without any appreciable effect.
-During the next two weeks, the condition of the animal steadily grew
-worse, although the body-weight remained practically stationary and
-nitrogen equilibrium was maintained. A week later, the animal died in
-a condition of exhaustion, without having manifested any symptoms of
-disturbed metabolism. There was found a marked catarrhal condition
-of the mucous membrane of the gastro-intestinal tract, with a fatty
-degeneration or metamorphosis of the glandular apparatus, but nothing
-sufficiently specific to account for the peculiar manner of death.
-
- [69] Theodor Rosenheim: Ueber den Gesundheitsschädigenden Einfluss
- eiweissarmer Nahrung. DuBois-Reymond’s Archiv für Physiologie,
- 1891, p. 341. Also, Weiterer Untersuchungen über die Schädlichkeit
- eiweissarmer Nahrung. Pflüger’s Archiv f. d. gesammte Physiologie,
- Band 54, p. 61, 1893.
-
-A second experiment with a dog of 5.8 kilograms, fed on meat, fat, and
-rice, led to essentially the same results as the preceding experiment.
-At the end of the first month, there appeared indications that the
-animal was not well, loss of appetite being marked, with disturbance
-of the stomach accompanied by occasional vomiting. These symptoms
-disappeared quickly when the animal was given for a few days large
-quantities of meat. On returning to the original low proteid diet,
-with its large content of rice, the symptoms gradually reappeared.
-At the end of two months the animal had again lost its appetite, and
-before the end of the fifth month the subject was dead. Post-mortem
-examination showed especially a strong fatty degeneration of the
-epithelial cells of the mucous membrane of the stomach and intestine.
-Rosenheim concludes that a diet poor in proteid is unhealthful for
-dogs, and that a daily ration containing even 0.32 gram of nitrogen
-per kilogram of body-weight, and with a fuel value of 110 calories per
-kilo, is not sufficient to maintain the animal in a condition of health.
-
-The next series of experiments was made by Jägerroos[70] of Finland.
-This investigator was evidently impressed by the unfavorable and
-monotonous character of the diet made use of by the preceding
-investigators, and sought to introduce a little variety, recognizing
-also that with a carnivorous animal it is difficult to reduce the
-proteid to a low level and maintain the necessary fuel value, without
-introducing foodstuffs to which the animal is wholly unaccustomed. In
-the first experiment, the dog had a body-weight of 5.77 kilograms, and
-at the beginning was fed daily 40 grams of meat and 100 grams of sugar,
-equal to 0.31 gram of nitrogen and 80 calories per kilo of body-weight.
-The experiment continued for eight months, sugar being replaced in part
-by butter, and occasionally bread, fat, and wheat meal being used in
-proper amount to yield the given nitrogen and fuel values. During the
-last five months, the intake of nitrogen per day averaged 0.29 gram
-per kilo, with a fuel value amounting to 89 calories daily per kilo of
-body-weight. During this period, the animal maintained a plus nitrogen
-balance for a large part of the time. The experiment was then continued
-for two months longer, with a gradual diminution in the nitrogen of the
-food and in the fuel value, the animal dying at the end of the tenth
-month.
-
- [70] B. H. Jägerroos: Ueber die Folgen einer ausreichenden, aber
- eiweissarmen Nahrung. Skandinavisches Archiv für Physiologie, Band
- 13, p. 375, 1902.
-
-In a second experiment, the dog made use of weighed at the beginning
-11.97 kilograms. During the first five months, the average intake of
-nitrogen amounted daily to 0.29 gram per kilo, while the average fuel
-value of the food (meat, fat, and sugar) was 76 calories per kilo
-daily. In the middle of the seventh month the animal was quite ill,
-with poor appetite, vomiting, etc. Body-weight began to fall off, and
-the animal soon died. With both of these animals, the experiment ended
-suddenly by a sharp and short illness.
-
-Jägerroos, however, believed that both animals died from a severe
-case of infection, and not as the result of the diminished intake of
-proteid. This view was fully substantiated, in his opinion, by the
-evidence furnished on bacteriological and morphological examination.
-There was no pathological alteration and no fatty degeneration in the
-intestinal epithelium; nothing to indicate any connection between the
-lowered proteid intake and the death of the animal. To be sure, the
-long-continued diet poor in nitrogen might have diminished the power
-of resistance of the body, but no proof of this is offered. There
-was indicated merely a simple infection, as shown by the presence
-of Streptococcus and Bacterium coli communis in the blood. But, as
-Jägerroos states, one might well conceive of a lowered power of
-resistance on the part of the body, due not to any change in diet,
-but to the long-continued confinement in a cage with the enforced
-inactivity and lack of freedom. It is to be noted, furthermore, that
-here there was no sign of a gradual and progressive weakening of
-the body, no indication of any disturbance of the digestive tract
-with diminished power of absorption of either fat or proteid. On the
-contrary, there was a sudden and sharp attack of some infectious
-disease by which the animals quickly succumbed. Jägerroos was of the
-opinion that in the absence of this infection the animals would have
-continued to live for a long period of time.
-
-If a low proteid diet works so inimically on high proteid animals as
-Munk and Rosenheim thought, it would naturally be expected that the
-small proteid ration followed so long by Jägerroos would have resulted
-in the appearance of marked symptoms, at least a gradual and persistent
-falling off in body-weight, inability to maintain nitrogen equilibrium,
-etc.; but none of these things occurred. In Munk’s first experiment,
-the animal was given no fresh meat whatever during four weeks. Is it
-not quite possible that in the abrupt cutting off of this wonted form
-of food a disturbance may have been set up in the gastro-intestinal
-tract, which paved the way for the more serious results that followed?
-Jägerroos used only fresh, uncooked meat in his experiments, and laid
-great stress upon the importance of not departing any more than was
-necessary from the accustomed form of diet. The writer is strongly of
-the opinion that sufficient stress has not been laid upon this phase of
-the subject. A satisfactory diet for dog as for man must meet ordinary
-hygienic requirements; it must not only be sufficient in amount, but
-it must be easily digestible, of accustomed flavor, appealing to eye,
-nostrils, and palate, with reasonable variation occasionally and of
-moderate volume. With due regard to these conditions, I believe with
-Jägerroos that not much attention need be paid to the proportion
-of nitrogen therein, for however small the amount it will be found
-sufficient to meet the needs of the body.
-
-These are the results, collectively, so frequently used to point
-a moral for man: Beware of the possible danger of reducing the
-consumption of proteid food below the commonly accepted dietary
-standards! We must admit, however, that there is a woeful lack of
-agreement in these results, and it is difficult to prevent a shadow of
-doubt from creeping over us as we try to depict for ourselves the way
-in which a low proteid ration exerts its deleterious effect on dogs.
-I do not believe that radical changes in diet, whether they involve
-increase or decrease in total quantities, or in specific elements of
-the diet, can be made suddenly without danger of some disturbance of
-the gastro-intestinal tract or other parts of the economy, either
-in dog or man. It is reasonable to believe also that a high proteid
-feeder, like a dog, with his more limited dietary, will be far more
-sensitive to great changes than omnivorous man with his wider range of
-foodstuffs. Moreover, there is just as good ground for believing that
-in any animal, excess of proteid is as dangerous as a low proteid diet.
-Too great a disturbance in the nutritive balance, whether it involves
-excess or reduction in the amount of a given foodstuff, is liable to be
-attended with serious disturbance in any sensitive organism.
-
-In illustration of these statements, we have some recent results
-obtained by Watson and Hunter[71] upon the influence of diet on
-growth and nutrition. These investigators find that young rats--two
-and a half months old--when fed upon a diet composed exclusively of
-horse-flesh, which is chiefly proteid matter with some fat, succumb
-very quickly, for some reason. Of fourteen young rats fed on this meat
-diet, six died on the third day. On the morning of this day, as the
-authors state, “the rats appeared to be in their usual health, but
-an hour after feeding one of them was lying on its side apparently
-unconscious. In a few minutes others were affected. They appeared to be
-paralyzed, they felt cold to the touch, exhibited symptoms of tetany,
-and speedily became unconscious. Six succumbed within half-an-hour. Of
-the remainder, some showed similar symptoms, although in less degree,
-and they recovered when the diet was changed to bread and skim milk.”
-After two days of the so-called normal diet, composed of bread and skim
-milk, the remaining eight rats were again placed on an exclusive meat
-diet. They appeared now to have acquired a certain degree of immunity,
-for although they exhibited symptoms of deranged nutrition, these were
-gradually recovered from and they gained in weight. At the end of the
-eighth month, five of the animals were still alive and in apparent good
-health, but their growth was permanently stunted. With an exclusive
-diet of ox-flesh, young rats were much more liable to thrive, although
-their growth was distinctly retarded.
-
- [71] Chalmers Watson, M.D., and Andrew Hunter, M.B.: Observations
- on Diet. The Influence of Diet on Growth and Nutrition. Journal of
- Physiology, Vol. XXXIV, p. 112, 1906.
-
-This difference in the behavior of the animals towards the two
-forms of proteid food is to be attributed to the fact that ox-flesh
-contains more fat than horse-flesh, and consequently the diet with
-this form of meat was less exclusively proteid in character. Further,
-there were some indications that horse-flesh is less digestible than
-ox-flesh. Another fact, showing the far-reaching effect of a distinctly
-unphysiological diet, is the marked influence of pure meat food on the
-progeny. Thus, of 93 rats born of meat-fed parents only 19 were alive
-at the end of two months, while of 97 young born of bread and milk-fed
-rats, 82 were alive and in apparent health at the end of the same
-period.
-
-As illustrating how foods that have, superficially at least,
-approximately the same chemical composition may react differently
-in the animal body we have the observations of Watson on rats fed
-with porridge, made by boiling oatmeal with water and skim milk,
-as contrasted with a diet of bread and skim milk, the two diets
-having essentially the same composition. Of fourteen young rats fed
-exclusively on porridge, all, with the exception of two that were
-withdrawn, succumbed within five months, while the bread and milk-fed
-animals thrived as usual. Adult rats, however, can live for prolonged
-periods and maintain their weight on a porridge diet. It is believed
-that the difference in the behavior of young rats to these two closely
-allied forms of diet, is due to a difference in the digestibility of
-the food, the porridge being presumably less readily digested by the
-young animals than bread. With the more fully developed digestive
-powers of the adult animals, however, this difference in availability
-practically disappears as a potent factor in their nutrition. Finally,
-mention may be made of the fact that a pure rice diet, notably
-deficient in proteid, arrests the growth of young rats and leads to a
-fatal issue within three months, while adult rats placed on such a
-diet lose weight rapidly and die in about the same time. All of these
-facts bearing on the nutrition of animals quite remote from man have
-significance as showing how any wide departure from a physiological
-diet, for that particular species or type, may lead to very undesirable
-results, and they warn us not to be too hasty in drawing far-reaching
-conclusions and sweeping deductions from a few experiments with a given
-species of animal.
-
-Recurring now to the experiments made with dogs, there is certainly
-suggested an element of danger in a low proteid diet, which, if the
-experiments are taken at their face value and the conclusions derived
-therefrom applied to man, needs careful consideration. Jägerroos
-plainly was not inclined toward the belief that a low nitrogen intake
-was the cause of the unfortunate results that attended his experiments.
-Still, his animals did die from some cause, and thereby his position
-was weakened. Munk and Rosenheim, on the other hand, from their
-experiments were apparently convinced that a low proteid intake was
-inimical to dogs, and it will be remembered Rosenheim concluded that
-“a daily ration containing even 0.32 gram of nitrogen per kilogram of
-body-weight, and with a fuel value of 110 calories per kilo, is not
-sufficient to maintain the animal in a condition of health.” If this
-is really true, there is some ground for the arguments advanced by
-critical writers regarding the general subject of nitrogen requirements
-of man. The evidence and the arguments, however, have always seemed to
-the present writer frail and faulty; but recognizing the hold they have
-taken on physiologists and the way they are usually applied to man, I
-have attempted to test the matter experimentally under conditions which
-would yield trustworthy and conclusive results.
-
-The question how far results obtained with dogs can be applied safely
-to man may be open to discussion, but we must first be sure of our
-facts before arguments or conclusions of any kind are warranted. It is
-to be remembered that dogs are as sensitive in many ways as man, and no
-physiological experiment covering a long period of time can be carried
-out with any hope of success unless there is due regard for proper
-hygienic conditions, some degree of variety in diet, and reasonable
-opportunities for fresh air and occasional exercise. I fancy that
-even the most vigorous and hardy man, if confined for six consecutive
-months in a room just large enough to furnish requisite air-space and
-to permit of extending his body at full length, would find himself
-at the end of such a period in a condition far from healthful, even
-though there were perfect freedom of choice in diet. If, however, there
-were added to the above conditions monotony in diet extending through
-many months, there would be no occasion for surprise if the individual
-lost appetite and strength, and showed signs of disturbance of the
-gastro-intestinal tract.
-
-It is doubtful if there is full appreciation of the possible effect
-of monotony, in the ordinary dietary experiments on dogs. Man quickly
-feels the effect; the sportsman camping in the woods by brook or lake
-enjoys his first meal of speckled trout and has no thought of ever
-becoming tired of such a delicacy; but as trout cooked in various ways
-continue to be placed before him three times a day, and with perhaps
-very little else, he soon passes into a frame of mind where salt pork
-would be a luxury, and where he would prefer to go hungry rather than
-eat the delicacy, if indeed he has appetite to eat anything. Is it
-strange that dogs confined in cages barely large enough to permit of
-their turning around, and fed day after day and month after month with
-exactly the same amount of desiccated meat, fat, and rice, should show
-signs and symptoms, if nothing worse, of disturbed nutrition? It is
-necessary in experiments of this kind that the animals be confined
-for given periods, at least, since otherwise it would be impossible
-to determine the extent of nitrogen excretion and the rate of proteid
-katabolism, etc. It is possible, however, to limit the time of close
-confinement to, say, ten consecutive days, this to be followed by a
-like period of comparative freedom, thus insuring opportunities for an
-abundance of fresh air and exercise.
-
-The experiments of which I wish to speak, and which had for their
-object a study of the effect of low proteid diet on dogs, as types
-of high proteid animals, were carried out at our laboratory in the
-Sheffield Scientific School and were made possible by liberal grants
-from the Carnegie Institution of Washington, thus providing means for
-securing the requisite number of chemical assistants. The experiments
-were conducted on a somewhat large scale, over twenty dogs being made
-use of, while many of the experiments extended through a full year.
-The results in their entirety are not yet ready for publication, but
-I am able to present in a general way observations on six dogs, which
-will serve as an ample illustration of what may be expected with high
-proteid animals when living on a low proteid diet under healthful
-conditions. All of the six dogs whose cases are here presented were fed
-on a mixed diet, with some fresh meat each day; bread, cracker dust,
-milk, lard, and rice being the other foods drawn upon to complete the
-dietary. The animals were fed twice a day, each meal being accurately
-weighed and of definite chemical composition. A large, light, and
-airy room, kept scrupulously clean, and in the winter time properly
-heated by steam, served as their main abiding place. In this room
-were a suitable number of smaller compartments, the walls of which
-were composed of open lattice work (of iron), so as not to interfere
-with light or air, and yet adequate to keep the dogs apart. These
-compartments were not cages in the ordinary sense, but were truly large
-and roomy. The entire floor under the dogs was composed of metal, the
-joints all soldered, the floor being sloped to a metal gutter in front
-so that all the compartments could be flushed out each morning and kept
-sweet and clean. In pleasant weather, immediately after their first
-meal, the dogs were taken out of doors to a large enclosure near by,
-where they were allowed perfect freedom until about four o’clock, when
-they were taken in for their second meal (between four and five o’clock
-in the afternoon). The outdoor enclosure was inaccessible to every one
-except the holder of the key, and the dogs while there were wholly free
-from annoyance. Once every month, during a period of ten consecutive
-days, each dog was confined in the metabolism cage so as to admit of
-the collection of all excreta, in order to make a determination of
-the nitrogen balance. Practically, therefore, each dog was in close
-confinement only one-third of the month, the remaining two-thirds
-being spent in much more congenial surroundings. I have entered thus
-fully into a description of the conditions prevailing, because I deem
-them exceedingly important, and because therein undoubtedly lies the
-explanation of the striking contrast between our results and those of
-the earlier investigators of this subject.
-
-In considering the outcome of our experiments, it may be wise to enter
-into some detail concerning the first case to be presented. The animal
-employed in this experiment was designated as No. 5, and weighed on
-July 27, 1905, 17.2 kilograms; it was apparently full grown, but was
-thin and had the appearance of being underfed. At first, it was given
-daily 172 grams of meat, 124 grams of cracker dust, and 72 grams of
-lard, the day’s ration containing 8.66 grams of nitrogen and having a
-fuel value of 1389 calories.[72] These figures are equivalent to 80
-calories, and 0.50 gram of nitrogen, per kilogram of body-weight. The
-animal took kindly to the diet, but on August 3 it refused to eat and
-seemed to have a little fever. The next day it was better, but for
-the three following days its appetite was poor, and only a portion
-of the daily food was eaten. Body-weight began to fall off, and was
-soon at 15.5 kilograms. On the 7th of August, a dose of vermifuge
-was given, after which the appetite returned and the animal appeared
-in good spirits. From this time forward it seemed in perfect health,
-with good appetite, and showed the usual vivacity and playfulness of
-dog-kind. The diet as specified was continued unchanged until August
-25, a balance experiment covering a period of ten days, from the 15th
-to the 24th of August inclusive, being carried out, in which the
-nitrogen of the intake was compared with the output for each day. From
-the accompanying table, where are given the average values of all the
-balance periods of the experiment, it is to be seen that during this
-first period the animal was laying on or gaining an average of 2 grams
-of nitrogen per day.
-
- [72] The fuel value of the food was calculated from the data given
- in Bulletin No. 28, U. S. Department of Agriculture. All figures for
- nitrogen were obtained by exact chemical analysis.
-
-
-SUBJECT No. 5. DAILY AVERAGES
-
- +----------------+-------+-----------------------+-------------------------+------+
- | | | Food. | Output. | |
- | | +------+-------+--------+---------+-------+-------+ |
- | | Body- | |Nitro- | Fuel | Nitro- | Nitro-| Nitro-|Nitro-|
- | Date. |weight.|Total |gen per| Value | gen | gen | gen | gen |
- | | |Nitro-| Kilo |per Kilo| through |through|through| Bal- |
- | | | gen. | Body- | Body- | Kid- |Excre- | Hair. | ance |
- | | | |weight.| weight.|neys.[73]| ment. | |+ or -|
- +----------------+-------+------+-------+--------+---------+-------+-------+------+
- | 1905 | kilos | grams| gram |calories| grams | gram | gram |grams |
- |Aug. 15-Aug. 24 | 15.8 | 8.66 | 0.54 | 87.3 | 5.44 | 0.70 | 0.52 |+2.00 |
- |Sept. 6-Sept. 15| 17.1 | 4.76 | 0.27 | 72.4 | 3.41 | 0.32 | 0.48 |+0.55 |
- |Oct. 8-Oct. 17 | 17.6 | 4.76 | 0.27 | 71.8 | 3.54 | 0.54 | 0.49 |+0.19 |
- |Nov. 22-Dec. 1 | 16.9 | 4.77 | 0.28 | 72.0 | 3.76 | 0.39 | 0.32 |+0.30 |
- | 1906 | | | | | | | | |
- |Jan. 2-Jan. 11 | 17.2 | 4.07 | 0.23 | 72.0 | 3.19 | 0.54 | 0.35 |-0.01 |
- |Jan. 30-Feb. 8 | 18.0 | 4.07 | 0.23 | 69.0 | 2.87 | 0.54 | 0.62 |+0.04 |
- |Feb. 27-Mar. 8 | 18.2 | 5.18 | 0.28 | 73.0 | 3.69 | 0.66 | 0.74 |+0.09 |
- |Mar. 27-Apr. 5 | 18.3 | 5.23 | 0.28 | 73.0 | 3.66 | 0.84 | 0.48 |+0.25 |
- |Apr. 24-May 3 | 19.1 | 5.22 | 0.27 | 68.0 | 3.76 | 0.38 | 0.48 |+0.60 |
- |May 22-May 31 | 19.4 | 5.22 | 0.26 | 65.0 | 3.44 | 0.31 | 0.48 |+0.99 |
- |June 17-June 26 | 20.0 | 5.24 | 0.26 | 67.0 | 3.50 | 0.71 | 0.48 |+0.55 |
- +----------------+-------+------+-------+--------+---------+-------+-------+------+
-
- [73] All through the balance periods the dogs were catheterized each
- morning to insure complete collection of the twenty-four hours’ urine.
-
-On August 25, a radical change was made in the diet, by reducing the
-amount of meat to 70 grams daily, thereby lowering the intake of
-nitrogen to 4.76 grams, or 0.27 gram per kilo of body-weight; the
-cracker dust and lard being kept at essentially the same levels as
-before. This diet was continued through the next balance period, the
-dog in the meantime gaining in body-weight, and showing for the second
-balance period an average gain by the body of half a gram of nitrogen
-per day. The food was then altered by substituting bread for the
-cracker dust, but so adjusted that the nitrogen and fuel values of the
-day’s food remained practically unchanged. There was still, however, a
-gain in body-weight and a slight gain in body nitrogen. At the close
-of the third balance period, the diet was again altered, one-half of
-the meat being replaced by milk, while cracker dust was substituted
-for the bread. The morning meal consisted of 170 grams of milk, 86
-grams of cracker dust, and 18 grams of lard, while the afternoon meal
-was composed of 35 grams of meat, 63 grams of cracker, and 35 grams of
-lard. The day’s ration, however, still contained 4.76 grams of nitrogen
-and had a fuel value of 1249 calories. This diet was maintained until
-November 20, when the animal was again placed on a daily ration of meat
-(69 grams), bread (166 grams), and lard (80 grams), with a total fuel
-value of 1228 calories and 4.77 grams of nitrogen. This was continued
-until December 2, the dog still showing a plus nitrogen balance, but
-with a little loss in body-weight. On December 2, the diet was again
-changed by substituting milk for a portion of the meat, but the
-nitrogen and fuel values were maintained at the same level as before.
-After a week, December 9, the food was modified as follows: the morning
-meal contained 170 grams of milk, 110 grams of rice, and 11 grams of
-lard, while the afternoon meal was composed of 35 grams of meat, 81
-grams of rice, and 30 grams of lard. The total nitrogen content of the
-day’s ration was 4.07 grams, while the fuel value was 1255 calories. At
-this time, the animal weighed 17.1 kilograms, consequently the intake
-of nitrogen had been reduced to 0.23 gram per kilo of body-weight,
-while the fuel value stood at 73 calories per kilogram. This diet was
-continued until February 9, the balance period, between January 2 and
-11, showing that the animal was in nitrogen equilibrium, in spite of
-the material reduction in the intake of proteid, and that body-weight
-was increasing. The next balance period, January 30 to February 8,
-showed still further gain in weight with continuance of nitrogen
-equilibrium. On February 9, the diet was changed by returning to 70
-grams of meat, 158 grams of cracker dust, and 60 grams of lard, with a
-daily intake of 0.28 gram of nitrogen per kilo of body-weight.
-
-In this manner, the experiment was continued with frequent changes in
-the character of the diet, but always maintaining essentially the same
-values in nitrogen and calories as shown in the table, until June 27;
-having extended through just eleven months, with the animal at the
-close of the experiment still gaining in body-weight, with a steady
-plus balance of nitrogen, and with every indication of good health and
-strength. For ten months the animal lived with perfect comfort and in
-good condition on an average daily intake of 0.26 gram of nitrogen
-per kilogram of body-weight, and with an average fuel value of 70.3
-calories per kilo. Further, it is to be observed that at no time
-during the ten months did the daily intake of nitrogen rise above 0.28
-gram per kilo, while during one month it fell to 0.23 gram per kilo.
-Similarly, the fuel value of the daily food never exceeded 73 calories
-per kilo, while at times it dropped as low as 67 and 65 calories per
-kilo. That this diet was more than sufficient, both in nitrogen and
-fuel value, is indicated by the steady increase in body-weight and by
-the plus nitrogen balances observed in most of the periods throughout
-the experiment. Indeed, with the comparatively low degree of muscular
-activity which this animal was accustomed to, it would have been unwise
-to have kept the subject much longer on a diet so rich as the above,
-since there would have been danger of detriment to its health and good
-condition. When these results are contrasted with the statements of
-Munk and Rosenheim, the latter of whom found that even 0.32 gram of
-nitrogen and 110 calories per kilo were insufficient to maintain dogs
-in a condition of health, it is plain that for some reason our results
-are quite at variance with their findings.
-
-The accompanying photographs, taken on August 19, 1905, February 27,
-April 24, and at the close of the experiment on June 27, 1906, show the
-appearance of the animal at the respective dates, and indicate more
-clearly than words can express the actual condition of the animal.
-
-[Illustration: _Subject No. 5._ _August 19, 1905_]
-
-[Illustration: _Subject No. 5._ _November 18, 1905_]
-
-[Illustration: _Subject No. 5._ _April 24, 1906_]
-
-[Illustration: _Subject No. 5._ _June 27, 1906_]
-
-Turning now to a second subject, designated as dog No. 3, the
-experiment with which lasted for nearly an entire year, the following
-general statements may be made. The animal was a small black and white
-fox terrier, weighing on July 6, 1905, 6.5 kilograms. It was a nervous,
-affectionate little creature, far less phlegmatic than the animal just
-described, always on the alert for a petting, and unceasingly active.
-For these reasons, it seemingly required per kilogram of body-weight a
-little more food than the preceding animal; a fact also in harmony with
-the general law that small animals, per unit of body-weight, need more
-food than larger ones. The diet made use of was of the same general
-character as employed with the preceding animal, and was changed
-from time to time to give requisite variety and to insure freedom from
-too great monotony. The accompanying table, showing daily averages
-during the twelve balance periods, gives all necessary information
-regarding the outcome of the experiment.
-
-
-SUBJECT No. 3. DAILY AVERAGES
-
- +----------------+-------+-----------------------+-----------------------+------+
- | | | Food. | Output. | |
- | | +------+-------+--------+-------+-------+-------+ |
- | | Body- | |Nitro- | Fuel | Nitro-| Nitro-| Nitro-|Nitro-|
- | Date. |weight.|Total |gen per| Value | gen | gen | gen | gen |
- | | |Nitro-| Kilo |per Kilo|through|through|through| Bal- |
- | | | gen. | Body- | Body- | Kid- |Excre- | Hair. | ance |
- | | | |weight.| weight.| neys. | ment. | |+ or -|
- +----------------+-------+------+-------+--------+-------+-------+-------+------+
- | 1905 | kilos | grams| gram |calories| grams | gram | gram | gram |
- |July 18-July 28 | 6.8 | 5.88 | 0.84 | 79.0 | 5.58 | 0.43 | 0.05 |-0.18 |
- |Aug. 15-Aug. 24 | 7.1 | 3.44 | 0.49 | 77.4 | 3.35 | 0.17 | 0.13 |-0.21 |
- |Sept. 6-Sept. 15| 6.9 | 2.11 | 0.30 | 80.0 | 1.93 | 0.21 | 0.07 |-0.10 |
- |Oct. 8-Oct. 17 | 6.9 | 2.10 | 0.30 | 80.0 | 1.83 | 0.20 | 0.07 | 0 |
- |Nov. 22-Dec. 1 | 6.0 | 1.83 | 0.31 | 80.0 | 1.48 | 0.21 | 0.11 |+0.03 |
- | 1906 | | | | | | | | |
- |Jan. 2-Jan. 11 | 5.6 | 1.63 | 0.29 | 81.0 | 1.54 | 0.17 | 0.08 |-0.16 |
- |Jan. 30-Feb. 8 | 5.5 | 1.63 | 0.30 | 82.0 | 1.60 | 0.15 | 0.05 |-0.17 |
- |Feb. 27-Mar. 8 | 5.5 | 1.78 | 0.32 | 84.0 | 1.66 | 0.17 | 0.05 |-0.10 |
- |Mar. 27-Apr. 5 | 5.7 | 1.98 | 0.34 | 81.0 | 1.75 | 0.21 | 0.06 |-0.04 |
- |Apr. 24-May 3 | 5.7 | 1.98 | 0.34 | 83.0 | 1.68 | 0.13 | 0.13 |+0.04 |
- |May 22-May 31 | 5.8 | 1.98 | 0.34 | 80.0 | 1.77 | 0.13 | 0.11 |-0.03 |
- |June 17-June 26 | 6.0 | 1.98 | 0.33 | 77.0 | 1.53 | 0.21 | 0.07 |+0.17 |
- +----------------+-------+------+-------+--------+-------+-------+-------+------+
-
-It will be observed that during the first three months the animal
-showed a tendency to gain in weight slightly, recalling that its
-initial weight on July 6 was 6.5 kilograms. Later, the weight fell
-off a little, but in March it showed an upward movement, though very
-gradual. With the amount of proteid food given, it is evident that
-the animal needed about 80 calories per kilo to maintain a condition
-of body-equilibrium. Nitrogen equilibrium was practically maintained
-throughout the larger portion of the twelve months, but evidently the
-animal required 0.31–0.33 gram of nitrogen per kilogram of body-weight.
-Attention may be directed, in view of the results reported by Munk
-regarding loss of the power of absorption and utilization of proteid
-food, to the figures showing the average daily output of nitrogen
-through the excrement. It is plain from the data presented, that this
-animal was not suffering from any trouble of this order; indeed, the
-utilization of proteid food throughout the entire experiment was
-exceedingly complete, as shown by the relatively small loss of nitrogen
-through the excrement, thus implying vigorous and unimpaired digestion,
-together with thorough absorption of the products formed.
-
-The accompanying photographs show the appearance of the animal on
-August 19, 1905, November 18, 1905, April 3 and June 27, 1906, the
-close of the experiment.
-
-[Illustration: _Subject No. 3._ _August 19, 1905_]
-
-[Illustration: _Subject No. 3._ _November 18, 1905_]
-
-[Illustration: _Subject No. 3._ _April 24, 1906_]
-
-[Illustration: _Subject No. 3._ _June 27, 1906_]
-
-Passing now to the third subject, we have an experiment of somewhat
-shorter duration, viz., of nine months, but sufficiently long to
-afford ample opportunity for any deleterious effect to manifest
-itself. The initial weight of the dog, No. 13, was 14.5 kilograms on
-September 14. The lowest intake of nitrogen was 0.26 gram per kilo
-of body-weight per day, while the fuel value of the daily food was
-during one period reduced to 55 calories per kilo. A daily proteid
-consumption equalling 0.30 gram of nitrogen per kilo, with a total
-fuel value in the day’s food of 66–70 calories per kilo, was clearly
-quite sufficient to maintain nitrogen equilibrium and body-weight;
-indeed, toward the end of the experiment, the animal commenced to gain
-in weight quite noticeably on the above diet, and was laying by fairly
-large amounts of nitrogen daily. The accompanying table gives the
-average daily nitrogen exchange, etc., of the nine balance periods,
-while the photographs, taken on the dates indicated under each, show
-the appearance of the animal at various times.
-
-SUBJECT No. 13. DAILY AVERAGES
-
- +---------------+-------+-----------------------+-----------------------+------+
- | | | Food. | Output. | |
- | | +------+-------+--------+-------+-------+-------+ |
- | | Body- | |Nitro- | Fuel | Nitro-| Nitro-| Nitro-|Nitro-|
- | Date. |weight.|Total |gen per| Value | gen | gen | gen | gen |
- | | |Nitro-| Kilo |per Kilo|through|through|through| Bal- |
- | | | gen. | Body- | Body- | Kid- |Excre- | Hair. | ance |
- | | | |weight.| weight.| neys. | ment. | |+ or -|
- +---------------+-------+------+-------+--------+-------+-------+-------+------+
- | 1905 | kilos | grams| gram |calories| grams | gram | gram | gram |
- |Sept. 24-Oct. 3| 14.0 | 7.22 | 0.52 | 86.0 | 6.40 | 0.71 | 0.19 |-0.08 |
- |Nov. 5-Nov. 14 | 13.0 | 4.78 | 0.35 | 80.0 | 4.29 | 0.37 | 0.25 |-0.13 |
- |Dec. 19-Dec. 28| 13.4 | 3.70 | 0.27 | 72.0 | 2.86 | 0.49 | 0.13 |+0.22 |
- | 1906 | | | | | | | | |
- |Jan. 16-Jan. 25| 14.1 | 3.72 | 0.26 | 70.0 | 3.16 | 0.61 | 0.16 |-0.21 |
- |Feb. 13-Feb. 22| 14.3 | 4.26 | 0.30 | 78.0 | 3.54 | 0.67 | 0.37 |-0.32 |
- |Mar. 13-Mar. 22| 14.1 | 3.62 | 0.26 | 55.0 | 3.29 | 0.46 | 0.14 |-0.27 |
- |Apr. 10-Apr. 19| 14.2 | 4.59 | 0.32 | 73.0 | 2.84 | 0.51 | 0.10 |+1.14 |
- |May 8-May 17 | 14.2 | 4.59 | 0.32 | 71.0 | 3.56 | 0.48 | 0.18 |+0.37 |
- |June 5-June 14 | 15.3 | 4.58 | 0.30 | 66.0 | 2.98 | 0.55 | 0.28 |+0.77 |
- +---------------+-------+------+-------+--------+-------+-------+-------+------+
-
-[Illustration: _Subject No. 13._ _January 2, 1906_]
-
-[Illustration: _Subject No. 13._ _February 27, 1906_]
-
-[Illustration: _Subject No. 13._ _April 24, 1906_]
-
-[Illustration: _Subject No. 13._ _June 19, 1906_]
-
-Results of the same general tenor with dogs No. 15 and No. 20 are seen
-in the appended tables, while the accompanying photographs testify
-clearly to the general good condition of the animals up to the end of
-the experiments. In No. 20 particularly, the great gain in body-weight
-is to be noted, even though the fuel value of the food was reduced as
-low as 64 calories per kilo, with the nitrogen intake at 0.28 gram per
-kilo daily. Plainly, the day’s food could have been diminished still
-more, with perfect safety to both body and nitrogen equilibrium.
-
-
-SUBJECT No. 15. DAILY AVERAGES
-
- +---------------+-------+-----------------------+-----------------------+------+
- | | | Food. | Output. | |
- | | +------+-------+--------+-------+-------+-------+ |
- | | Body- | |Nitro- | Fuel | Nitro-| Nitro-| Nitro-|Nitro-|
- | Date. |weight.|Total |gen per| Value | gen | gen | gen | gen |
- | | |Nitro-| Kilo |per Kilo|through|through|through| Bal- |
- | | | gen. | Body- | Body- | Kid- |Excre- | Hair. | ance |
- | | | |weight.| weight.| neys. | ment. | |+ or -|
- +---------------+-------+------+-------+--------+-------+-------+-------+------+
- | 1905 | kilos | grams| gram |calories| grams | gram | gram | gram |
- |Nov. 5-Nov. 14| 9.2 | 3.35 | 0.36 | 82.0 | 2.95 | 0.11 | 0.14 |+0.15 |
- |Dec. 19-Dec. 28| 8.9 | 2.61 | 0.30 | 75.0 | 2.47 | 0.12 | 0.12 |-0.10 |
- | 1906 | | | | | | | | |
- |Jan. 16-Jan. 25| 8.7 | 2.60 | 0.30 | 79.9 | 2.15 | 0.21 | 0.16 |+0.08 |
- |Feb. 13-Feb. 16| 8.5 | 2.61 | 0.30 | 82.0 | 2.37 | 0.20 | 0.15 |-0.11 |
- |Mar. 13-Mar. 22| 8.7 | 2.82 | 0.32 | 80.0 | 2.68 | 0.17 | 0.19 |-0.22 |
- |Apr. 10-Apr. 19| 9.0 | 2.80 | 0.31 | 82.0 | 2.14 | 0.26 | 0.09 |+0.31 |
- |May 8-May 17| 9.5 | 2.83 | 0.30 | 75.0 | 2.26 | 0.30 | 0.12 |+0.15 |
- |June 5-June 14| 10.2 | 2.81 | 0.27 | 70.0 | 2.26 | 0.28 | 0.24 |+0.03 |
- +---------------+-------+------+-------+--------+-------+-------+-------+------+
-
-[Illustration: _Subject No. 15._ _January 2, 1906_]
-
-[Illustration: _Subject No. 15._ _February 27, 1906_]
-
-[Illustration: _Subject No. 15._ _April 24, 1906_]
-
-[Illustration: _Subject No. 15._ _June 19, 1906_]
-
-
-SUBJECT No. 20. DAILY AVERAGES
-
- +---------------+-------+-----------------------+-----------------------+------+
- | | | Food. | Output. | |
- | | +------+-------+--------+-------+-------+-------+ |
- | | Body- | |Nitro- | Fuel | Nitro-| Nitro-| Nitro-|Nitro-|
- | Date. |weight.|Total |gen per| Value | gen | gen | gen | gen |
- | | |Nitro-| Kilo |per Kilo|through|through|through| Bal- |
- | | | gen. | Body- | Body- | Kid- |Excre- | Hair. | ance |
- | | | |weight.| weight.| neys. | ment. | |+ or -|
- +---------------+-------+------+-------+--------+-------+-------+-------+------+
- | 1905 | kilos | grams| gram |calories| grams | gram | gram | gram |
- |Dec. 6-Dec. 15 | 15.9 | 8.35 | 0.52 | 82.0 | 6.03 | 0.74 | 0.38 |+1.20 |
- | 1906 | | | | | | | | |
- |Jan. 16-Jan. 25| 16.4 | 4.47 | 0.27 | 73.0 | 3.61 | 0.55 | 0.15 |+0.16 |
- |Feb. 13-Feb. 22| 17.2 | 4.45 | 0.25 | 72.0 | 3.92 | 0.36 | 0.13 |+0.04 |
- |Mar. 13-Mar. 22| 17.4 | 5.00 | 0.28 | 72.0 | 5.49 | 0.33 | 0.10 |-0.92 |
- |Apr. 10-Apr. 19| 18.4 | 5.60 | 0.30 | 69.0 | 4.88 | 0.52 | 0.18 |+0.02 |
- |May 8-May 17 | 19.6 | 5.58 | 0.28 | 69.0 | 3.85 | 0.75 | 0.38 |+0.60 |
- |June 5-June 14 | 19.7 | 5.59 | 0.28 | 64.0 | 4.69 | 0.45 | 0.40 |+0.05 |
- +---------------+-------+------+-------+--------+-------+-------+-------+------+
-
-[Illustration: _Subject No. 20._ _January 2, 1906_]
-
-[Illustration: _Subject No. 20._ _February 27, 1906_]
-
-[Illustration: _Subject No. 20._ _April 24, 1906_]
-
-[Illustration: _Subject No. 20._ _June 19, 1906_]
-
-The illustrations so far presented, with the general agreement in the
-character of the results, might perhaps be interpreted as indicating
-that there is no difficulty whatever in bringing a high proteid
-consumer, like a dog, down to a low level of proteid consumption.
-This, however, would be a false impression. Much depends upon the
-character of the proteid food, at least where any attempt at rapid
-change is made, for a certain modicum of meat or other animal food
-seems a necessary part of the daily diet if health and strength are
-to be maintained. A dog transferred suddenly from a daily ration in
-which meat and milk are conspicuous elements to a diet in which these
-are wholly wanting is very liable to show disturbing symptoms almost
-immediately. One case may be cited in illustration of these statements.
-On September 29, 1905, dog No. 17, weighing 18.2 kilos, was placed on
-a daily diet composed of 70 grams of fresh meat, 442 grams of milk,
-300 grams of bread, and 28 grams of lard. This ration contained 9.06
-grams of nitrogen and had a fuel value of 1465 calories, or 0.5 gram
-of nitrogen and 80 calories per kilogram of body-weight. On October
-11, the animal weighed 18.6 kilograms and was in perfect condition. On
-the 13th, the meat was reduced to 34 grams per day, but the milk was
-increased in amount so as to maintain the same nitrogen intake and fuel
-value as before. This diet was continued until November 3, a balance
-experiment covering ten days from October 22 to the 31 inclusive,
-showing that the animal was laying by a little nitrogen. On November
-3, the diet was changed to milk, bread, and lard, the fuel value being
-maintained at 80 calories per kilo daily, while the nitrogen intake
-was reduced to 0.30 gram per kilo. On this diet, the animal seemed to
-thrive perfectly, and at the end of two weeks showed a body-weight of
-18.2 kilograms. November 19, the milk was withdrawn, the bread being
-increased so as to keep the daily nitrogen intake and the fuel value
-unchanged. The day’s food was now composed of bread and lard solely,
-but, as just stated, the nitrogen and fuel values were unaltered. In
-four days’ time, however, a change began to creep over the animal; the
-appetite diminished, and there was apparent a condition of lassitude
-and general weakness which deterred the animal from moving about as
-usual.
-
-During the next week the animal grew steadily worse, and would eat
-only when coaxed with a little milk or with bread softened with milk,
-the diet of bread and lard being invariably refused. There was marked
-disturbance of the gastro-intestinal tract; bloody discharges were
-frequent; the mucous membrane of the mouth was greatly inflamed and
-very sore; body-weight fell off, and the animal was in a very enfeebled
-condition. This continued until December 4, with every indication that
-the animal would not long survive, but by feeding carefully with a
-little milk and occasionally some meat, improvement finally manifested
-itself, and by December 18 there was good appetite, provided bread was
-not conspicuous in the food. Body-weight, which had fallen to 15.5
-kilos, was being slowly regained, and on December 30 the animal was
-again placed on a weighed diet, consisting of 70 grams of meat, 442
-grams of milk, 210 grams of cracker dust, and 10 grams of lard. This
-diet contained 8.26 grams of nitrogen and had a fuel value of 1330
-calories, equivalent to 0.5 gram nitrogen and 80 calories per kilogram
-of body-weight. On January 12, 1906, the weight of the animal was 16.7
-kilos, while in general condition there was nothing to be desired. The
-food was then modified by diminishing the amounts of meat and milk fed
-daily by one-half, thus reducing the nitrogen intake to 0.35 gram per
-kilo of body-weight, but maintaining the fuel value of the food at 80
-calories per kilo. Under this régime, body-weight still increased,
-and on January 27 was 17.5 kilograms. A balance period, shown in the
-accompanying table, extending from January 30 to February 8, affords
-ample evidence that the body was laying by nitrogen.
-
-
-SUBJECT No. 17. DAILY AVERAGES
-
- +---------------+-------+-----------------------+-----------------------+------+
- | | | Food. | Output. | |
- | | +------+-------+--------+-------+-------+-------+ |
- | | Body- | |Nitro- | Fuel | Nitro-| Nitro-| Nitro-|Nitro-|
- | Date. |weight.|Total |gen per| Value | gen | gen | gen | gen |
- | | |Nitro-| Kilo |per Kilo|through|through|through| Bal- |
- | | | gen. | Body- | Body- | Kid- |Excre- | Hair. | ance |
- | | | |weight.| weight.| neys. | ment. | |+ or -|
- +---------------+-------+------+-------+--------+-------+-------+-------+------+
- | 1905 | kilos | grams| gram |calories| grams | gram | gram | gram |
- |Oct. 22-Oct. 31| 18.3 | 9.06 | 0.49 | 80.0 | 7.73 | 0.66 | 0.28 |+0.39 |
- | 1906 | | | | | | | | |
- |Jan. 30-Feb. 8 | 17.6 | 5.77 | 0.33 | 78.0 | 4.12 | 0.44 | 0.21 |+1.00 |
- |Feb. 27-Mar. 8 | 17.9 | 5.31 | 0.30 | 72.0 | 4.59 | 0.59 | 0.37 |-0.24 |
- |Mar. 27-Apr. 5 | 18.1 | 5.33 | 0.29 | 70.0 | 5.63 | 0.89 | 0.27 |-1.52 |
- |Apr. 24-May 3 | 18.4 | 5.90 | 0.32 | 68.0 | 5.06 | 0.49 | 0.30 |+0.05 |
- |May 22-May 31 | 18.6 | 5.90 | 0.31 | 67.0 | 5.25 | 0.53 | 0.43 |-0.31 |
- |June 17-June 26| 19.9 | 5.89 | 0.29 | 70.0 | 4.29 | 0.39 | 0.28 |+0.93 |
- +---------------+-------+------+-------+--------+-------+-------+-------+------+
-
-In all of the subsequent months, a small amount of meat was a part of
-the daily food, but as is seen from the table of balance periods, the
-total nitrogen intake and the fuel value of the food were reduced to
-even lower levels per kilogram of body-weight. Yet the animal gained
-steadily, until at the latter part of June the weight was considerably
-above that noted at the commencement of the experiment in the preceding
-October. Further, the animal was in nitrogen equilibrium or even
-gaining nitrogen, and in perfect condition of health and vigor, as
-is indicated by the accompanying photographs taken at the different
-periods stated. Especially to be emphasized is the fact that during the
-last six months of the experiment, the daily intake of nitrogen and the
-fuel value of the food were as low or even lower than in November, when
-the daily diet was limited to bread and lard. The disastrous result
-which showed itself at once on this latter diet, with all animal food
-excluded, was not due to low proteid or to deficiency in fuel value,
-but simply to the fact that the animal for some reason could not
-adjust itself to a simple dietary of bread and fat, although there was
-ample available nitrogen and fuel value for the body’s needs. Something
-was lacking, which meat or milk could supply, and this something was
-indispensable for the maintenance of the normal nutritional rhythm.
-
-[Illustration: _Subject No. 17._ _January 2, 1906_]
-
-[Illustration: _Subject No. 17._ _February 27, 1906_]
-
-[Illustration: _Subject No. 17._ _April 24, 1906_]
-
-[Illustration: _Subject No. 17._ _June 27, 1906_]
-
-This is by no means an exceptional case, but we can cite many other
-examples of like results where the animal when restricted to a purely
-vegetable diet, such as bread, pea-soup, bean soup, etc., reinforced by
-an animal fat, quickly passed from a condition of health into a state
-of utter wretchedness, with serious gastro-intestinal disturbance.
-The results are not to be attributed to the lower utilization of the
-vegetable food, for the disastrous effect is too quickly manifest, and
-further, often shows itself when the animal plainly has a large store
-of available nutriment in its own tissues.
-
-This experiment with dog No. 17 has been dwelt upon at some length,
-because it illustrates a very important principle in the nutrition
-of a high proteid and carnivorous animal. As before stated, it is
-not a question of high or low proteid simply, but involves possibly
-the more subtle question of the relative value of specific forms of
-proteid food. It will be noted that this statement is made somewhat
-guardedly, in harmony with the caution necessarily called for in view
-of our lack of knowledge regarding the possible need of the animal’s
-body for extraneous principles which only meat, milk, or other animal
-products can supply. Inorganic salts, nitrogenous extractives, and
-other substances without any appreciable fuel value, are quite likely
-to be of primary importance in controlling and regulating the various
-processes of the body, which combine to maintain the condition of
-normal nutrition. With a diet restricted to one or two vegetable
-products, it is quite conceivable that something may be lacking
-which the system demands, though it cannot be measured in terms of
-nitrogen or calories. It may be said that man thrives on a purely
-vegetable diet, but while this is unquestionably true, it must be
-remembered that man with his free choice of food has recourse, as a
-rule, to a large variety of vegetable products from many sources,
-and consequently there is great likelihood of his absorbing from
-these varied products such supplementary matters as may be needed. On
-this question, we are in a realm of doubt and uncertainty, but the
-possibilities suggested must not be ignored, for they may contain a
-germ of truth of the utmost importance. The fact remains, however, that
-a dog when restricted to a purely vegetable dietary does not thrive; a
-little animal food seems necessary to keep up health and strength, and
-this suffices even though the daily nitrogen intake and fuel value of
-the food are restricted to a level below that of the vegetable dietary.
-
-With these facts before us, it is difficult to avoid the conclusion
-that some significance may attach to the specific nature of the
-proteid. Of course, we must not overlook the radical difference in
-dietary habits of man and dog. Man as an omnivorous creature has for
-generations been accustomed to partake largely of vegetable foods,
-and as a result his digestive tract and his system as a whole has
-become acclimated, as it were, to the nutritive effects of vegetable
-matter. Dogs, on the other hand, are typical carnivores, and their
-habits for generations have led in an opposite direction, so that their
-gastro-intestinal tracts and their systems have become accustomed
-to the effects of a diet in which animal food largely predominates.
-Whether these deeply ingrained characteristics are responsible in
-any large measure for the difference in behavior of man, on a purely
-vegetable diet, and dogs is open to question. It would certainly not be
-strange if such were the case, but as we look at the facts collected in
-our study of this subject, it is somewhat impressive to note how well
-dogs thrive on a relatively large amount of vegetable food, provided
-there is a modicum of animal food added thereto. In other words,
-these high proteid consumers are apparently quite able to utilize the
-vegetable foods, but there is something lacking in such a dietary
-which the body has great need of. Is it not quite possible, as already
-suggested, that the specific nature of the proteid counts for something
-in nutrition? The question cannot be answered definitely at present,
-but there are certain facts slowly accumulating which make the question
-a pertinent one in this connection.
-
-Thus, it is becoming evident, as was pointed out in an earlier chapter,
-that the many proteid substances occurring in the animal and vegetable
-kingdoms are more or less unlike each other in their chemical make-up.
-They yield different decomposition products, or the same products
-in widely different proportion, when broken down by the action of
-hydrolyzing agents; and when we recall that the digestive enzymes of
-the body convert the proteids of the food into these same end-products,
-it is plain that in the assimilation and utilization of the proteid
-foodstuffs the body has to deal with these various chemical units.
-Hence, an animal suddenly restricted to a dietary in which all of the
-proteid is furnished by bread might be seriously incommoded, either by
-the excess of certain amino-acids resulting therefrom, or by a lack
-of certain other end-products to which its body is accustomed. As an
-example, we may take the three typical proteids of the wheat kernel,
-gliadin, glutenin, and leucosin, and note the very striking difference
-in the proportion of certain of the decomposition products of each, as
-reported by Osborne and Clapp.[74]
-
- [74] See Osborne and Clapp: The Chemistry of the Protein Bodies of
- the Wheat Kernel. American Journal of Physiology, vol. 17, p. 231.
-
- +-----------------+-------------+-------------+-------------+
- | | | | |
- | | Gliadin. | Glutenin. | Leucosin. |
- | | | | |
- +-----------------+-------------+-------------+-------------+
- | | per cent | per cent | per cent |
- | Leucin | 5.61 | 5.95 | 11.34 |
- | Lysin | 0 | 1.92 | 2.75 |
- | Arginin | 3.16 | 4.72 | 5.94 |
- | Glutaminic acid | 37.33 | 23.42 | 6.73 |
- | Ammonia | 5.11 | 4.01 | 1.41 |
- | Aspartic acid | 0.58 | 0.91 | 3.35 |
- | Tyrosin | 1.20 | 4.25 | 3.34 |
- +-----------------+-------------+-------------+-------------+
-
-It is obvious from these figures that the three proteids of the wheat
-kernel are radically different from each other. Contrast, for example,
-the content of glutaminic acid in gliadin with the amount in leucosin.
-With such striking differences in chemical make-up, it is reasonable
-to assume that corresponding differences in physiological action or
-food values may exist. Further, “in respect to the amount of these
-amino-acids, leucosin more nearly resembles the animal proteins than
-the seed proteins thus far examined, and in this connection it is
-interesting to note that leucosin occurs chiefly if not wholly in the
-embryo of this seed and is probably one of its ‘tissue’ proteins, in
-contrast to the ‘reserve’ proteins of the endosperm of which gliadin
-and glutenin form the chief part” (Osborne and Clapp). In other words,
-animal proteids, such as those of meat, are characterized like leucosin
-by a small content of glutaminic acid and ammonia; while leucin, lysin,
-aspartic acid, and arginin are relatively more abundant. Until we know
-more on this subject, however, any broad generalization would be out
-of place, but certainly there is justification for the supposition
-that in these differences in chemical constitution are to be found
-explanation of some of the peculiarities common to certain varieties of
-proteid food. Wheat flour, aside from its starch, is composed mainly
-of glutenin and gliadin with their large content of glutaminic acid.
-Meat proteids, on the other hand, like leucosin, contain only a small
-fraction of this acid, and, with the other differences indicated,
-meat proteid and wheat proteid as food for dogs or other high proteid
-consumers may reasonably be expected to have at the least very unequal
-values. And if we go a step beyond this and suppose that in the
-formation of true tissue proteid or the living protoplasm of the cell,
-certain of these end-products of proteid decomposition are absolutely
-indispensable, we can easily picture for ourselves a dearth of such
-building stones in the long-continued use of a diet which lacks that
-particular proteid from which the necessary building stones can be
-split off in adequate number.
-
-It has been said, notably by Munk, that in dogs fed for some time on
-a low proteid diet there is a diminished power of absorption from the
-intestinal tract, associated with weakened digestion. If it is true
-that a lowered proteid intake results in a diminished utilization of
-the ingested food, that efficiency in the digestion and absorption of
-foodstuffs is impaired, it can only be interpreted as meaning that
-some injurious influence has been exerted on the epithelial cells of
-the intestine or the adjacent gland cells. We have, however, failed
-to find any evidence of deleterious action in the dogs that we have
-experimented with, where due regard was paid to maintaining a diet
-suitable for the physiological needs of the body. In the experiments
-that we have cited, both nitrogen intake and the fuel value of the food
-per day were lower than in Munk’s experiments, but the utilization of
-fat and proteid was not sensibly affected. The following tables give
-the results with ten dogs (including the six dogs already described)
-for lengths of time ranging from seven to twelve months, the periods
-indicated being each of ten days’ duration and occurring once each
-month. In the first table, the utilization of fat is shown, the
-figures given being based on determinations of the amount of fat
-contained in the excrement. Knowing the amount of fat in the daily
-food and the amount which passed through the intestine, it is easy to
-calculate the percentage of fat utilized.
-
-
-UTILIZATION OF FAT IN PERCENTAGES.
-
- +----------+-------------------------------------------------+
- | | Dogs. |
- | Periods. +----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+
- | | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 12 | 13 | 15 | 17 | 20 |
- +----------+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+
- | 1 | 97 | 96 | 93 | 97 | 97 | 96 | 96 | 98 | 98 | 95 |
- | 2 | 96 | 96 | 98 | 98 | 98 | 94 | 95 | 97 | 98 | 95 |
- | 3 | 98 | 97 | 97 | 99 | 96 | 97 | 97 | 98 | 94 | 98 |
- | 4 | 98 | 96 | 97 | 97 | 96 | 94 | 95 | 98 | 97 | 97 |
- | 5 | 96 | .. | 94 | 98 | 97 | 95 | 95 | 98 | 97 | 96 |
- | 6 | 97 | 98 | 94 | 98 | 97 | 96 | 94 | 97 | 96 | 97 |
- | 7 | 97 | 98 | 98 | 97 | 96 | 93 | 95 | 97 | 98 | 96 |
- | 8 | .. | .. | 98 | 96 | 96 | 96 | 93 | 97 | .. | .. |
- | 9 | .. | .. | 98 | 97 | 98 | .. | 97 | 98 | .. | .. |
- | 10 | .. | .. | 98 | 97 | 98 | .. | .. | .. | .. | .. |
- | 11 | .. | .. | 97 | 92 | 97 | .. | .. | .. | .. | .. |
- | 12 | .. | .. | 97 | 97 | .. | .. | .. | .. | .. | .. |
- +----------+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+
-
-It is perfectly plain from these results that there was no falling off
-in the utilization of fat; the percentage amount digested and absorbed,
-as in dogs 3 and 4, was just as large at the end of the twelve months’
-experiment as at the beginning. Clearly, a so-called low nitrogen
-intake with dogs does not lead to any loss of power in the utilization
-of the fat of the food. This being so, it is equally clear that the
-arguments based on Munk’s results in this direction, and applied to
-man, are without adequate foundation.
-
-
-UTILIZATION OF NITROGEN IN PERCENTAGES.
-
- +----------+-------------------------------------------------+
- | | Dogs. |
- | Periods. +----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+
- | | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 12 | 13 | 15 | 17 | 20 |
- +----------+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+
- | 1 | 95 | 91 | 92 | 94 | 91 | 91 | 90 | 93 | 92 | 91 |
- | 2 | 92 | 94 | 94 | 95 | 93 | 90 | 92 | 96 | 92 | 87 |
- | 3 | 91 | 92 | 90 | 91 | 88 | 89 | 86 | 95 | 89 | 91 |
- | 4 | 90 | 85 | 90 | 92 | 91 | 82 | 83 | 91 | 83 | 93 |
- | 5 | 90 | 82 | 88 | 92 | 86 | 85 | 84 | 96 | 91 | 90 |
- | 6 | 86 | 87 | 89 | 83 | 86 | 89 | 87 | 94 | 91 | 86 |
- | 7 | 87 | 87 | 90 | 83 | 87 | 83 | 88 | 90 | 93 | 91 |
- | 8 | .. | .. | 90 | 83 | 84 | 81 | 89 | 89 | .. | .. |
- | 9 | .. | .. | 89 | 87 | 92 | .. | 87 | 89 | .. | .. |
- | 10 | .. | .. | 93 | 85 | 94 | .. | .. | .. | .. | .. |
- | 11 | .. | .. | 93 | 81 | 86 | .. | .. | .. | .. | .. |
- | 12 | .. | .. | 89 | 92 | .. | .. | .. | .. | .. | .. |
- +----------+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+
-
-The figures in the above table were obtained by determining the
-amount of nitrogen in the dried excrement from the animals, _i. e._
-the amount that passed through the intestine unchanged;[75] and
-knowing the content of nitrogen in the daily food, the percentage of
-unabsorbed nitrogen was then easily calculated, after which by simple
-subtraction the percentage of utilized nitrogen was found. At first
-glance, it would appear that as the experiments proceeded utilization
-of nitrogen was less complete. In a sense, this was true, but it was
-not connected with any impairment of the digestive or absorptive
-powers of the intestine. It must be remembered that in the earlier
-periods a larger proportion of the ingested nitrogen was in the form of
-readily digestible meat, but as the latter was reduced in amount larger
-proportions of vegetable food were introduced in order to maintain the
-desired fuel value, and consequently the percentage of non-absorbable
-nitrogen was increased. The well-known difference in the availability
-of animal and vegetable proteid has already been referred to in other
-connections; a difference due not so much to any inherent quality in
-the digestibility of the two forms of proteid as to the presence of
-cellulose and other material in the vegetable food which retards in
-some measure the action of the digestive juices. To this cause must
-be ascribed the slight falling off in the utilization of nitrogen
-noticeable in most of the experiments. If, however, the figures are
-compared with those usually obtained on a diet largely vegetable in
-nature, it will be seen that the utilization of nitrogen by these dogs
-was in no sense abnormal.
-
- [75] There is an unavoidable error here, since the excrement contains
- not only undigested food, but also contains some nitrogenous matter
- derived from the secretions of the intestine, etc.
-
-These experiments on the influence of a low proteid diet on dogs, as
-a type of high proteid consumers, taken in their entirety, afford
-convincing proof that such animals can live and thrive on amounts of
-proteid and non-nitrogenous food far below the standards set by Munk
-and Rosenheim. The deleterious results reported by these investigators
-were not due to the effects of low proteid or to diminished consumption
-of non-nitrogenous foods, but are to be ascribed mainly to non-hygienic
-conditions, or to a lack of care and physiological good sense in the
-prescription of a narrow dietary not suited to the habits and needs
-of this class of animals. Further, it is obvious that the more or
-less broad deductions so frequently drawn from the experiments of
-Munk and Rosenheim, especially in their application to mankind, are
-entirely unwarranted and without foundation in fact. Our experiments
-offer satisfying proof that not only can dogs live on quantities
-of proteid food per day smaller than these investigators deemed
-necessary, and with a fuel value far below the standard adopted by
-them; but, in addition, that these animals are quite able on such a
-diet to gain in body-weight and to lay by nitrogen, thereby indicating
-that even smaller quantities of food might suffice to meet their true
-physiological requirements.
-
-The results of these experiments with dogs, which we have recorded in
-such detail, are in perfect harmony with the conclusions arrived at by
-our experiments and observations with man, and serve to strengthen the
-opinion, so many times expressed, that the dietary habits of mankind
-and the dietary standards based thereon are not always in accord with
-the true physiological requirements of the body. If these views are
-correct, and the facts presented seemingly indicate that they are,
-it is time for enlightened people to give heed to such suggestions,
-that their lives may be ordered more nearly in accord with the best
-interests of the body. Physiological economy in nutrition is not a
-myth, but a reality full of promise for the welfare of the individual
-and of the community in general. Ignorance on dietary matters should
-give place to an intelligent comprehension of the body’s needs, and an
-adequate understanding of how best to meet the legitimate demands of
-the system for nourishment under given conditions of life. It is said
-that more than half the earnings of the working people of this country
-is spent for food. Here, we have suggested another form of economy as
-worthy of consideration; less important perhaps than that which relates
-to health and strength, but still calling for thoughtful attention. We
-cannot afford to be ignorant of these things; we must have definite
-knowledge of the actual facts, and these can only be obtained by
-careful research and investigation.
-
-As a prominent writer on nutrition has well said, “The health and
-strength of all are intimately dependent upon their diet. Yet most
-people understand very little about what their food contains, how it
-nourishes them, whether they are economical or wasteful in buying and
-preparing it for use, and whether or not the food they eat is rightly
-fitted to the demands of their bodies. The result of this ignorance is
-great waste in the purchase and use of food, loss of money, and injury
-to health” (Atwater). We all recognize the general force and truth of
-this statement, but there is a surprising lack of appreciation of the
-full significance of what is involved thereby. If it is true that the
-demands of the body for proteid food--which of all foods is the most
-expensive--are fully met by an amount equal to one-half that ordinarily
-consumed, and that health and strength are more satisfactorily
-maintained thereby, it is easy to see how the acquisition of dietary
-habits leading to consumption of food in harmony with physiological
-needs will result in a fruitful twofold economy; viz., economy in
-expenditure, and of still greater moment, economy in the activities of
-the body by which food and its waste products are cared for.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII
-
-PRACTICAL APPLICATIONS WITH SOME ADDITIONAL DATA
-
- TOPICS: Proper application of the results of scientific research
- helpful to mankind. Dietary habits should be brought into conformity
- with the true needs of the body. The peculiar position of proteid
- foods emphasized. The evil effects of overeating. What the new
- dietary standards really involve. The actual amounts of foodstuffs
- required. Relation of nutritive value to cost of foods. The
- advantages of simplicity in diet. A sample dietary for a man of
- 70 kilograms body-weight. A new method of indicating food values.
- Moderation in the daily dietary leads toward vegetable foods. The
- experiments of Dr. Neumann. The value of fruits as food. The merits
- of animal and vegetable proteids considered in relation to the
- bacterial processes in the intestine. A notable case of simplicity
- in diet. Intelligent modification of diet to the temporary needs of
- the body. Diet in summer and winter contrasted. Value of greater
- protection to the kidneys. Conclusion.
-
-
-Knowledge has value in proportion to the benefit it confers, directly
-or indirectly, on the human race. Every new scientific fact or
-principle brought to light promises help in the understanding of
-Nature’s laws, and when rightly interpreted and properly applied is
-sure to aid in the advancement and prosperity of the individual and of
-the community. Proper methods of living, economical adjustment of the
-intake to the varying needs of the body, avoidance of excessive waste
-of foodstuffs and of energy, are all desirable precepts, which rational
-people presumably are inclined to follow so far as their knowledge and
-understanding of the subject will permit. Here, as elsewhere, false
-teaching may be exceedingly mischievous and lead to costly errors;
-while blind reliance upon customs, instinct, and superstitions is
-hardly in keeping with twentieth-century progress.
-
-Modern scientific methods should give us help in dietetics, as in
-other branches of hygiene and practical medicine. A few short years
-ago, diphtheria was a scourge which brought misery to many a home,
-for there was at hand no adequate means of combating the disease; but
-scientific research has given us new light, and placed at our command a
-weapon of inestimable value. Do we hesitate to use it when the occasion
-arises, because it happens to be out of keeping with old-time customs
-and traditions? No, we recognize the possibility of help, and as the
-need is urgent we turn to it quickly, with hope and thankfulness that
-scientific progress has opened up a pathway of escape from a threatened
-calamity.
-
-Not many years ago we drank freely of such water as was at hand,
-without realization of danger from bacteria or disease germs, looking
-on epidemics of typhoid fever perhaps as a visitation of Divine
-Providence, in punishment of our many sins and to be borne meekly and
-with resignation. But all this has changed through the researches of
-bacteriologists and chemists; scientific facts of the utmost importance
-have been clearly established; a classification of water-borne
-diseases has been adopted, and we realize fully that diseases of this
-order can be kept from our doors by proper precautions applied to
-our water supply. To-day, epidemics of typhoid fever are traceable
-solely to the ignorance or carelessness of the individual or of the
-commonwealth, and the exemption which we of the present generation
-have from this class of diseases is directly due to the application of
-precautionary measures based on the information furnished by scientific
-investigation. It is proper for us to use caution in the acceptance of
-new ideas, but not that form of caution which refuses change on the
-ground that what has been is sufficiently good for the present and the
-future. The point of view is ever changing with advance of knowledge,
-and it is not profitable to exclude opportunities for improvement
-in personal hygiene and general good health, any more than in other
-matters that affect the prosperity of the individual or the community.
-
-Dietary habits should be brought into conformity with the true needs of
-the body. Excessive consumption of proteid food, especially, should be
-avoided on the ground that it is not only unnecessary and wasteful, but
-is liable to bring penalties of its own, most undesirable and wholly
-uncalled for. We may, perhaps, accept these statements at their full
-value, and yet have a shadow of doubt in our minds as to whether, after
-all, dietary customs do not harmonize sufficiently at least with true
-nutritive requirements. All the data that we have presented in the
-preceding chapters, however, have seemingly given a positive answer to
-such doubts, and indicate quite clearly that the results of scientific
-study are opposed to the prevailing dietary standards, especially
-as regards proteid food. As the celebrated physiologist Bunge has
-expressed it, “The necessity for a daily consumption of 100 grams of
-proteid is incomprehensible, so long as we do not know of any function
-of the body in the performance of which the chemical potential energies
-of the destroyed proteid are used up.”
-
-Perfectly trustworthy evidence is at hand showing that the needs of
-the body for potential energy can be fully met, and indeed are more
-advantageously met, by the non-nitrogenous foods, carbohydrates and
-fats. The energy of muscle work, as we have seen, comes preferably
-from the breaking down of non-nitrogenous material, so that there is
-no special call for proteid in connection with increased muscular
-activity. In fact, it would appear that the need for proteid food
-by man is limited to the requirements of growth and development,
-reinforced by the amount called for in that form of tissue exchange
-which we have emphasized under the term “endogenous proteid
-metabolism,” or true tissue metabolism. To be sure, there must be a
-certain reserve of proteid, available in case of emergency, but this is
-easily established without resorting to excessive feeding.
-
-The peculiar position which proteid foods occupy in man’s dietary
-naturally make them the central figure, around which the other foods
-are grouped. No other form of food can take the place of proteid; a
-certain amount is needed each day to make good the loss of tissue
-material broken down in endogenous katabolism, and consequently our
-choice and combination of the varied articles of diet made use of
-should be regulated by the amount of proteid they contain. But while
-proteid foods occupy this commanding position, it is not necessary
-or desirable that they should exceed the other foodstuffs in amount,
-or indeed approach them in quantity. We must be ever mindful of
-the fact, so many times expressed, that proteid does not undergo
-complete oxidation in the body to simple gaseous products like the
-non-nitrogenous foods, but that there is left behind a residue of
-non-combustible matter--solid oxidation products--which are not
-so easily disposed of. In the forceful language of another, “The
-combustion of proteid within the organism yields a solid ash which must
-be raked down by the liver and thrown out by the kidneys. Now when
-this task gets to be over-laborious, the laborers are likely to go on
-strike. The grate, then, is not properly raked; clinkers form, and
-slowly the smothered fire glows dull and dies” (Curtis).
-
-Even though no such dire fate overtakes one, the penalties of excessive
-proteid consumption are found in many ills, for which perhaps the
-victim seeks in vain a logical explanation; gastro-intestinal
-disturbance, indigestion, intestinal toxæmia, liver troubles, bilious
-attacks, gout, rheumatism, to say nothing of many other ailments,
-some more and some less serious, are associated with the habitual
-overeating of proteid food. But excessive food consumption is by no
-means confined to the proteid foodstuffs; general overfeeding is a
-widespread evil, the marks of which are to be detected on all sides,
-and in no uncertain fashion. One of the most common signs of excessive
-food consumption is the tendency toward obesity, a condition which
-is distinctly undesirable and may prove decidedly injurious. Undue
-accumulation of fat is not only a mechanical obstacle to the proper
-activity of the body as a whole, but it interferes with the freedom
-of movement of such muscular organs as the heart and stomach, thereby
-interposing obstacles to the normal action of these structures.
-Further, whenever undue fat formation is going on in the body, there is
-the ever present danger that the lifeless fat may replace the living
-protoplasm of the tissue cells and so give rise to a condition known as
-“fatty degeneration.” While a superabundance of fat in the body is a
-sure telltale of overeating, the absence of obesity is by no means an
-indication that excess of food is being avoided. There is here, in man
-as in animal kind, much idiosyncrasy; some persons, especially those
-endowed with a long and large frame, tend to keep thin even though
-they eat excessively, while others grow fat much more readily. As a
-well-known physician has expressed it, “In the one case, the subject
-burns, instantly and mercilessly, every stick of fuel delivered at his
-door, whether or not he needs the resulting hot fire roaring within,
-while the other, miser-like, hoards the rest in vast piles, filling the
-house from cellar to garret.”
-
-Temperance in diet, like temperance in other matters, leads to good
-results, and our physiological evidence points out plainly, like
-a signpost all can read, that there is no demand on the part of
-the body for such quantities of food as custom and habit call for.
-Healthfulness and longevity are the prizes awarded for the successful
-pursuance of a temperate life, modelled in conformity with Nature’s
-laws. Intemperance, on the other hand, in diet as in other matters,
-is equally liable to be followed by disaster. A physician of many
-years’ experience, with opportunities for observation among different
-classes of people, has written, “that overeating tends to shrink the
-span of life in proportion as it expands the liver is demonstrable
-both directly and indirectly. Let any actuary of life-insurance be
-asked his experience with heavy-weight risks, where the waist measures
-more than the chest, and the long-drawn face of the businessman, at
-memory of lost dollars, will make answer without need of words. Then
-let be noted the physique of the blessed ones that attain to green old
-age, and, in nine cases out of ten, spry old boys--no disparagement,
-but all honor in the phrase--will be found to be modelled after the
-type of octogenarian Bryant or nonogenarian Bancroft--the whitefaced,
-wiry, and spare, as contrasted with the red-faced, the pursy, and the
-stout. It is true, as has already been mentioned, that in old age
-much of an adventitious obesity is absorbed and disappears, but the
-Bryant-Bancroft type is that of a subject who never has been fat at
-all. And just such is preëminently the type that rides easily past the
-fourscore mark, reins well in hand, and good for many another lap in
-the race of life.”[76]
-
- [76] Edward Curtis, M.D.: Nature and Health, p. 70. Henry Holt &
- Company, New York, 1906.
-
-With these thoughts before us, we may consider briefly just what is
-involved in these new dietary standards that aim to conform more
-closely with actual body needs. Referring at first to proteid food, it
-may be wise to again emphasize the fact that the weight of the body,
-_i. e._, the weight of the proteid-containing tissues, as contrasted
-with excessive fat accumulation, is one of the important factors not to
-be overlooked when determining the dietary needs of a given individual.
-As must be perfectly clear, from all that has been said, the man of
-170 pounds’ body-weight has more proteid tissue to nourish than the
-man of 130 pounds’ weight, and consequently what will satisfy the
-requirements of the latter individual will not suffice for the former.
-We must understand distinctly that no general statement can be made
-applicable to mankind at large, but due consideration must be given to
-the size and weight of the individual structure. We have found that
-the average need for proteid food by adults is fully met by a daily
-metabolism equal to an exchange of 0.12 gram of nitrogen per kilogram
-of body-weight. This means a katabolism of three-fourths of a gram of
-proteid matter daily, per kilogram.
-
-Remembering, however, that the intake of proteid food must be somewhat
-in excess of the actual proteid katabolism, since not all of the
-proteid of the food is available, and as this is a variable amount
-depending upon the proportion of animal and vegetable foods with their
-different degrees of digestibility and availability, we may place the
-required intake of proteid at 0.85 gram per kilogram of body-weight,
-still keeping to maximum figures for safety’s sake. Hence, for a man
-weighing 70 kilograms or 154 pounds, there would be required daily
-59.5 grams--say 60 grams--of proteid food to meet the needs of the
-body. These are perfectly trustworthy figures, with a reasonable margin
-of safety, and carrying perfect assurance of being really more than
-sufficient to meet the true wants of the body; adequate to supply all
-physiological demands for reserve proteid, and able to cope with the
-erratic requirements of personal idiosyncrasies. It will be observed
-that such an intake of proteid food daily is equal to one-half the Voit
-standard for a man of this weight, while it is still further below the
-Atwater standard and far below the common practices of the majority of
-mankind in Europe and America, as indicated by the published dietary
-studies.
-
-It may not be out of place to state at this point that in the writer’s
-opinion the use of the terms “standard diet” and “dietary standards,”
-etc., is objectionable, since such usage seems to demand a certain
-degree of definiteness in the daily diet for which there is no
-justification. As in the use of the term “normal diet,” there is danger
-of misinterpretation, and of the assumption that dietary habits should
-be regulated strictly in accord with certain set principles. This I
-believe to be altogether wrong; there should be, on the contrary,
-full latitude for individual freedom, but freedom governed by an
-intelligence that appreciates the significance of scientific fact
-and is willing to mould custom and habit into accord with them. What
-is needed to-day is not so much an acceptance of the view that man
-requires daily 0.85 gram of proteid per kilogram of body-weight, as a
-full appreciation of the general principle, which our definite figures
-have helped to work out, that the requirements of the body for proteid
-food are far below the customary habits of mankind, and that there is
-both economy and gain in various directions to be derived by following
-the general precepts which this view leads to. In other words, there
-is no advantage, but, on the contrary, much bother and worriment, in
-attempting to follow out in practice the details of our more or less
-exact physiological experiments.
-
-The general teaching which they afford, however, can be adopted and
-put in practice in our daily lives, without striving to follow too
-closely the so-called standards which our experiments have led to.
-Again, the sample dietaries adopted in our experiments have no special
-virtue, aside from the general principle they teach that simple foods
-are quite adequate for the nourishment of the body, and that the amount
-of nitrogen or proteid they contain was sufficient to meet the demands
-of the particular individuals consuming it. Broadening intelligence on
-matters of food composition is called for on all sides, and as this
-is acquired together with due appreciation of the relative nutritive
-values of proteid, fat, and carbohydrate, there is placed at our
-command the power of intelligent discrimination, with the ability
-to apply the principles set forth in our own way, in harmony with
-personal likes and dislikes.
-
-To the majority of us, not very familiar with the percentage
-composition of ordinary food materials, and unaccustomed to the
-weighing of food in grams, the figures given from time to time may
-have failed to convey a very definite impression regarding the actual
-amounts of the various foods made use of. Further, our ideas concerning
-the bulk of many of the common articles of food necessary to furnish
-the 60 grams of proteid required daily by a man of 70 kilograms
-body-weight may be somewhat hazy. The following table, however, will be
-of service in this direction:
-
-
-SIXTY GRAMS OF PROTEID ARE CONTAINED IN
-
- Fuel Value[77]
- One-half pound fresh lean beef, loin 308 calories
- Nine hens’ eggs 720
- Four-fifths pound sweetbread 660
- Three-fourths pound fresh liver 432
- Seven-eighths pound lean smoked bacon 1820
- Three-fourths pound halibut steak 423
- One-half pound salt codfish, boneless 245
- Two-and one-fifth pounds oysters, solid 506
- One-half pound American pale cheese 1027
- Four pounds whole milk (two quarts) 1300
- Five-sixths pound uncooked oatmeal 1550
- One and one-fourth pounds shredded wheat 2125
- One pound uncooked macaroni 1665
- One and one-third pounds white wheat bread 1520
- One and one-fourth pounds crackers 2381
- One and two-thirds pounds flaked rice 2807
- Three-fifths pound dried beans 963
- One and seven-eighths pounds baked beans 1125
- One-half pound dried peas 827
- One and eleven-twelfths pounds potato chips 5128
- Two-thirds pound almonds 2020
- Two-fifths pound pine nuts, pignolias 1138
- One and two-fifths pounds peanuts 3584
- Ten pounds bananas, edible portion 4600
- Ten pounds grapes 4500
- Eleven pounds lettuce 990
- Fifteen pounds prunes 5550
- Thirty-three pounds apples 9570
-
- [77] Fuel value of the quantity needed to furnish the sixty grams of
- proteid.
-
-The figures in this table are instructive in many ways. First, it is
-to be noted that the daily proteid requirement of sixty grams can
-be obtained from one-half pound of lean meat (uncooked), of which
-the loin steak is a type. Subject to some variations in content of
-water, an equivalent weight of lean flesh of any variety, lamb, veal,
-poultry, etc., will furnish approximately the same amount of proteid.
-With fish, such as halibut steak, and with liver, three-quarters of a
-pound are required; while with sweetbreads, four-fifths of a pound are
-needed to furnish the requisite amount of proteid. Of salt codfish,
-one-half pound will provide the same amount of proteid as an equivalent
-weight of fresh beef; while with lean smoked bacon the amount rises
-to seven-eighths of a pound. Among the vegetable products, it is to
-be observed that dried peas and beans, almonds and pine nuts, are as
-rich in proteid as the above-mentioned animal foods, essentially the
-same weights being called for to provide the daily requirement of
-proteid. The same is true of cheese, the variety designated having such
-a composition that one-half pound is the equivalent, so far as the
-content of proteid is concerned, of a like amount of fresh beef. We
-must not be unmindful of the fact previously mentioned, however, that
-there are differences in digestibility among these various foodstuffs
-which tend to lower somewhat the availability of the vegetable
-products, also of the cheese, thereby necessitating a slight increase
-in the amount of these foods required to equal the value to the body of
-lean meat.
-
-Secondly, passing to the other extreme in our list, we find indicated
-types of foods exceedingly poor in proteid, such as the fruits;
-notably, bananas, grapes, prunes, apples, etc., also lettuce, and in
-less degree potatoes. These are the kinds of food that may legitimately
-attract by their palatability, but do not add materially to our intake
-of proteid even when consumed in relatively large amounts. Thirdly, we
-see clearly indicated a radical difference between the animal foods
-and those of vegetable origin, in that with the former the fuel value
-of the quantity necessary to furnish the sixty grams of proteid is
-very small, as compared with a like amount of the average vegetable
-product. One-half pound of lean meat, for example, with its 60 grams of
-proteid, has a fuel value of only 308 calories, while two-thirds of a
-pound of almonds has a fuel value of 2020 calories, and one-half pound
-of dried peas 827 calories. Naturally, this is mainly a question of
-the proportion of fat or oil present. With fat meat, as in bacon, the
-calorific value rises in proportion to increase in the amount of fat,
-the proteid decreasing in greater or less measure.
-
-The main point to be emphasized in this connection, however, is that a
-high proteid animal food, like lean meat, eggs, fish, etc., obviously
-cannot alone serve as an advantageous food for man. We see at once the
-philosophy of a mixed diet. Let us assume that our average man of 70
-kilograms body-weight needs daily 2800 calories. On this assumption,
-if he were to depend entirely upon lean beef for his sustenance, he
-would require daily four and a half pounds of such meat, which amount
-would furnish nine times the quantity of proteid needed by his system.
-The same would be more or less true of other kindred animal products.
-On the other hand, certain vegetable foods on our list, such as flaked
-rice, crackers, and shredded wheat, contain proteid, with carbohydrate
-and fat, in such proportion that the energy requirement would be met
-essentially by the same quantity as served to furnish the necessary
-proteid. Passing to the other extreme among the vegetable products, as
-in potatoes and bananas, for example, we find fuel value predominating
-largely over proteid content. The ideal diet, however, is found in a
-judicious admixture of foodstuffs of both animal and vegetable origin.
-Wheat bread, reinforced by a little butter or fat bacon to add to its
-calorific value, shredded wheat with rich cream, crackers with cheese,
-bread and milk, eggs with bacon, meat with potatoes, etc.; the common,
-every-day household admixtures, provide combinations which can easily
-be made to accord with true physiological requirements. The same may be
-equally true of the more complicated dishes evolved by the high art of
-modern cookery.
-
-Lastly, our table throws light upon certain questions of household
-economy. The cost of foods is regulated mainly not by the value of the
-nutrients contained therein, but by other factors of quite a different
-nature. Relationship between supply and demand naturally counts here
-as in other directions, but our demand is liable to be based not upon
-food values, but rather upon delicacy of flavor, palatability, and
-other kindred fancies, some real and some imaginary. Ordinary crackers
-can be purchased for ten cents a pound, but if we desire a little
-stronger flavor of salt and a special box to hold them, we pay eighteen
-cents a pound. Rolled very thin and thus made more delicate, they cost
-twenty-five cents, while sold under a special name and perhaps tied
-with a blue ribbon they cost thirty-five cents a pound. Their nutritive
-value per pound is the same in all cases, but we pay something for
-the increased labor of preparation and a good deal for the added
-attractiveness to eye and palate. We pay twenty-two cents a pound for
-round steak, thirty-two cents for loin steak, and seventy-five cents a
-pound for sweetbreads, the high price of the latter being regulated by
-the relative scarcity of the article and not by its food value. As our
-table indicates, the real value of sweetbread as a source of proteid
-is only a little more than half that of lean beef. Its fuel value,
-however, is somewhat more than that of beef, but a little fat added
-to the latter will more than compensate and at a trifling cost. When
-we can afford it, we pay the increased price for sweetbreads simply
-because their delicacy and flavor are attractive to us. We should
-not do it under the mistaken idea that we are indulging in a highly
-nutritive article of food, for as a matter of fact it is not only less
-nutritive than a corresponding weight of lean beef, but in addition
-it possesses certain qualities, in its high purin-content, that are a
-menace to good health if indulged in too freely.
-
-Where expense must be carefully guarded, or where the condition of the
-family purse is such that conflicting demands must be intelligently
-considered in order to insure wise expenditure and the greatest
-permanent good of the many, it is well to remember that price is no
-guarantee whatever of real nutritive value. Two quarts of milk will
-furnish half the daily fuel requirement of our average man and the
-entire proteid requirement, while its cost is only sixteen cents.
-Reinforced by a pound loaf of wheat bread, the energy requirement for
-the day would be fully met, with surplus nitrogen to store up for
-future needs, and at an additional cost of only ten cents. A mixture in
-this proportion, however, would not be strictly physiological, since
-it is wasteful of proteid, but it may serve to illustrate the point.
-A better illustration is found in an admixture, quite adequate to
-supply the daily needs of our average man, both for proteid and energy,
-composed of one-quarter of a pound of lean beef, two-thirds of a pound
-of bread, and half a pound of butter, and at a total cost not to exceed
-thirty cents. The contrast of such prices with what is so commonly
-paid for table delicacies is somewhat striking; it could be made still
-more so by drawing upon many common vegetable foods, rich alike in
-proteid and in fuel value, the cost of which is even less than the
-simple food mixtures just referred to. It is not necessary, however, to
-enlarge upon this question; it is sufficient to merely emphasize the
-fact that the exaggerated demand of our present generation for dietetic
-luxuries is leading us far away from the proverbially simple life of
-our forefathers, and without adding in any way to the effectiveness of
-the daily diet. On the contrary, it is in part responsible for the high
-proteid consumption of the present day, with its attendant evils, and
-involves a large and unnecessary expenditure without adequate return.
-The wants of the body for food are far more advantageously met by a
-simple dietary, moderate in amount and at an expense comparatively
-slight.
-
-A recent writer,[78] in the “British Medical Journal,” a practitioner
-of medicine in the Highlands of Scotland, has said that these are
-“facts of common experience in the Highlands of Scotland, and probably
-among the peasantry of other countries also, where the old beliefs and
-customs have not too readily given way to the luxuries of civilization.
-Oatmeal in one form or another is a daily ingredient in the diet of a
-Highland peasant. The potato also is a staple food, and is consumed in
-large quantities with salt herring or other fish, and perhaps in some
-cases salt mutton or pork. Milk and eggs are used by most. The growing
-consumption of tea, however, and the increasing relish for sweets,
-candy, pastry, and biscuits, threaten to destroy the old way of living.
-A typical day’s diet for a crofter or fisherman who still believes in
-the traditional diet would be somewhat like this:
-
- Breakfast.--Oatmeal porridge or brose with milk; bread, butter, and tea.
- Dinner.--Potatoes galore and herrings, or other salt fish.
- Supper.--Porridge and milk, or oat bread and cheese, and tea.
-
- [78] Aran Coirce: British Medical Journal, April 7, 1906, p. 829.
-
-“I have often been assured by shepherds that they could work all
-day ‘on the hill’ after a breakfast of oatmeal brose and milk,
-without fatigue and without feeling hungry, returning in the evening
-to partake of a dish of broth, potatoes, and salt mutton. In these
-diets, proteid forms a very small proportion, and yet a hardier race
-than these shepherds and fishermen cannot be found.” It should be
-added that “brose” consists of a few handfuls of oatmeal, to which
-is added boiling water, the mixture being stirred vigorously and
-placed for a few minutes near the fire. It is then eaten with milk, or
-better, with cream. In the absence of positive data, it can only be
-asserted that the above dietary stands for simplicity and frugality.
-Its proteid-content may be low, but the amount of proteid taken per
-day by these Highlanders will obviously depend upon the _quantity_
-of food consumed. Oatmeal is fairly rich in proteid, and it is quite
-conceivable that the amount eaten daily may be such as to result in a
-high proteid exchange.
-
-It will be profitable for us to gain, if possible, a fairly clear idea
-of the quantities of food requisite for our average man of 70 kilograms
-body-weight; _i. e._, the amounts necessary to provide 60 grams of
-proteid and 2800 calories. With this end in view, we may outline a
-simple dietary, expressed in terms that will convey a clear impression,
-showing what may be eaten without overstepping the required limits of
-proteid or total calories:
-
-
-BREAKFAST
-
- Proteid Calories
- One shredded wheat biscuit 3.15 grams 106
- 30 grams
- One teacup of cream 3.12 206
- 120 grams
- One German water roll 5.07 165
- 57 grams
- Two one-inch cubes of butter 0.38 284
- 38 grams
- Three-fourths cup of coffee 0.26 ...
- 100 grams
- One-fourth teacup of cream 0.78 51
- 30 grams
- One lump of sugar ... 88
- 10 grams ----- ---
- 12.76 850
-
-
-LUNCH
-
- Proteid Calories
- One teacup homemade chicken soup 5.25 grams 60
- 144 grams
- One Parker-house roll 3.38 110
- 38 grams
- Two one-inch cubes of butter 0.38 284
- 38 grams
- One slice lean bacon 2.14 65
- 10 grams
- One small baked potato 1.53 55
- 2 ounces, 60 grams
- One rice croquette 3.42 150
- 90 grams
- Two ounces maple syrup ... 166
- 60 grams
- One cup of tea with one slice lemon ... ..
- One lump of sugar ... 38
- 10 grams ----- ---
- 16.10 928
-
-
-DINNER
-
- Proteid Calories
- One teacup cream of corn soup 3.25 72
- 130 grams
- One Parker-house roll 3.38 110
- 38 grams
- One-inch cube of butter 0.19 142
- 19 grams
- One small lamb chop, broiled 8.51 92
- lean meat, 30 grams
- One teacup of mashed potato 3.34 175
- 167 grams
- Apple-celery lettuce salad with mayonnaise dressing 0.62 75
- 50 grams
- One Boston cracker, split 1.32 47
- 2 inches diameter, 12 grams
- One-half inch cube American cheese 3.35 50
- 12 grams
- One-half teacup of bread pudding 5.25 150
- 85 grams
- One demi-tasse coffee ... ..
- One lump of sugar ... 38
- 10 grams ----- ---
- 29.21 951
-
-The grand totals for the day, with this dietary, amount to 58.07 grams
-of proteid and 2729 calories. It is of course understood that these
-figures are to be considered as only approximately correct, but the
-illustration will suffice, perhaps, to give a clearer understanding of
-the actual quantities of food involved in a daily ration approaching
-the requirements for a man of 70 kilograms body-weight. Further, there
-may be suggested by the figures given for proteid and fuel value of
-the different quantities of foods, a clearer conception of how much
-given dietary articles count for in swelling the total values of a
-day’s intake. Moreover, it is easy to see how the diet can be added to
-or modified in a given direction. If a little more proteid is desired
-without changing materially the fuel value of the food a boiled egg can
-be added to the breakfast, for example. An average-sized egg (of 53
-grams) contains 6.9 grams of proteid, while it will increase the fuel
-value of the food by only 80 calories. Or, if more vegetable proteid is
-wished for, a soup of split-peas can be introduced, without changing
-in any degree the calorific value of the diet. Thus, one teacup of
-split-pea soup (144 grams) contains 8.64 grams of proteid, while the
-fuel value of this quantity may be only 94 calories. The addition of
-one banana (160 grams) will increase fuel value 153 calories, but will
-add only 2.28 grams of proteid. If it is desired to increase fuel
-value without change in the proteid-content of the food, recourse can
-always be had to butter, fat of meat, additional oil in salads, or to
-syrup and sugar.
-
-Such a menu as is roughly outlined, however, has perhaps special value
-in emphasizing how largely the proteid intake is increased by foods
-other than meats, and which are not conspicuously rich in proteid
-matter. All wheat products, for example, while abounding in starch,
-still show a large proportion of proteid. Thus, shredded wheat biscuit
-(1 ounce), which is a type of many kindred wheat preparations, from
-bread and biscuit to the various so-called breakfast foods, yields
-about 3 grams of proteid per ounce and approximately 100 calories.
-Even potato, which is conspicuously a carbohydrate food owing to its
-large content of starch, yields of nitrogen the equivalent of at least
-three-fourths of a gram of proteid per ounce. If larger volume is
-desired without much increase in real food value, there are always
-available green foods, such as lettuce, celery, greens of various
-sorts, fruits, such as apples, grapes, oranges, etc. Too great reliance
-on meats as a type of concentrated food, on the other hand, augments
-largely the intake of proteid, and adds a relatively small amount to
-the fuel value of the day’s ration.
-
-An ingenious method of indicating food values, which promises to
-be of service in sanatoria and under other conditions where it is
-desirable to record or correct the diet of a large number of persons,
-has been devised recently by Professor Fisher.[79] The method aims to
-save labor, and is likewise designed to visualize the magnitude and
-proportions of the diet. The food is measured by calories instead of
-by weight, a “standard portion” of 100 large calories being the unit
-made use of. In carrying out the method, foods are served at table in
-“standard portions,” or multiples thereof. In the words of Fisher, the
-amount of milk served, for example, “instead of being a whole number of
-ounces, should be 4.9 ounces--the amount that contains 100 calories.
-This ‘standard portion’ constitutes about two-thirds of an ordinary
-glass of milk. Of the 100 calories which it contains 19 will be in the
-form of proteid, 52 in fat, and 29 in carbohydrate.” In the carrying
-out of this plan, it is evident that the weight of any food yielding
-100 calories becomes a measure of the degree of concentration. From
-the standpoint of fuel value, olive oil is probably one of the most
-concentrated of foods, approximately one-third of an ounce containing
-100 calories. The following table, taken from Fisher’s description
-of his method, will serve to show the amounts of several foods
-constituting a “standard portion,” and also the number of calories in
-the form of proteid, fat, and carbohydrate:
-
- [79] Irving Fisher: A new method for indicating food values. American
- Journal of Physiology, vol. 15, p. 417, 1906.
-
- +-----------------------+-------------+--------+--------+--------+--------+
- | Name of Food | Weight | | | | |
- | and “Portion” | containing |Proteid.| Fat. | Carbo- | Total. |
- | roughly estimated. |100 Calories.| | |hydrate.| |
- +-----------------------+------+------+--------+--------+--------+--------+
- | |ounces|grams |calories|calories|calories|calories|
- |Almonds, a dozen | 0.53 | 15 | 13.0 | 77.0 | 10 | 100 |
- |Bananas, one large | 3.50 | 98 | 5.0 | 5.0 | 90 | 100 |
- |Bread, a large slice | 1.30 | 37 | 13.0 | 6.0 | 81 | 100 |
- |Butter, an ordinary pat| 0.44 | 13 | 0.5 | 99.5 | .. | 100 |
- |Eggs, one large | 2.10 | 60 | 32.0 | 68.0 | .. | 100 |
- |Oysters, a dozen | 6.80 | 190 | 49.0 | 22.0 | 29 | 100 |
- |Potatoes, one | 3.60 | 100 | 10.0 | 1.0 | 89 | 100 |
- |Whole milk, | | | | | | |
- | two-thirds glass | 4.90 | 140 | 19.0 | 52.0 | 29 | 100 |
- |Beef sirloin, | | | | | | |
- | a small piece | 1.40 | 40 | 31.0 | 69.0 | .. | 100 |
- |Sugar, five teaspoons | 0.86 | 24 | .... | .... | 100 | 100 |
- +-----------------------+------+------+--------+--------+--------+--------+
-
-Obviously, to make use of the “calories per cent” method a table such
-as the above, covering all common foodstuffs and showing the weight of
-each food constituting a standard portion, together with the calories
-of proteid, fat, and carbohydrate in this portion, is necessary. The
-chief advantage of the method, however, is that it lends itself readily
-to geometrical representation and affords an easy means of determining
-the constituents of combinations of different foods by use of a simple
-mechanism, for a description of which reference must be made to the
-original paper.
-
-Any attempt to follow a daily routine which accords with the true
-needs of the body leads necessarily toward foods derived from the
-plant kingdom, with the adoption of simple dietary habits, and with
-greater freedom from the exciting influence of the richer animal
-foods. There is, however, virtue in a simple dietary that appeals and
-satisfies, and in so doing testifies to the completeness with which
-it meets the physiological requirements of the body. A physician,[80]
-writing in the “British Medical Journal,” says: “I determined to give
-the minimum-of-proteid diet a fair trial in my own case. The result
-was that I was relieved of a life-long tendency to acid dyspepsia and
-occasional sick headache; my fitness for work, my appetite and relish
-for food, were increased, without any diminution, but rather a slight
-increase, in my weight. My practice extends over a wide area of rough
-mountainous country involving long journeys on cycle, on foot, driving,
-and in open boats, in fair and foul weather. The muscular exertion
-and endurance necessary for the work would seem to require a large
-proportion of proteid and a generous diet altogether, but since I began
-to experiment I have suffered less than formerly from fatigue, and seem
-to eat in all a smaller quantity of food. My diet consists of:
-
- [80] Aran Coirce: British Medical Journal, April 7, 1906, p. 829.
-
- Breakfast, 8.30 A.M.--Oatmeal cakes, bread and butter, about 1 cubic
- inch of cheese or bloater paste, marmalade, and one breakfast cup of
- tea.
-
- Lunch, 1.30 P.M.--Same as breakfast, with occasionally a boiled egg,
- and sometimes coffee instead of tea.
-
- Dinner, 7 P.M.--Thick soup containing vegetables, with bread,
- followed by suet pudding or fruit tart; or vegetable stew, containing
- 2 or 3 ounces of meat, with boiled potatoes, followed by milk pudding
- and jam, and occasionally a cup of black coffee.”
-
-This statement of personal experience is in close accord with
-statements that have come to the writer in hundreds of letters during
-the past two or three years, from persons who have for some reason
-chosen to follow a more abstemious mode of life. Such testimony has a
-certain measure of value in that it offers corroborative evidence of
-the beneficial effects of a moderate diet, more closely in accord with
-the actual demands of the body for food. It does not, however, carry
-quite that degree of assurance that scientific evidence, gathered by
-careful observers and controlled by weights and measures that hold the
-imagination in check, affords; and so we may turn to a different type
-of testimony, presented in an elaborate research by Dr. Neumann,[81]
-of the Hygienic Institute at Kiel, an experiment on himself extending
-through a total of 746 days.
-
- [81] Dr. med. et phil. R. O. Neumann: Experimentelle Beiträge zur
- Lehre von dem täglichen Nahrungsbedarf des Menschen unter besonderer
- Berücksichtigung der notwendigen Eiweissmenge. Archiv für Hygiene,
- Band 45, p. 1, 1902.
-
-The experiment was divided into three periods. In the first period of
-ten months the subject, with a body-weight of 66.5 kilograms, consumed
-daily on an average the amounts of food indicated in the following
-table. In this same table are also included the daily values, based on
-the preceding data, for a body-weight of 70 kilograms. Thirdly, the
-table likewise shows the amounts of utilizable food contained in the
-foodstuffs actually eaten, on the basis of 70 kilos body-weight.
-
-
-AVERAGE DAILY FOOD FOR TEN MONTHS
-
- +------------+-----------------+----------------+-----------------+
- | |Actually consumed|Calculated for a| Utilizable Food |
- | | by the Subject, | Body-weight of |for a Body-weight|
- | | 66.5 Kilos | 70 Kilos | of 70 Kilos |
- +------------+-----------------+----------------+-----------------+
- |Proteid | 66.1 grams | 69.1 grams | 57.3 grams |
- |Fat | 83.5 | 90.2 | 81.2 |
- |Carbohydrate| 230.0 | 242.0 | 225.0 |
- |Alcohol | 43.7 | 45.6 | 41.0 |
- |Fuel value | 2309 calories | 2427 calories | 2199 calories |
- +------------+-----------------+----------------+-----------------+
-
-During this period of ten months, the body-weight of the subject
-remained practically constant, or indeed showed a slight gain up to 67
-kilograms. All the functions of the body, and the general condition
-of good health, were in no wise impaired; so that in the words of the
-subject, the amount of food eaten must have been sufficient for the
-needs of the body. Somewhat striking is the fact that of the 2309
-calories in the daily food, more than one-fourth was derived from the
-beer consumed daily (1200 c.c.). Also noticeable is the relatively
-small amount of carbohydrate taken daily, only about one-half the
-quantity designated by Voit as the average requirement of German
-laborers. Finally, it is to be observed that during this period of
-ten months, the daily consumption of food as calculated for a man of
-70 kilograms body-weight, based on the actual food consumption of the
-subject with a weight of 66.5 kilos, was not widely different from our
-own statement of 60 grams of proteid and 2800 calories. The tendency,
-however, in Dr. Neumann’s experiment was toward lower fuel values and
-somewhat higher proteid consumption.
-
-In a second period of 50 days, with a slightly larger daily intake,
-Dr. Neumann observed that his body was laying by nitrogen, _i. e._,
-storing up proteid on a daily diet of 76.5 grams of proteid and with
-sufficient fat and carbohydrate to furnish a total fuel value of 2658
-calories. In the final period of 8 months, the following data were
-obtained:
-
-
-AVERAGE DAILY FOOD FOR EIGHT MONTHS
-
- +------------+-----------------+----------------+-----------------+
- | |Actually consumed|Calculated for a| Utilizable Food |
- | | by the Subject, | Body-Weight of |for a Body-Weight|
- | | 71.5 Kilos. | 70 Kilos. | of 70 Kilos. |
- +------------+-----------------+----------------+-----------------+
- |Proteid | 76.2 grams | 74.0 grams | 61.4 grams |
- |Fat | 109.0 | 106.1 | 95.5 |
- |Carbohydrate| 168.9 | 164.2 | 152.7 |
- |Alcohol | 5.5 | 5.3 | 4.7 |
- |Fuel value | 2057 calories | 1999 calories | 1766 calories |
- +------------+-----------------+----------------+-----------------+
-
-During this period, it is to be noted that the fuel value of the
-day’s food averaged only 2057 calories, which for a body-weight of
-70 kilograms would amount to less than 2000 calories. The proteid
-consumption, however, was larger than we have found to be necessary
-for a man of the above weight. Still, the facts are in harmony with
-the general principle that there is no necessity for a daily intake
-of food such as common usage dictates, there being obviously a wide
-difference between a minimal daily consumption of 118 grams of proteid
-and 3000 or more calories, such as is assumed to be needed by a man of
-70 kilos, and 74 grams of proteid with 1999 calories. Under the latter
-conditions, the subject gained a kilogram in weight during the eight
-months, while the establishment of nitrogen equilibrium testifies to
-the now generally accepted view that it is quite possible for the body
-to establish nitrogen equilibrium at different levels, _i. e._, with
-different quantities of proteid food and different fuel values.
-
-The diet made use of by Neumann was a mixed one, containing a great
-variety of animal and vegetable foods, but withal simple and moderate
-in quantity. Calculated per kilogram of body-weight, the average
-consumption of food material per day during the three periods was as
-indicated in the following table:
-
-
-DAILY FOOD CONSUMPTION PER KILOGRAM OF WEIGHT
-
- +-------------+--------+-----+-------------+--------+--------+
- | |Proteid.| Fat.|Carbohydrate.|Alcohol.|Calories|
- +-------------+--------+-----+-------------+--------+--------+
- | | grams |grams| grams | grams | |
- |First Period | 0.99 | 1.3 | 34.5 | 0.56 | 34.7 |
- |Second Period| 1.10 | 2.3 | 33.4 | . . | 59.7 |
- |Third Period | 1.00 | 1.5 | 23.4 | 0.07 | 28.5 |
- +-------------+--------+-----+-------------+--------+--------+
-
-The average of daily food consumption for the total of 746 days was as
-follows: 74.2 grams proteid, 117 grams fat, 213 grams carbohydrate, and
-2367 calories. On such a diet, during this long period, equilibrium was
-satisfactorily maintained, thereby furnishing additional evidence that
-quantities of food way below the so-called normal amounts are quite
-adequate to meet the needs of the body. There is no conflict whatever
-between these results and our own; they both point in the same general
-direction. Perhaps the one thing that needs to be again emphasized,
-however, in view of the low fuel values used by Neumann, is that while
-they proved quite adequate in his case, the demand in this direction is
-governed largely by the degree of bodily activity. In fact, Neumann’s
-results with fuel values are in perfect harmony with the data obtained
-by us with professional men, but the writer is inclined to believe that
-for the majority of mankind, with the varying degrees of activity and
-muscular exertion called for, a somewhat larger number of heat units is
-desirable, and indeed on many occasions demanded.
-
-Still, it is perfectly obvious that custom has greatly exaggerated
-the fuel values required in ordinary muscular work, and such results
-as are here presented tend to emphasize the true relationship between
-actual requirements and fuel intake. Further, it must not be overlooked
-that the rate of proteid katabolism is governed in large measure by the
-amount of non-nitrogenous food, and consequently a too narrow margin in
-the consumption of the latter will obviously result in a higher rate
-of proteid exchange. We are inclined to the belief that a satisfactory
-degree of bodily efficiency is more liable to be maintained with a
-somewhat larger consumption of carbohydrate food, combined with a
-reduction in proteid food to a level nearer our own figures. It will
-be observed that the average amount of carbohydrate taken daily by
-Neumann, during the 746 days, was only 213 grams, while the daily
-consumption of fat averaged 117 grams. These figures are interesting
-and instructive in many ways, especially as indicating the ease with
-which the body accommodates itself to a relatively low intake of
-proteid food, combined with a small proportion of starches and sugars.
-This relationship between carbohydrate and fat might well occur at
-times as a natural result of personal taste, but as a general rule it
-is probably better, from the standpoint of digestibility and general
-availability, for the daily food to contain a larger proportion of
-carbohydrate.
-
-Under this head, I would lay special stress upon the value to the
-body of the natural sugars as well as of starch. We are inclined to
-deprecate the widespread use of candy, especially among children, and
-there is no doubt that the too lavish use of sugar in such concentrated
-form does at times do harm; but when eaten as an integral part of the
-many available fruits its use cannot be too highly lauded, for both
-young and old. Oranges, grapes, prunes, dates, plums, and bananas are
-especially to be commended, and in lesser degree peaches, apricots,
-pears, apples, figs, strawberries, raspberries, and blueberries. In
-all of these fruits, it is the sugar especially that gives food value
-to the article, while the mild acids and other extractives, together
-with the water of the fruit, help in other ways in the maintenance
-of good health. Where personal taste and inclination are favorably
-disposed, the first six fruits named can be partaken of freely, and the
-diet of the young, especially, can be advantageously modified by the
-liberal use of such articles of food.
-
-Of the other fruits, apples when thoroughly ripe are above reproach
-if properly masticated, but the raw fruit is somewhat indigestible
-when swallowed in too large pieces, and may cause trouble to a
-delicate stomach. A baked apple, on the other hand, is both savory and
-wholesome, and if served with sugar and cream, for example, constitutes
-a most healthful and satisfying article of food. Peaches, apricots,
-and strawberries as ripe fruits are likewise exceedingly valuable, but
-here personal idiosyncrasy frequently comes to the fore, especially
-with strawberries, and prohibits their free use. The peculiar acidity
-of these latter fruits is occasionally a source of trouble, which
-leads to their avoidance; but this is far less liable to happen with
-people living on a low proteid diet with its greater freedom from purin
-derivatives, or uric acid antecedents. Further, there is a tendency
-on the part of some individuals to suffer from acid fermentation with
-too liberal use of starches and sugar, but as a rule the advantages
-of ordinary starchy and natural sugar-containing foods cannot be
-overestimated. It is certainly wise to give them a conspicuous place in
-the daily dietary and to encourage their use, especially by children.
-
-As has been stated in several connections, a diet which conforms to the
-true nutritive requirements of the body must necessarily lead toward
-vegetable foods. In no other satisfactory way can excess of proteid be
-avoided, and at the same time the proper calorific value be obtained.
-This, however, does not mean vegetarianism, but simply a greater
-reliance upon foods from the plant kingdom, with a corresponding
-diminution in the typical animal foods. This raises the question of the
-possible relation of diet to the bacterial processes of the intestine,
-knowing, as we do, that the latter are of primary importance in the
-causation of certain forms of auto-intoxication, etc. Recent studies
-have indicated that the bacterial flora of carnivorous animals is
-quite different from that of herbivorous animals, and this being so,
-it is easy to see how a predominance of vegetable or animal food may
-modify the bacterial conditions of the intestinal tract in man. Dr.
-Herter[82] has reported the presence in the intestines of cats, dogs,
-tigers, lion, and wolf of many spore-holding bacilli, as well as free
-spores and vegetative forms of anærobic organisms; some of which at
-least are decidedly pathogenic when injected into the subcutaneous
-connective tissue, leading to serious and even fatal results within
-twenty-four hours. With herbivorous animals, on the other hand, such as
-the buffalo, goat, horse, elephant, etc., the predominating organisms
-are of a different order from those found in the intestines of the
-carnivora; proving practically non-pathogenic, or only slightly so,
-when injected subcutaneously, and less disposed to produce putrefactive
-changes or other chemical decompositions.
-
- [82] C. A. Herter: Character of the Bacterial Flora of Carnivorous
- and Herbivorous Animals. Science, December 28, 1906, p. 859.
-
-In the words of Dr. Herter, “These differences in the appearance
-and behavior of the bacteria derived from typical carnivora and
-herbivora suggest that the habit of living upon a diet consisting
-exclusively of raw meat entails differences in the types of bacteria
-that characterize the contents of the large intestine. The occurrence
-of considerable numbers of spore-bearing organisms in the carnivora
-points to the presence of anærobic putrefactive forms in great
-numbers. The results of subcutaneous inoculations into guinea-pigs
-bear out this view and indicate that the numbers of organisms capable
-of producing a hemorrhagic œdema with tissue necrosis, with or without
-gas-production, are very considerable.... The observations recorded are
-of much interest in relation to the bacterial processes and nutrition
-of herbivorous as distinguished from carnivorous animals, and are
-significant furthermore for the interpretation of bacterial conditions
-found in man. The question arises whether the abundant use of meat over
-a long period of time may not favor the development of much larger
-numbers of spore-bearing putrefactive anærobes in the intestinal tract
-than would be the case were a different type of proteid substituted for
-meat.” While it may be said truly that observations of this character
-are as yet not sufficiently numerous or conclusive to warrant positive
-or sweeping statements, yet there is a suggestion here well worthy of
-thoughtful consideration in its general bearing on the nutrition of
-mankind.
-
-Simplicity in diet, with or without complete abstinence from meat,
-is often resorted to as a means of relief from bodily ailments, and
-such cases sometimes afford striking illustrations of the adequacy
-and benefits of a relatively low intake of food. Cases of this sort,
-perhaps, are more frequently observed among elderly people, where the
-daily requirements are not so great as with younger and more active
-persons, but they offer evidence in support of our main thesis that
-dietary habits are no guarantee of bodily requirements. I have in mind
-the details of an exceedingly interesting case reported with much care
-by Dr. Fenger;[83] the case of a man who at 61 years of age, after a
-long period of poor health, brought himself quickly into a condition of
-sound health by a daily diet characterized by extreme simplicity and
-with an exceedingly low fuel value. The daily diet made use of during
-the fifteen years the subject was under examination consisted of the
-following articles:
-
- [83] Dr. S. Fenger: Beiträge zur Kenntniss des Stoffwechsels im
- Greisenalter. Skandinavisches Archiv für Physiologie, Band 16, p.
- 222, 1904.
-
- 1889–1892: 1 egg, 1 quart of oatmeal soup, 2 quarts of skim milk,
- 1-1/2 ounces of red wine, 1/4 ounce of sugar.
-
- 1892–1894: 2 eggs, 1 quart of oatmeal soup, 2 quarts of skim milk,
- 1-1/2 ounces of red wine, 1/4 ounce of sugar.
-
- 1894–1900: 3 eggs, 1 pint of oatmeal soup, 2 quarts of skim milk,
- 1-1/2 ounces of red wine, 1/4 ounce of sugar, 2 ounces of plum and
- raspberry juice.
-
- 1900–1903: 3 eggs, 1 pint of barley soup, 3 pints of sweet milk, 1
- pint of buttermilk, 1-1/2 ounces of red wine, 1/4 ounce of sugar, 2
- ounces of plum and raspberry juice.
-
-It will be observed that during these fifteen years the subject
-partook of no meat whatever, and further, that the diet was wholly
-in fluid form. At the close of this long period, the subject, being
-then 75 years of age, was reported as well and in good health, with
-satisfactory physical condition for a person of his years. He was a
-man of small body-weight, only 42 kilograms, but during this period
-of voluntary restriction in diet, he suffered no loss. It is perhaps
-worthy of comment also that all through this lengthy period no salt
-was taken other than what was naturally present in the simple foods
-made use of. The point to attract our attention especially, however, is
-that for fifteen years, during which the quality and quantity of this
-man’s food was carefully observed, body-weight, general good health,
-and physical vigor were all maintained, together with freedom from the
-ills of previous years and with a daily diet characterized by extreme
-simplicity. The chemical composition of the diet was likewise peculiar,
-particularly in its exceedingly low fuel value. The following table
-shows the amounts of proteid, fat, and carbohydrate consumed daily
-during the four periods designated:
-
- +---------+--------+-----+--------+---------+---------+---------+
- | | | | Carbo- | |Calories | Proteid |
- | Period. |Proteid.|Fat. |hydrate.|Calories.| per | per |
- | | | | | |Kilogram.|Kilogram.|
- +---------+--------+-----+--------+---------+---------+---------+
- | | grams |grams| grams | | | grams |
- |1889–1892| 79.8 | 21.7| 152.0 | 1125 | 26 | 1.90 |
- |1892–1894| 85.2 | 27.0| 152.0 | 1200 | 28 | 2.03 |
- |1894–1900| 87.0 | 30.1| 150.1 | 1230 | 29 | 2.07 |
- |1900–1903| 84.4 | 73.7| 148.3 | 1600 | 38 | 2.00 |
- +---------+--------+-----+--------+---------+---------+---------+
-
-Especially noticeable here is the low intake of fat and carbohydrate,
-with the corresponding low fuel value, and also the relatively high
-consumption of proteid, averaging 2.0 grams daily per kilogram of
-body-weight. Dr. Fenger concludes that for a man of this age and
-weight, with the relative inactivity characteristic of old age, a heat
-value in the intake of 30 calories per kilogram of body-weight is quite
-sufficient for the needs of the body. This may be quite true, but to
-maintain nitrogen equilibrium under such conditions requires a larger
-intake of proteid food than is desirable. It will be observed that in
-the last period of four years a very decided change in the diet was
-instituted; proteid was diminished somewhat, but the noticeable change
-was the decided increase in fat, produced in large measure by the
-substitution of whole milk, with its contained cream, for skim milk. In
-the words of Dr. Fenger, this change was necessitated by the appearance
-of gout in the subject. From superficial examination of the dietary of
-the preceding eleven years there would seem no occasion for criticising
-the subject for high living, and yet I believe we are quite within the
-limits of reason in saying that the proteid exchange for a subject of
-this body-weight was altogether too high. The heat requirements of the
-body were being met in an unnecessarily large degree from the breaking
-down of proteid material, with consequent formation of excessive
-nitrogenous waste, among which uric acid was plainly conspicuous.
-
-One comment to be made here is that meat and other rich
-purin-containing foodstuffs are not the only source of gout and uric
-acid. Excessive proteid katabolism, both exogenous and endogenous, is
-a possible source of danger in this respect, and the above subject,
-though living on an exceptionally simple diet, was consuming far more
-proteid per kilogram of body-weight than was necessary or desirable.
-Increase of fatty food naturally served to diminish the rate of proteid
-katabolism, and this could have been advantageously accompanied by
-a still greater reduction in the amount of proteid ingested, and a
-larger addition of non-nitrogenous foodstuffs. In old age, there is
-naturally a slowing down of the metabolic processes, and both nitrogen
-equilibrium and body equilibrium can be satisfactorily maintained by a
-relatively small intake of food and with gain to the body; but there
-is every reason to believe that economy in proteid food can be more
-advantageously adopted than economy in non-nitrogenous foodstuffs.
-
-Finally, we may call attention to the many possibilities of an
-intelligent modification of the daily diet to the temporary needs
-of the individual. The season of the year, summer and winter, the
-climate, the degree of activity of the body, the state of health,
-temporary ailments, etc., all present special conditions which admit
-of particular dietetic treatment. In hot summer weather, for example,
-there is plainly less need for food than in the cold winter season,
-especially for fat with its high calorific value. During the cold part
-of the year, the lower temperature of the surrounding air, with the
-tendency toward greater muscular activity, calls for more extensive
-chemical decomposition in order to meet the demand for heat, and the
-energy of muscular contraction. There is perhaps no special reason for
-any material change in the amount of proteid food consumed in the two
-seasons, except in so far as it may seem desirable at times to take
-advantage of the well-known stimulating properties of proteid to whip
-up the general metabolism of the body, in harmony with the principle
-that all metabolic processes may need spurring to meet the demands of a
-greatly lowered temperature in the surrounding air.
-
-Fuel value, however, should be increased somewhat during the winter
-months in our climate. Fat promises the largest amount of energy,
-but there is more of a tendency to store up excess of fat than of
-carbohydrate, hence the latter foods have certain advantages as a
-source of the additional energy needed during cold weather. In warm
-weather, it should be our aim to diminish unnecessary heat production
-as much as possible, though it must be remembered that the body is
-to be maintained approximately at least in equilibrium, and this
-calls for an adequate amount of food. Lighter foods, however, may be
-advantageously employed, such as fruits, vegetables, fresh fish, etc.
-Fats and fat meats especially are to be avoided, not only because
-there is no specific need for them, but particularly on account of a
-greater sensitiveness of the gastro-intestinal tract during the hot
-seasons of the year, that is liable to result in a disturbance whenever
-undue quantity of rich or heavy food is taken. Further, in hot summer
-weather we may advantageously live more largely on foods served cold,
-and thereby avoid the heat ordinarily introduced into the body by
-hot fluids and solids. These, however, are all obvious physiological
-truths, constituting a form of physiological good sense the application
-of which calls for no special expert knowledge.
-
-Less obvious, though no less important, is the partial protection
-that can be afforded to weakened or disabled kidneys by judgment and
-discrimination in the matter of diet. In acute or chronic nephritis,
-forms of so-called Bright’s disease, is there not danger of overtaxing
-organs already weakened by placing upon them the daily duty of
-excreting large amounts of solid nitrogenous waste, as well as of the
-various inorganic salts which are so intimately associated with many of
-the organic foodstuffs? The consumption of excessive and unnecessary
-amounts of proteid food simply means the ultimate formation of just
-so much more urea, uric acid, etc., which must be passed out through
-the kidneys. In the words of Bunge, “There is no organ in our body so
-mercilessly ill treated as the kidneys. The stomach reacts against
-overloading. The kidneys are obliged to let everything pass through
-them, and the harm done to them is not felt till it is too late to
-avoid the evil consequences.” It would seem the part of wisdom,
-therefore, to adjust the daily intake of proteid food to as low a
-level as is consistent with the true needs of the body, in those cases
-where the kidneys are at all enfeebled, or where it seems desirable to
-exercise due precaution as a possible means of prevention.
-
-Equal care is frequently called for in connection with the mineral
-matters which enter so largely into many natural foodstuffs, or which
-are introduced as condiments. As an illustration, we may note one or
-two peculiarities in the distribution of sodium and potassium salts
-in the tissues of the body. Potassium is an indispensable constituent
-of every living cell, and the latter has the power of absorbing and
-holding on to such amounts of this particular element as may be
-necessary for the functional activity of the tissue of which it is a
-part. Sodium, on the other hand, stands in a different relationship
-to living structures. It is widely distributed, but in the higher
-animals, as in man, sodium salts are most abundant in the fluids of
-the body, notably in the plasma of the blood. Herbivorous animals have
-a strong liking for sodium chloride or common salt, but this is not
-true of carnivorous animals; indeed, the latter animals have a great
-dislike for salty articles of food. Vegetable products are all rich in
-potassium salts, whereas ordinary animal foods, such as meat, eggs,
-milk, and blood, are relatively poor in this element.
-
-It is claimed that the abundance of potassium salts in vegetable foods
-is the cause of the apparent need for sodium chloride by herbivorous
-animals, and in lesser degree by man. This is explained by supposing
-that when the salts of potassium reach the blood by absorption of the
-vegetable foods, an interchange takes place with the sodium chloride
-of the blood plasma. “Chloride of potassium and the sodium salt of the
-acid which was combined with the potassium are formed. Instead of the
-chloride of sodium, therefore, the blood now contains another sodium
-salt, which did not form part of the normal composition of the blood,
-or at any rate not in so large a proportion. A foreign constituent
-or an excess of a normal constituent, _i. e._, sodium carbonate,
-has arisen in the blood. But the kidneys possess the function of
-maintaining the same composition of the blood, and of thus eliminating
-every abnormal constituent and any excess of a normal constituent. The
-sodium salt formed is therefore ejected by the kidneys, together with
-the chloride of potassium, and the blood becomes poorer in chlorine
-and sodium. Common salt is therefore withdrawn from the organism by
-the ingestion of potassium salts. This loss can only be made up from
-without, and this explains the fact that animals which live on a diet
-rich in potassium, have a longing for salt” (Bunge). It is certainly a
-fact worthy of note that man takes only one salt as such in addition
-to those that are naturally present in his food, and it is equally
-significant that sodium chloride is by no means lacking in ordinary
-foodstuffs. If the individual lives entirely on animal foods, he has no
-desire for salt, but as soon as he adopts a vegetable diet the craving
-for salt shows itself. Vegetable foods, however, are not all alike in
-their content of potassium salts; some, like rice, contain relatively
-little, while others, like potatoes, peas, and beans, are comparatively
-rich in this element.
-
-We may recognize in these statements a physiological demand for a
-certain amount of salt, especially when vegetable foods enter into
-the daily dietary, but there is no justification for the employment
-of such quantities as are generally made use of. Where the vegetable
-food is largely rice, a small fraction of a gram of salt is really
-sufficient for all physiological purposes; and in those cases where
-ordinary cereals, legumes, potatoes, etc., constitute the chief part
-of the dietary, a few grams of salt, at the most, will suffice to meet
-the daily needs. Common usage, however, frequently raises the amount
-consumed to 25 grams or more per day, the bulk of which is at once
-eliminated through the kidneys; thereby entailing a certain amount
-of renal activity, which must, it would seem, constitute something
-of a strain upon organs ordinarily hard worked at the best. “Do we
-not impose too great a task upon them, and may it not be fraught
-with serious consequences? When on a diet of meat and bread, without
-salt, we excrete not more than from 6 to 8 grams of alkaline salts
-in twenty-four hours. With a diet of potatoes, and a corresponding
-addition of salt, over 100 grams of alkaline salts pass through the
-kidneys in the day. May not there be danger in this? The habit of
-drinking spirituous liquors, which moreover is reckoned one of the
-causes of chronic nephritis, also brings about the immoderate use of
-salt, and thus one sin against nature leads to another” (Bunge).
-
-The moral we would draw (from these observations) is that in weakened
-conditions of the kidneys there is reason in reducing the rate of
-proteid exchange to the lowest level consistent with the maintenance
-of equilibrium and the preservation of strength and vigor, thereby
-diminishing the amount of nitrogenous waste to be eliminated and the
-consequent strain upon these organs. Further, there is suggested
-moderation in the amount of salt to be used daily, and some
-circumspection in the amount and quality of vegetable foods consumed
-in order to regulate more effectually the quantity of saline waste to
-be handled by the kidneys. These conclusions are just as worthy of
-consideration as the more obvious rule that in diabetes or glycosuria
-proper precaution must be observed in the eating of carbohydrate
-foods. In gout and rheumatism, accumulated physiological knowledge
-teaches plainly the necessity of avoiding those foods that are rich in
-purin-containing compounds. Uric acid owes its origin in part at least
-to substances of this class; and as an ounce of prevention is worth
-more than a pound of cure, we may by proper moderation in the use of
-such foods save ourselves from the disagreeable effects of accumulated
-uric acid deposits.
-
-In conclusion, the nutrition of man, if it is to be carried out by the
-individual in a manner adapted to obtaining the best results, involves
-an intelligent appreciation of the needs of the body under different
-conditions of life, and a willingness to accept and put in practice the
-principles that scientific research has brought to light, even though
-such principles stand opposed to old-time traditions and customs. The
-master words which promise help in the carrying out of an intelligent
-plan of living are moderation and simplicity; moderation in the amount
-of food consumed daily, simplicity in the character of the dietary, in
-harmony with the old saying that man _eats to live_ and not lives to
-eat. In so doing there is promise of health, strength, and longevity,
-with increased efficiency, as the reward of obedience to Nature’s
-laws.
-
-
-
-
-INDEX
-
-
- A
-
- Abderhalden, Emil, 35
-
- Absorption, a physiological process, 41
- diffusion as a factor in, 41
- from the stomach, 31
- in intestine, 37
- of fats, 43, 49
- of fats, in dogs on low proteid diet, 233, 261
- of food products, by blood, 44
- of peptones, 41
- of proteid in dogs on low proteid diet, 233, 262
- of proteid products, 47
- of proteoses, 41
- osmosis, as factor in, 41
- paths of, 44
- reconstruction of proteid during, 42
- selective action, of sugars, 47
-
- Acid, aspartic, 34, 67, 259
- glutaminic, 34, 259
- hydrochloric, 25, 26
- uric, 73
- uric, excretion of, as influenced by diet, 144
-
- Acids, amino, 34
- diamino, 34
-
- Adenase, 71
-
- Adenin, 72
-
- Aldehydase, 64
-
- Amino acids, 34, 67
-
- Ammonia, 70, 259
-
- Amylopsin, 32
-
- Anabolism, 50
-
- Animals, influence of low proteid diet on high proteid, 231, 233, 243
-
- Animal starch, _see_ Glycogen
-
- Appetite, in relation to food requirements, 162
-
- Arginin, 34, 68, 70, 259
-
- Argutinsky, views on muscle work, 123
-
- Aspartic acid, 34, 67, 259
-
- Assimilation limits of sugars, 47
-
- Athlete, photograph of, 190
-
- Athletes, fuel value of food of, on low proteid diet, 198
- strength tests of, on low proteid diet, 206
- true proteid requirement of, 186
-
- Atwater and Benedict, 109, 111
-
- Autodigestion (_see_ Autolysis), 63
-
- Autolysis, 12
-
- Availability, of foods, 12
- of carbohydrates, as source of energy, 45
-
-
- B
-
- Bacterial flora in intestine, of carnivora, 292
- of herbivora, 292
-
- Bacterial processes in intestine, in relation to food, 292
-
- Balance, nutritive, as affected by various factors, 117, 118
-
- Basal energy exchange, 104
-
- Beaumont, William, on movements of stomach, 27
-
- Benedict, F. G., _see_ Atwater and Benedict
-
- Bergell and Lewin, 36
-
- Beriberi, and diet, 224
-
- Blood, absorption of food products by, 44
- behavior of disaccharides when introduced into, 39
- effects of injection of proteoses and peptones into, 41
- relation of sugar in, to glycogen, 46
- sugar in, 45
-
- Body, amounts of food required to furnish proteid needs of, 274
- efficiency of, as a machine, 111
- equilibrium, 78
- nature of oxidation in the, 60
- needs of nitrogen by, 4
- needs for food by, 169
- needs and dietary habits, 268
- needs of proteid by, 268, 272
- relation of oxygen to decompositions in, 61
- resistance, _see_ Resistance
- sample dietary supplying needs of, 280
- site of oxidation in, 62
- surface, relation to energy exchange, 104, 105
- surface, relation to nitrogen requirement in dogs, 248
-
- Body-weight, on low proteid diet, 175, 181, 185, 190, 199, 245–255
- relation to proteid requirement, 184, 188, 198, 227
-
- Bright’s disease, _see_ Nephritis
-
- Breisacher, L., on minimum proteid requirement, 172
-
- Bunge, 124
-
-
- C
-
- Calorie, 14
-
- Calorimeter, respiration, 102
-
- Cane sugar, assimilation limit of, 47
- behavior when introduced into blood, 39
- utilization of, 40
-
- Cannon, W. B., on muscular movements of stomach, 28, 29
-
- Carbon dioxide, output in rest, 111, 112
- dioxide, output during work, 111, 123
- equilibrium, 84
- excretion, during fasting, 84
- moiety of proteid, 129
-
- Carnivora, bacterial flora in intestine of, 292
-
- Carbohydrates, as food, 6
- as fuel, 6
- as heat producers, 58
- as proteid sparers, 92
- as source of energy, 128
- as source of energy in fasting, 81
- as source of energy in work, 58
- availability of, 13
- availability of, as source of energy, 45
- composition of, 5
- formation from proteid, 129
- fuel value of, 15
- in foodstuffs, 7
- liver as regulator of, 45
- respiratory quotient of, 107
-
- Casein, cleavage products of, 70
-
- Caspari and Glässner, on minimum proteid requirement in man, 172
-
- Cellulose, in vegetables, influence on digestion, 263
-
- Chemical character of proteid, influence on nutrition, 256
- composition of foodstuffs, 7
-
- Circulating proteid, 134
-
- Clapp, S. H.
- (_see_ Osborne and Clapp, on proteid cleavage products), 258
-
- Cleavage, oxidative, 61
-
- Climbing, oxygen consumption in, 116
-
- Cogan, Thomas, on temperance in food, 166
-
- Cohnheim, Otto, on proteid decomposition, 36
-
- Composition, of proteid, 3
- of carbohydrate, 5
- of fat, 6
-
- Cornaro, Louis, on temperance in food, 168
-
- Cost of foods in relation to nutritive value, 277
-
- Creatin, 74
-
- Creatinin, 74
- excretion, as influenced by diet, 144
-
- Curtis, Edward, Nature and Health, 2, 5, 214
-
-
- D
-
- Dapper, Max, 99
-
- Dangers of underfeeding, 214
-
- Degeneration, fatty, 270
-
- Deuteroproteose, 67, 69
-
- Dextrins, 21, 37
-
- Dextrose, 37
- assimilation, limit of, 47
- utilization of, 40
-
- Diabetes, phloridzin, 130
-
- Diamino acids, 34
-
- Diet, and beriberi, 224
- and renal activity, 297
- effects of exclusive proteid, upon rats, 239
- effects of intemperance in, 270
- effects of rice, on rats, 240
- fat absorption in dogs on low proteid, 233, 261
- influence of, on creatin in excretion, 144
- exclusive proteid, on progeny in rats, 240
- on growth in rats, 239
- monotony in, 242
- on oxygen consumption in man at rest, 126
- on oxygen consumption in man at work, 126
- on respiratory quotient in man at rest, 126
- on respiratory quotient in man at work, 126
- rice, on growth in rats, 240
- on urea excretion, 144
- on uric acid excretion, 144
- vegetable, upon dogs, 254, 256
- in relation to nephritis, 297
- in relation to nitrogen distribution in urine, 144
- in relation to seasons of the year, 296
- of Highlanders, 279
- low proteid, influence on body-weight in dogs, 245, 249, 250,
- 251, 252, 255
- nitrogen excretion during severe work on exclusive proteid, 123, 124
- philosophy of a mixed, 92, 276
- relation of endurance to low proteid, 210, 212
- relation of inorganic salts to, 299, 300
- relation of work to, 126
- relation of vegetable food to low proteid, 291
- sample, of soldiers, 194
- sample, in experiments on true proteid requirement in man, 178,
- 182, 189, 195
- simplicity in, advantages of, 279, 293
- temperance in, 270
- utilization of fat in dogs on low proteid, 261
- utilization of nitrogen in dogs on low proteid, 262
- variety in, 229, 242
-
- Diets, normal, _see_ Standard diets
- standard, 155
-
- Dietary habits, in relation to needs of body, 268
- of fruitarians, 215
- of Japanese, 225
- sample, supplying needs of body, 280
- standards, use of the term, 272
-
- Dietetic customs of mankind, 154
-
- Dietetics, habit in, 159
-
- Diffusion, as factor in absorption, 41
-
- Digestibility, _see_ Availability
-
- Digestion, gastric, of proteids, 26
- importance of gastric, 30
- influence of cellulose in vegetables on, 263
- in the stomach, 25
- object of gastric, 30
- of fat, in intestine, 36
- of fat, in stomach, 36
- of starch, 21
- products of pancreatic, of fats, 36
- products of pancreatic, of proteids, 34, 67
- products of pancreatic, of starch, 37
- products of salivary, 21
- salivary, in stomach, 23
-
- Digestive products, reconstruction of proteid from, 42
-
- Disease, relation of excessive proteid consumption to, 269
-
- Dogs, effects of low proteid diet on, 232–236, 245–255
- fasting experiments on, 82
- fat absorption in, on low proteid diet, 233, 261
- fuel value requirement of, 234, 236, 245–255
- influence of low proteid diet upon body-weight in, 245–255
- influence of vegetable diet on, 254, 256
- nitrogen requirement of, 234, 235, 236, 245–255
- photographs of, 248
- proteid absorption in, on low proteid diet, 233, 262
- proteid requirement, experiments by Munk, 232
- proteid requirement, experiments by Rosenheim, 234
- proteid requirement, experiments by Jägerroos, 236
- proteid requirement, experiments by author, 243
- utilization of fat in, on low proteid diet, 261
- utilization of nitrogen in, on low proteid diet, 262
-
- Disaccharides, utilization of, 40
-
-
- E
-
- Edestin, cleavage products of, 70
-
- Efficiency of body, as a machine, 111
-
- Egg albumin, cleavage products of, 70
-
- Endogenous metabolism, 145, 146
-
- Endurance, relation of, to low proteid diet, 210, 212
-
- Energy, availability of carbohydrates, as source of, 45
- basal exchange, 104
- carbohydrate as source of, 128
- carbohydrate as source of, in fasting, 81
- conservation of, in man, 103
- exchange, effect of muscular work, 109, 110, 113, 115
- exchange, factors modifying, 105, 106
- exchange, in relation to work, 119
- exchange proportional to body surface, 104, 105
- fat as source of, 128
- fat as source of, in fasting 81
- foods as source of, 15
- metabolism of, in man, 103
- of muscle contraction, 121
- origin of, in fasting, 81
- output, in man, 103
- produced by man, 106
- proteid as source of, 122, 123, 124, 129
- proteid as source of, in fasting, 81
- source of, in body, 21, 121
- source of, during fasting, in work, 125
-
- Enterokinase, 33
-
- Enzymes, deamidizing, 71, 72
- in gastric juice, 25
- in pancreatic juice, 32
- in saliva, 20
- intracellular, 63, 71, 72, 75
- reversible action of, 21
- specificity of, 21
-
- Equilibrium, carbon, 84
- nitrogenous, 78
- of body, 78
-
- Erepsin, 34
-
- Exchange, basal energy, 104
- of energy, as affected by work, 109, 110, 113, 115, 119
- of energy, factors modifying, 105, 106
- of energy, relation to body surface, 104, 105
-
- Exogenous metabolism, 145, 146
-
-
- F
-
- Fasting, carbohydrates as source of energy in, 81
- excretion of carbon during, 84
- excretion of nitrogen during, 80, 82, 84
- experiments on dogs, 82
- experiments on man, 80, 84
- fat as source of energy in, 81
- fuel value during, 86
- fuel value of fat, metabolized during, 86
- metabolism of fat during, 84
- nitrogen excretion during, 80, 82, 84
- origin of energy in, 81
- proteid as source of energy in, 81
- proteid metabolism during, 83
- relation of nitrogen excretion to work during, 125
- source of energy for work during, 125
-
- Fat, absorption, 43, 49
- absorption in dogs on low proteid diet, 233, 261
- as food, 6
- as fuel, 6
- as source of energy, 128
- as source of energy during work, 58
- as source of energy in fasting, 81
- composition of, 6
- digestion of, in intestine, 36
- digestion of, in stomach, 36
- fuel value of, 15
- fuel value of, metabolized during fasting, 86
- hydrolysis of, 36
- influence of feeding, on body fat, 44
- in foodstuffs, 7
- laying on of, from overfeeding, 98, 99
- metabolism during fasting, 84, 86
- respiratory quotient of, 107
- saponification of, 36
- specificity of body, 44
- synthesis of, 43
- utilization of, in dogs on low proteid diet, 261
-
- Fats, availability of, 13
- as heat producers, 58
- as proteid sparers, 92
-
- Fatty degeneration, 270
-
- Fatigue, relation to low proteid diet, 208
-
- Fenger, S., 293
-
- Fick and Wislicenus, on source of muscular energy, 121
-
- Fischer, Emil, 21
-
- Fisher, Irving, on endurance and low proteid diet, 210
- on method of indicating food values, 283
-
- Folin, Otto, theory of proteid metabolism, 144
-
- Food, absorption and utilization of, in dogs on low proteid diet, 261, 262
- amounts, required for proteid needs of body, 274
- as fuel, 6
- as source of energy, 15
- availability of, 12
- carbohydrates as, 6
- character of, in relation to bacterial processes in intestine, 292
- consumption and obesity, 270
- consumption, relation to prosperity, 160
- fats as, 6
- fuel value of, 274
- of fruitarians, 217
- in experiments on proteid requirement, athletes, 198
- in experiments on proteid requirement, professional men, 178, 180, 185
- in experiments on proteid requirement, soldiers, 198
- of Japanese, 219, 221
- fuel value requirement of, in dogs, 234, 236, 245–255
- influence of, on respiratory quotient, 107
- needs of body for, 169
- of man, 2
- proteids as, 3, 5
- real need of body for proteid, 272
- relation of appetite to, 162
- relation of nutritive value and cost of, 277
- requirements, factors modifying, 165
- temperance in, 166, 168
- value of fruits as, 290
- values of, method of indicating, 283
-
- Foods, respiratory, 58
- time, remain in stomach, 29, 30
-
- Foodstuffs, carbohydrate in, 7
- composition of, 7
- fat in, 7
- fuel value of, 7
- inorganic salts in, 7
- organic, 3
- plastic, 58
- proteid in, 7
- water in, 7
-
- Fritz, photograph of, 199
-
- Fruitarians, dietary of, 215
- fuel value of food of, 217
- proteid consumption of, 217
-
- Fruits, value of, as food, 290
-
- Fuel, carbohydrate as, 6
- fat as, 6
- proteid as, 6
-
- Fuel value, in fasting, 86
- of carbohydrate, 15
- of fat, 15
- of fat metabolized during fasting, 86
- of food, in experiments on proteid requirement, athletes, 188
- of food, in experiments on proteid requirement, professional men,
- 178, 180, 185
- of food, in experiments on proteid requirement, soldiers, 198
- of food of fruitarians, 217
- of food of Japanese, 219, 221
- of foods, 274
- of foodstuffs, 7
- of proteid, 15
- of proteid metabolized during fasting, 86
- requirement in the dog, experiments by Munk, 234
- requirement in the dog, experiments by Rosenheim, 236
- requirement in the dog, experiments by Jägerroos, 236
- requirement in the dog, experiments by author, 245–255
-
-
- G
-
- Gastric digestion, importance of, 30
- object of, 30
- products of, 26
-
- Gastric juice, action on milk, 26
- composition of, 25, 26
- functions of, 25, 27
- hydrochloric acid in, 25, 26
- influence of diet upon flow of, 25
- pepsin in, 25
- psychical stimulation of, 24
-
- Gastric secretion, 24
-
- Gelatin, as food, 4, 5
-
- Glässner, _see_ Caspari and Glässner
-
- Gliadin, cleavage products of, 70, 259
-
- Glutaminic acid, 34, 67, 70, 259
-
- Glutenin, cleavage products of, 259
-
- Glycerin, 36
-
- Glycocoll, 67
-
- Glycogen, formation from proteid, 130
- in liver, 46
- relation to sugar of blood, 46
-
- Growth, influence of diet on, in rats, 239
-
- Guanase, 71
-
- Guanin, 72
-
-
- H
-
- Habit, in dietetics, 159
-
- Heat, furnished by fats and carbohydrates, 58
- production during sleep, 104, 105
- production in work, 110
-
- Herbivora, bacterial flora in intestine of, 292
-
- Herter, C. A., on bacterial flora, 292
-
- Hirschfeld, Felix, on minimum proteid requirement, 170
-
- Histidin, 34, 68, 70
-
- Hofmeister, Franz, on sugar assimilation, 47
-
- Hunt, Reid, on low proteid diet and body resistance, 226
-
- Hunter, Andrew, _see_ Watson and Hunter
-
- Hydrochloric acid, in gastric juice, 25, 26
-
- Hydrolysis, of fats, 36
-
- Hypoxanthin, 72
-
-
- I
-
- Indol, 37
-
- Inorganic salts, and renal activity, 298, 300
- in foodstuffs, 7
- in nutrition, 2
- relation to diet, 299, 300
-
- Intemperance in diet, effects of, 270
-
- Intermediary metabolism, _see_ Exogenous metabolism
-
- Intestine, absorption in, 37
- chemical changes in, 33
- putrefaction in, 37
- bacterial flora of, 292
-
- Invertase, 40
-
-
- J
-
- Jägerroos, B. H., on proteid requirement in the dog, 236
-
- Japanese Army and Navy, rations of, 224
-
- Japanese, dietary of, 225
- fuel value of food of, 219, 221
- proteid consumption by, 219, 221
-
-
- K
-
- Katabolism, 50
- nature of proteid, 75
- oxygen in, 62
- relation to intracellular enzymes, 75
-
- Klemperer, on proteid requirement, 171
-
-
- L
-
- Lactase, 40
-
- Lavoisier, views on oxidation, 56
-
- Leucin, 34, 67, 70, 259
-
- Leucosin, cleavage products of, 259
-
- Levulose, assimilation limits of, 47
-
- Lewin, _see_ Bergell and Lewin
-
- Liebig, views on oxidation, 57, 120
-
- Lipase, 32
-
- Lipolysis, by pancreatic juice, 36
-
- Liver, function of, as regulator of carbohydrate, 45
- glycogen in, 46
- synthesis of proteid by, 48
-
- Luxus consumption, of proteid, 59
-
- Lüthje, 101
-
- Lymphatics, absorption of food products by, 44
-
- Lysin, 34, 68, 70, 259
-
-
- M
-
- Maltose, 21, 37
- behavior when introduced into blood, 39
-
- Man, conservation of energy in, 103
- energy produced by, 106
- experiments on oxygen consumption in, 126
- fasting experiments on, 80, 84
- food of, 2
- metabolism of energy in, 103
- minimum proteid requirement in, 170, 171, 172, 174–208
- work experiments on, 110–116
-
- Mastication, importance of, 23
-
- Meat, influence on growth in rats, 239
-
- Metabolic changes as influencing respiratory quotient, 108
-
- Metabolism, 51
- and old age, 296
- endogenous, 145
- exogenous, 145
- Folin’s theory of proteid, 144
- influence of proteid on, 83
- influence of carbohydrates on proteid, 92, 94, 95, 96, 97
- influence of fat on proteid, 92, 93, 96, 97
- influence of proteid on proteid, 88
- of energy in man, 103
- of fat during fasting, 84, 86
- oxidation in, 60
- of proteid during fasting, 83, 86
- Pflüger’s theory of proteid, 138
- processes of, 51
- significance of exogenous and endogenous proteid, 49
- significance of proteid, 131
- Voit’s theory of proteid, 134
-
- Methyl glycocoll, _see_ Sarcosin
-
- Methyl guanidin, 74
-
- Milk sugar, assimilation limit of, 47
- behavior when introduced into blood, 39
- utilization of, 40
-
- Mineral matter, _see_ Inorganic salts
-
- Minimum proteid requirement, 59
-
- Mixed diet, philosophy of a, 92, 276
-
- Monotony of diet, influence of, 242
-
- Morphotic proteid, 134
-
- Munk, Immanuel, on proteid requirement in the dog, 232
-
- Muscular movements of stomach, 27–30
-
-
- N
-
- Needs of body for food, 169
-
- Nephritis, in relation to diet, 297
-
- Neumann, R. O., on low proteid diet, 286
-
- Nitrogen, distribution of, in the urine in relation to diet, 144
- needs by body, 4
- utilization of, in dogs on low proteid diet, 262
-
- Nitrogen excretion, as influenced by proteid, 59, 87, 90
- during fasting, 80, 84
- during work in fasting, 125
- during excessive work, 114, 127
- during hard work on proteid diet, 123, 124
- in experiments on proteid requirement, in dogs, 245, 249, 250, 251,
- 252, 255
- in experiments on true proteid requirement, athletes, 187, 188
- in experiments on true proteid requirement, professional men, 176,
- 177, 181, 185
- in experiments on true proteid requirement, soldiers, 199, 200, 201
- relation to work, 122, 123, 124
-
- Nitrogen equilibrium, on low proteid diet, 176, 177, 181, 188, 200,
- 201, 249, 250, 251, 252, 255
-
- Nitrogen requirement, in dogs, 234–236, 245–255
- in man, 180, 184, 185, 187, 198, 227
- relation to body-weight, 184, 248
-
- Nitrogenous equilibrium, 78
-
- Nitrogenous metabolism, theory of Folin, 144
- theory of Pflüger, 138
- theory of Voit, 134
-
- Normal diets, 155
-
- Nutrition, factors in, 16, 17
- influence of chemical character of proteid on, 256
- inorganic salts, as aids in, 2
- physiological economy in, 264
- purpose of, 2
-
- Nutritive balance, as affected by various factors, 117, 118
-
- Nuclease, 71
-
- Nucleoproteid, character of, 3
- cleavage products of, 71
-
-
- O
-
- Obesity, relation to food consumption, 270
-
- Old age, metabolism in, 296
-
- Osborne and Clapp, on chemistry of proteids of wheat kernel, 258
-
- Osmosis, as factor in absorption, 41
-
- Overeating, evil effects of, 270
-
- Overfeeding, in laying on of fat, 98, 99
-
- Oxidase, xanthin, 73
-
- Oxidases, 64
-
- Oxidation, in metabolism, 60
- nature of, in the body, 60
- older views regarding, 52
- relation to enzymes, 75
- site of, in the body, 62
- value of respiratory quotient in determination of substances
- undergoing, 125
- views of Lavoisier on, 56
- views of Liebig on, 57, 120
-
- Oxidative cleavage, 61
-
- Oxygen, in katabolism, 62
- relation to decompositions in the body, 61
- relation to proteid decomposition, 59
-
- Oxygen consumption, in climbing, 116
- in relation to work, 123
- in standing at rest, 116
- in walking, 116
-
-
- P
-
- Pancreatic digestion, of proteids, 34
- products of, 34, 67
- products of, of starch, 37
-
- Pancreatic juice, composition of, 32
- condition of trypsin in, 33
- enzymes in, 32
- secretion of, 31, 32
- sodium carbonate in, 32
-
- Paths of absorption, 44
-
- Pawlow, on adaptation of saliva, 18
-
- Pepsin, in gastric juice, 25, 26
-
- Peptones, 67
- absorption of, 41
- cleavage by erepsin, 34
- effects when injected into blood, 41
- formed in gastric digestion, 26
-
- Pflüger, E., theory of proteid metabolism, 138
- views on muscle work, 123
-
- Phenol, 37
-
- Phloridzin diabetes, 130
-
- Phosphorus, excretion of, in relation to work, 123
-
- Photograph, of athlete, 190
- of Fritz, 199
-
- Photographs, of dogs, 248
- of soldiers, 193
-
- Physical endurance, _see_ Endurance
-
- Physiological economy in nutrition, 264
-
- Plastic foodstuffs, 58
-
- Poisons, relation of body resistance to, on low proteid diet, 226
-
- Polypeptid, 35
-
- Portal vein, absorption of food products by, 45
-
- Processes of metabolism, 51
-
- Products, of cleavage of wheat kernel proteids, 259
- of gastric digestion, 26
- of pancreatic digestion, 37, 67
- of proteid cleavage, 70
- of putrefaction in intestine, 38
- of salivary digestion, 21
-
- Products of digestion, absorption of, 44
-
- Professional men, fuel value of food on low proteid diet, 178, 180, 185
- nitrogen equilibrium of, on low proteid diet, 176, 177, 181
- true proteid requirement of, 174
-
- Progeny, influence of meat diet on, in rats, 240
-
- Prosperity, relation to food consumption, 160
-
- Proteid, absorption of, in dogs on low proteid diet, 233, 262
- absorption of cleavage products, 47
- amounts of food required to supply needs of body for, 272
- as food, 3
- as fuel, 6
- as glycogen former, 130
- as source of energy, 122, 123, 124, 129
- as source of energy, in fasting, 81
- availability of, 12
- body-weight on diet low in, 170–175, 181, 185, 190, 199, 245, 249,
- 250, 251
- carbon moiety of, 129
- chemical basis of protoplasm, 51
- circulating, 134
- cleavage products of, 70
- composition of, 3, 69
- consumption by fruitarians, 217
- consumption by Japanese, 219, 221
- decomposition by oxygen, 59
- decomposition in work, 58
- excessive consumption of, relation to disease, 269
- effect of diet exclusively of, on rats, 239
- effect on dogs of diet low in, 233, 234, 237, 245–255
- fat absorption in dogs on diet low in, 261
- food, real need of body for, 272
- formation of carbohydrate from, 129
- fuel value of, 15
- fuel value of, metabolized during fasting, 86
- influence of chemical character of, on nutrition, 256
- diet exclusively of, upon progeny of rats, 240
- diet low in, on high proteid animals, 231, 233, 243
- on excretion of nitrogen, 59, 87, 90
- on metabolism, 83
- on metabolism of, 88
- in foodstuffs, 7
- katabolism, 75
- luxus consumption of, 59
- metabolized during fasting, 86
- minimum requirement, 59
- morphotic, 134
- need of body for, 268
- nitrogen equilibrium on diet low in, 176, 177, 181, 200, 201, 245,
- 249, 250, 251, 252, 255
- overfeeding with, 98
- reconstruction of, during absorption, 42
- relation of endurance to diet low in, 210, 212
- relation of fatigue to diet low in, 208
- respiratory quotient of, 107
- resistance of body to poisons on diet low in, 226
- safety in relation to diet low in, 231
- significance of complete cleavage of, 35
- storing of, 92, 98, 99, 100
- strength tests on diet low in, 203, 206
- synthesis, 48, 49, 68
- utilization of fat in dogs on diet low in, 261
- utilization of nitrogen in dogs on diet low in, 262
- work done at expense of, 58
-
- Proteid diet, experiments of Neumann on low, 286
- body-weight of dogs on low, 245, 249, 250, 251
- body-weight of men on low, 170–175, 181, 185, 190, 199
- in relation to nitrogen excretion during hard work, 123, 124
- vegetable foods in relation to, 291
-
- Proteid metabolism, influence of carbohydrate on, 92, 94, 95, 96, 97
- influence of fat on, 92, 93, 96, 97
- influence of proteid on, 59, 87, 90
- Folin’s theory of, 144
- Pflüger’s theory of, 138
- significance of, 131
- Voit’s theory of, 134
-
- Proteid requirement, fuel value of food in experiments on, athletes, 188
- fuel value of food in experiments on, professional men, 178, 180, 185
- fuel value of food in experiments on, soldiers, 198
- in dogs, experiments of Jägerroos, 236
- in dogs, experiments of Munk, 232
- in dogs, experiments of Rosenheim, 234
- in dogs, experiments of author, 243
- in man, 169, 170, 171, 172, 174–202
- nitrogen excretion in experiments on, athletes, 186, 187, 188
- nitrogen excretion in experiments on, in dogs, 245, 249, 250, 251,
- 252, 255
- nitrogen excretion in experiments on, professional men, 177, 180, 185
- nitrogen excretion in experiments on, soldiers, 197, 200, 201
- relation to body-weight, 184, 188, 198, 227
- sample diets in experiments on, 178, 182, 189, 195
-
- Proteids, as tissue formers, 58
- of wheat kernel, cleavage products of, 259
-
- Proteoses, 26, 67, 69
- absorption of, 41
- cleavage by erepsin, 34
- effects when injected into blood, 41
- primary, 67, 69
- secondary, 67, 69
-
- Protoplasm, 51
-
- Protoproteose, 67, 69
-
- Ptyalin, 20
-
- Purin bases, 71, 72
- relation to uric acid, 73
-
- Putrefaction, in intestine, 37
- products of, 38
-
-
- R
-
- Rats, effects of exclusive proteid diet on, 239
- effects of rice on, 240
- influence of meat diet on progeny of, 240
-
- Renal activity, and diet, 297
- and inorganic salts, 298, 299, 300
-
- Rennin, in gastric juice, 26
-
- Resistance of body to poisons, relation to low proteid diet, 226
-
- Respiration calorimeter, 102
-
- Respiratory foods, 58
-
- Respiratory quotient, 107
- influence of foods on, 107, 126
- influence of metabolic change on, 108
- of foodstuffs, 107
- relation to work, 125
- value of, in determination of substances oxidized, 125
-
- Rest, carbon dioxide output during, 111
- influence of, on oxygen consumption, 126
- influence of, on respiratory quotient, 126
-
- Rice, influence of, on growth in rats, 240
-
- Rosenheim, Theodor, on proteid requirement in the dog, 234
-
-
- S
-
- Safety of low proteid standards, 231
-
- Saliva, adaptation of, 18, 19
- function of, 20
- psychical secretion of, 18
- secretion of, 17, 18
-
- Salivary digestion, in stomach, 23
- products of, 21
-
- Salts, _see_ Inorganic salts
-
- Saponification of fats, 36
-
- Sarcosin, 74
-
- Schnyder, 115
-
- Scientific research and typhoid fever, 267
-
- Seasons of the year, relation to diet, 296
-
- Secretin, 32
-
- Secretion, of gastric juice, 24
- of pancreatic juice, 31, 32
- of saliva, 17, 18
-
- Sivén, on proteid requirement, 89
-
- Skatol, 38
-
- Sleep, heat production during, 104, 105
-
- Soaps, 36
-
- Sodium carbonate, in pancreatic juice, 32
-
- Soldiers, fuel value of food in experiments on proteid requirement
- of, 198
- nitrogen equilibrium in experiments on proteid requirement
- of, 200, 201
- photographs of, 193
- proteid requirement of, 192
- sample diet in experiments on proteid requirement of, 195
- strength tests in experiments on proteid requirement of, 203
-
- Specificity of body fat, 44
-
- Standard diets, 155
-
- Standing at rest, oxygen consumption in, 116
-
- Starch digestion, products of, 21, 37
-
- Steapsin, 36
-
- Stomach, absorption from the, 31
- as a reservoir, 31
- digestion in the, 25–31
- fat digestion in the, 36
- muscular movements of the, 27–30
- salivary digestion in the, 23
- time foods remain in the, 29, 30
-
- Storing of proteid, 92, 98, 99, 100
-
- Strength tests, on low proteid diet, athletes, 206
- on low proteid diet, soldiers, 203
-
- Sugar, in blood, 45
- in blood, relation to glycogen, 46
-
- Sugars, behavior when introduced into blood, 39
- selective action in absorption of, 47
-
- Sulphur, excretion of, relation to work, 123
-
- Synthesis, of fat, 43
- of proteid, 48, 49, 68
-
-
- T
-
- Temperance in diet, 166, 168, 270
-
- Tissue formers, 58
-
- Tissue metabolism, _see_ Endogenous metabolism
-
- Trypsin, 32
- condition in pancreatic juice, 33
-
- Tryptophan, 67
-
- Typhoid fever and scientific research, 267
-
- Tyrosin, 34, 67, 70, 259
-
-
- U
-
- Underfeeding, dangers of, 214
-
- Urea, 74
- excretion of, influence of diet on, 144
- relation of, to creatin and creatinin, 74
-
- Uric acid, 73
- excretion of, as influenced by diet, 144
- relation of, to xanthin bases, 73
-
- Urine, relation of diet to nitrogen distribution in the, 144
-
- Utilization, of dextrose, 40
- of disaccharides, 40
- of fat in dogs on low proteid diet, 261
- of nitrogen in dogs on low proteid diet, 262
-
-
- V
-
- Variety in diet, 229, 242
-
- Vegetable diet, influence upon dogs, 254, 256
-
- Vegetable foods, relation to low proteid dietary, 291
-
- Vegetables, cellulose in, influence on digestion, 263
-
- Voit, Carl, on minimum proteid requirement, 171
- theory of proteid metabolism, 59, 134
-
-
- W
-
- Walking, oxygen consumption in, 116
-
- Water in foodstuffs, 7
-
- Watson and Hunter, influence of diet on growth in rats, 239
-
- Wheat kernel proteids, cleavage products of, 259
-
- Weight, _see_ Body-weight
-
- Wislicenus, _see_ Fick and Wislicenus
-
- Work, carbon dioxide excretion in relation to, 123
- carbon dioxide excretion during, 111, 112
- due to proteid decomposition, 58
- effect of, on energy exchange, 109, 110, 113, 115
- experiments on man, 110, 111, 112, 113, 114, 115, 116
- heat production in, 110
- influence of, on oxygen consumption, 126
- influence of, on respiratory quotient, 126
- nitrogen excretion during excessive, 127
- nitrogen excretion during fasting in, 125
- proteid decomposition in, 58
- relation of diet to, 126
- to energy exchange, 119
- fats and carbohydrates to, 58
- nitrogen excretion on proteid diet to hard, 123, 124
- nitrogen excretion to proteid diet to hard, 122, 123, 124
- relation of oxygen consumption to, 123
- phosphorus excretion to, 123
- sulphur excretion to, 123
- respiratory quotient in relation to, 125
- source of energy during fasting in, 125
- views of Argutinsky on muscle, 123
- views of Pflüger on muscle, 123
- views of Voit on muscle, 59, 134
-
-
- X
-
- Xanthin, 72
-
- Xanthin oxidase, 73
-
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-<p style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of The nutrition of man, by Russell H. Chittenden</p>
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
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-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online
-at <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you
-are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the
-country where you are located before using this eBook.
-</div>
-
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: The nutrition of man</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Russell H. Chittenden</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: August 24, 2022 [eBook #68830]</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</p>
- <p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em; text-align:left'>Produced by: Thiers Halliwell, Mark C. Orton and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)</p>
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE NUTRITION OF MAN ***</div>
-
-<div class="transnote">
-<p><b><a id="Transcribers_notes"></a>Transcriber’s notes</b>:</p>
-
-<p>The text of this e-book has been preserved in its original form
-apart from correction of the typographic errors listed below.
-Illustrations have been repositioned adjacent to relevant tabulated
-data, and the List of Illustrations adjusted accordingly. On
-p.72 an image of the Xanthin formula incorrectly shows a double
-bond between a carbon and nitrogen atom – the correct formula
-is shown on the next page – and there is a date discrepancy on
-p. 248 between the text and the illustration caption (November
-18/February 27). <span class="htmlonly">Page numbers are shown in
-the right margin and footnotes are located at the end.</span> <span
-class="epubonly">Footnotes are located at the end.</span></p>
-
-<p>Typographic corrections:<br />
-&emsp;enyzmes → enzymes<br />
-&emsp;oxgyen → oxygen<br />
-&emsp;enyzme → enzyme<br />
-&emsp;Futher → Further<br />
-&emsp;mechancial → mechanical<br />
-&emsp;rythmical → rhythmical<br />
-&emsp;economcially → economically<br />
-&emsp;circulirinden → circulirenden<br />
-&emsp;SUBJECT → SUBJECTS<br />
-&emsp;equibrium → equilibrium<br />
-&emsp;availibility → availability<br />
-&emsp;(166) grams → (166 grams)<br />
-&emsp;accusstomed → accustomed<br />
-&emsp;Glassner → Glässner<br />
-&emsp;strach → starch</p>
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="titlepage">
-<h1><span class="t1">THE</span>
-
-<span class="t2">NUTRITION OF MAN</span></h1>
-
-<div class="tp1">BY</div>
-
-<div class="tp2">RUSSELL H. CHITTENDEN, <span class="smcap">Ph.D.</span>, LL.D., <span class="smcap">Sc.D.</span></div>
-
-<div class="tp3">AUTHOR OF “PHYSIOLOGICAL ECONOMY IN NUTRITION,” ETC.<br />
-PROFESSOR OF PHYSIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY<br />
-AND DIRECTOR OF THE SHEFFIELD<br />
-SCIENTIFIC SCHOOL OF YALE UNIVERSITY</div>
-
-
-<div class="tp4">WITH ILLUSTRATIONS</div>
-
-
-<div class="tp5">NEW YORK</div>
-<div class="tp6">FREDERICK A. STOKES COMPANY</div>
-<div class="tp6"><span class="smcap">Publishers</span></div>
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="center fs80 mt10em">
-<i>Copyright, 1907</i>,<br />
-<span class="smcap">By Frederick A. Stokes Company</span><br />
-<br />
-<i>All rights reserved</i><br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-May, 1907<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<i>FIFTH PRINTING</i>
-</div>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="PREFACE">PREFACE</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>The present book is the outcome of a course of eight lectures
-delivered before the Lowell Institute of Boston in the
-early part of 1907.</p>
-
-<p>In this presentation of the subject the attempt has been
-made to give a systematic account of our knowledge regarding
-some of the more important processes of nutrition, with
-special reference to the needs of the body for food. In doing
-this, the facts accumulated by painstaking observations and
-experiments during recent years in our laboratory have been
-incorporated with data from other sources and brought into
-harmony, so far as possible, with the modern trend of physiological
-thought.</p>
-
-<p>Numerous experimental results, hitherto unpublished, have
-been introduced, notably in Chapter VII, in which a few of
-the data recently obtained in our laboratory with dogs are
-presented in some detail, since they afford evidence of the
-error of the current arguments concerning the necessity of a
-high proteid intake by man, as based on the results of earlier
-investigators with high proteid animals.</p>
-
-<p>It is hoped that the facts and arguments here presented
-will help to arouse a more general interest in the subject of
-human nutrition, as right methods of living promise so much
-for the health and happiness of the individual and of the
-community.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_vii">vii</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CONTENTS">CONTENTS</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<div class="center">
-<table id="toc" class="fs100" summary="table of contents">
-<tr><td class="chap"><div>CHAPTER I</div></td> <td><span class="lowercase smcap fs80">PAGE</span></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="title"><span class="smcap">Foods and their Digestion</span></td> <td class="page"><div><a href="#Page_1">1</a></div></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="topics"><span class="smcap">Topics</span>: The purpose of nutrition. The food of man. Proteid foods.
-Carbohydrate foods. Fats. Food as fuel. Composition of foodstuffs.
-Availability of foods. Food as source of energy. Various factors in the
-nourishment of the body. Processes of digestion. Secretion of saliva.
-Function of saliva. Enzymes. Reversible action of enzymes. Specificity
-of enzymes. Mastication. Gastric secretion. Components of gastric
-juice. Action of gastric juice. Muscular movements of stomach. Time
-foods remain in stomach. Importance of stomach digestion. Processes
-of the small intestine. Secretion of pancreatic juice. Chemical changes
-in small intestine. Destruction of proteid food. Significance of the
-breaking down of proteid. Change of fatty foods and carbohydrates in
-intestine. Digestion practically complete at end of small intestine. Putrefaction
-held in check. Digestion a prelude to utilization of food.</td></tr>
-
-
-<tr><td class="chap"><div>CHAPTER II</div></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="title"><span class="smcap">Absorption, Assimilation, and the Processes of Metabolism</span></td> <td class="page"><div><a href="#Page_39">39</a></div></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="topics"><span class="smcap">Topics</span>: Physiological peculiarities in absorption. Chemical changes in
-epithelial walls of intestine. Two pathways for absorbed material. Function
-of the liver as a regulator of carbohydrate. Absorption of proteid
-products. Assimilation of food products. Anabolism. Katabolism.
-Metabolism. Processes of metabolism. Older views regarding oxidation.
-Discoveries of Lavoisier. The views of Liebig. Theory of luxus consumption.
-Oxidation in the body not simple combustion. Oxygen not the
-cause of the decompositions. Oxidation not confined to any one place.
-Intracellular enzymes. Living cells the guiding power in katabolism.
-Some intermediary products of tissue metabolism. Chemical structure of
-different proteids. Decomposition products of nucleoproteids. Relation
-to uric acid. Action of specific intracellular enzymes. Creatin and
-creatinin. Relation to urea. Proteid katabolism a series of progressive
-chemical decompositions. Intracellular enzymes as the active agents.</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="chap"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_viii">viii</span><div>CHAPTER III</div></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="title"><span class="smcap">The Balance of Nutrition</span></td> <td class="page"><div><a href="#Page_77">77</a></div></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="topics"><span class="smcap">Topics</span>: Body equilibrium. Nitrogen equilibrium. Carbon equilibrium.
-Loss of nitrogen during fasting. Influence of previous diet on loss of
-nitrogen in fasting. Output of carbon during fasting. Influence of pure
-proteid diet on output of nitrogen. Influence of fat on proteid metabolism.
-Effect of carbohydrate on nitrogen metabolism. Storing up of proteid by
-the body. Transformation of energy in the body. Respiration calorimeter.
-Basal energy exchange of the body. Circumstances influencing energy
-exchange. Effect of food on heat production. Respiratory quotient and
-its significance. Influence of muscle work on energy exchange. Elimination
-of carbon dioxide during work and with different diets. Effect of
-excessive muscular work on energy exchange. Oxygen consumption under
-different conditions. Output of matter and energy subject to great variation.
-Body equilibrium and approximate nitrogen balance to be expected
-in health.</td></tr>
-
-
-<tr><td class="chap"><div>CHAPTER IV</div></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="title"><span class="smcap">Source of the Energy of Muscle Work, with Some Theories
-of Proteid Metabolism</span></td> <td class="page"><div><a href="#Page_119">119</a></div></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="topics"><span class="smcap">Topics</span>: Relation of muscle work to energy exchange. Views of Liebig.
-Experimental evidence. Relation of nitrogen excretion to muscle work.
-Significance of the respiratory quotient in determining nature of the material
-oxidized. Fats and carbohydrates as source of energy by muscles.
-Utilization of proteid as a source of energy. Formation of carbohydrate
-from proteid. Significance of proteid metabolism. Theories of Carl Voit.
-Morphotic proteid. Circulating proteid. General conception of proteid
-metabolism on the basis of Voit’s theories. Pflüger’s views of proteid
-metabolism. Rapidity of elimination of food nitrogen. Methods by which
-nitrogen is split off from proteid. Theories of Folin. Significance of
-creatinin and of the percentage distribution of excreted nitrogen. Endogenous
-or tissue metabolism. Exogenous or intermediate metabolism.
-Needs of the body for proteid food possibly satisfied by quantity sufficient
-to meet the demands of tissue or endogenous metabolism. Bearings of
-Folin’s views on current theories and general facts of proteid metabolism.
-Large proteid reserve and voluminous exogenous metabolism probably not
-needed. Importance of feeding experiments in determining the true value
-of different views.</td></tr>
-
-
-<tr><td class="chap"><div>CHAPTER V</div></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="title"><span class="smcap">Dietary Habits and True Food Requirements</span></td> <td class="page"><div><a href="#Page_153">153</a></div></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="topics"><span class="smcap">Topics</span>: Dietetic customs of mankind. Origin of dietary standards. True
-food requirements. Arguments based on custom and habit. Relationship<span class="pagenum" id="Page_ix">ix</span>
-between food consumption and prosperity. Erroneous ideas regarding
-nutrition. Commercial success and national wealth not the result of liberal
-dietary habits. Instinct and craving not wise guides to follow in choice
-and quantity of food. Physiological requirements and dietary standards
-not to be based on habits and cravings. Old-time views regarding temperate
-use of food. The sayings of Thomas Cogan. The teachings of
-Cornaro. Experimental results obtained by various physiologists. Work
-of the writer on true proteid requirements. Studies with professional men.
-Nitrogen equilibrium with small amounts of food. Sample dietaries.
-Simplicity in diet. Nitrogen requirement per kilogram of body-weight.
-Fuel value of the daily food. Experiments with University athletes.
-Nitrogen balance and food consumption. Sample dietaries. Adequacy
-of a simple diet.</td></tr>
-
-
-<tr><td class="chap"><div>CHAPTER VI</div></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="title"><span class="smcap">Further Experiments and Observations Bearing on True
-Food Requirements</span></td> <td class="page"><div><a href="#Page_191">191</a></div></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="topics"><span class="smcap">Topics</span>: Dietary experiments with a detail of soldiers from the United
-States Army. General character of the army ration. Samples of the
-daily dietary adopted. Rate of nitrogen metabolism attained. Effect on
-body-weight. Nitrogen balance with lowered proteid consumption. Influence
-of low proteid on muscular strength of soldiers and athletes.
-Effect on fatigue. Effect on physical endurance. Fisher’s experiments
-on endurance. Dangers of underfeeding. Dietary observations on fruitarians.
-Observations on Japanese. Recent dietary changes in Japanese
-army and navy. Observations of Dr. Hunt on resistance of low proteid
-animals to poisons. Conclusions.</td></tr>
-
-
-<tr><td class="chap"><div>CHAPTER VII</div></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="title"><span class="smcap">The Effect of Low Proteid Diet on High Proteid Animals</span></td> <td class="page"><div><a href="#Page_229">229</a></div></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="topics"><span class="smcap">Topics</span>: A wide variety of foods quite consistent with temperance in diet.
-Safety of low proteid standards considered. Arguments based on the
-alleged effects of low proteid diet on high proteid animals. Experiments
-of Immanuel Munk with dogs. Experiments of Rosenheim. Experiments
-of Jägerroos. Comments on the above experiments. The experiments of
-Watson and Hunter on rats. The writer’s experiments with dogs. Details
-of the results obtained with six dogs. Comparison of the results with
-those of previous investigators. Effect of a purely vegetable diet on dogs.
-Different nutritive value of specific proteids considered. Possible influence
-of difference in chemical constitution of individual proteids. Effect of low
-proteid diet on the absorption and utilization of food materials in the intestine
-of dogs. General conclusions from the results of experiments with
-animals.</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="chap"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_x">x</span><div>CHAPTER VIII</div></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="title"><span class="smcap">Practical Applications with Some Additional Data</span></td> <td class="page"><div><a href="#Page_266">266</a></div></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="topics"><span class="smcap">Topics</span>: Proper application of the results of scientific research helpful to
-mankind. Dietary habits should be brought into conformity with the true
-needs of the body. The peculiar position of proteid foods emphasized.
-The evil effects of overeating. What the new dietary standards really
-involve. The actual amounts of foodstuffs required. Relation of nutritive
-value to cost of foods. The advantages of simplicity in diet. A sample
-dietary for a man of 70 kilograms body-weight. A new method of indicating
-food values. Moderation in the daily dietary leads toward vegetable
-foods. The experiments of Dr. Neumann. The value of fruits as food.
-The merits of animal and vegetable proteids considered in relation to the
-bacterial processes in the intestine. A notable case of simplicity in diet.
-Intelligent modification of diet to the temporary needs of the body. Diet
-in summer and winter contrasted. Value of greater protection to the
-kidneys. Conclusion.</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tal pt15">INDEX</td> <td class="page pt15"><div><a href="#Page_303">303</a></div></td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_xi">xi</span></p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="LIST_OF_ILLUSTRATIONS">LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-
-<div class="center">
-<table id="loi" summary="list of illustrations">
-<tr><td></td> <td class="tar fs70"><span class="hide">FACING </span>PAGE</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="main">Photograph of one of the athletes</td> <td class="page"><a href="#Page_190">190</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="main">Photograph of soldiers taken at the close of the experiment</td> <td class="page"><a href="#Page_194">194</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="main">Photograph of soldiers taken at the close of the experiment</td> <td class="page"><a href="#Page_194">194</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="main">Photograph of Fritz at the close of the experiment</td> <td class="page"><a href="#Page_200">200</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="main">Photographs of the dogs experimented with</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="subj1">Subject No. 5 August 19, 1905</td> <td class="page1"><div><a href="#Page_248">248</a></div></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj1">Subject No. 5 November 18, 1905</td> <td class="page1"><div><a href="#Page_248">248</a></div></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj1">Subject No. 5 April 24, 1906</td> <td class="page1"><div><a href="#Page_248">248</a></div></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj2">Subject No. 5 June 27, 1906</td> <td class="page2"><div><a href="#Page_248">248</a></div></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="subj1">Subject No. 3 August 19, 1905</td> <td class="page1"><div><a href="#Page_251">251</a></div></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj1">Subject No. 3 November 18, 1905</td> <td class="page1"><div><a href="#Page_251">251</a></div></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj1">Subject No. 3 April 24, 1906</td> <td class="page1"><div><a href="#Page_251">251</a></div></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj2">Subject No. 3 June 27, 1906</td> <td class="page2"><div><a href="#Page_251">251</a></div></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="subj1">Subject No. 13 January 2, 1906</td> <td class="page1"><div><a href="#Page_252">252</a></div></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj1">Subject No. 13 February 27,1906</td> <td class="page1"><div><a href="#Page_252">252</a></div></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj1">Subject No. 13 April 24, 1906</td> <td class="page1"><div><a href="#Page_252">252</a></div></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj2">Subject No. 13 June 19, 1906</td> <td class="page2"><div><a href="#Page_252">252</a></div></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="subj1">Subject No. 15 January 2, 1906</td> <td class="page1"><div><a href="#Page_252">252</a></div></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj1">Subject No. 15 February 27, 1906</td> <td class="page1"><div><a href="#Page_252">252</a></div></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj1">Subject No. 15 April 24, 1906</td> <td class="page1"><div><a href="#Page_252">252</a></div></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj2">Subject No. 15 June 19, 1906</td> <td class="page2"><div><a href="#Page_252">252</a></div></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="subj1">Subject No. 20 January 2, 1906</td> <td class="page1"><div><a href="#Page_252">252</a></div></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj1">Subject No. 20 February 27, 1906</td> <td class="page1"><div><a href="#Page_252">252</a></div></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj1">Subject No. 20 April 24, 1906</td> <td class="page1"><div><a href="#Page_252">252</a></div></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj2">Subject No. 20 June 19, 1906</td> <td class="page2"><div><a href="#Page_252">252</a></div></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="subj1">Subject No. 17 January 2, 1906</td> <td class="page1"><div><a href="#Page_256">256</a></div></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj1">Subject No. 17 February 27, 1906</td> <td class="page1"><div><a href="#Page_256">256</a></div></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj1">Subject No. 17 April 24, 1906</td> <td class="page1"><div><a href="#Page_256">256</a></div></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj2">Subject No. 17 June 27, 1906</td> <td class="page2"><div><a href="#Page_256">256</a></div></td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="THE_NUTRITION_OF_MAN">THE NUTRITION OF MAN</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_1">1</span></p>
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_I">CHAPTER I</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="chaptitle">FOODS AND THEIR DIGESTION</p>
-
-<p class="chaptopics"><span class="smcap">Topics</span>: The purpose of nutrition. The food of man. Proteid foods.
-Carbohydrate foods. Fats. Food as fuel. Composition of foodstuffs.
-Availability of foods. Food as source of energy. Various factors in
-the nourishment of the body. Processes of digestion. Secretion of
-saliva. Function of saliva. Enzymes. Reversible action of enzymes.
-Specificity of enzymes. Mastication. Gastric secretion. Components
-of gastric juice. Action of gastric juice. Muscular movements of
-stomach. Time foods remain in stomach. Importance of stomach
-digestion. Processes of the small intestine. Secretion of pancreatic
-juice. Chemical changes in small intestine. Destruction of proteid
-food. Significance of the breaking down of proteid. Change of fatty
-foods and carbohydrates in intestine. Digestion practically complete
-at end of small intestine. Putrefaction held in check. Digestion
-a prelude to utilization of food.</p>
-
-
-<p>One of the great mysteries of life is the power of growth,
-that harmonious development of composite organs and
-tissues from simple protoplasmic cells, with the ultimate
-formation of a complex organism with its orderly adjustment
-of structure and function. Equally mysterious is that wonderful
-power of rehabilitation by which the cells of the body
-are able to renew their living substance and to maintain
-their ceaseless activity through a period, it may be of fourscore
-years, before succumbing to the inevitable fate that
-awaits all organic structures. This bodily activity, visible
-and invisible, is the result of a third mysterious process,
-more or less continuous as long as life endures, of chemical<span class="pagenum" id="Page_2">2</span>
-disintegration, decomposition, and oxidation, by which arises
-the evolution of energy to maintain the heat of the body and
-the power for mental and physical work.</p>
-
-<p>These three main functions constitute the purpose of nutrition.
-The growth of the adult man from the tiny cell or
-germ that marks his simple beginning is at the expense of
-the food material he absorbs and assimilates. The rehabilitation
-of the cells, or the composite tissues of the fully developed
-organism, is accomplished through utilization of the
-daily food, whereby cell substance is renewed and all losses
-made good. The energy which manifests itself in the form
-of heat and mechanical or mental work, <i>i. e.</i>, the energy by
-which the vital machinery is maintained in ceaseless activity,
-comes from the breaking down of the food materials by means
-of which, as the saying goes, the body is nourished. The
-body thus becomes the centre of different lines of activity,
-the food serving as the material out of which new cells and
-tissues are constructed, old cells revivified, and energy for
-running the bodily machinery derived. Development, growth,
-and vital activity all depend upon the availability of food
-in proper amounts and proper quality.</p>
-
-<p>The food of man is composed mainly of organic materials,
-for while, as Dr. <span class="nowrap">Curtis<a id="FNanchor_1" href="#Footnote_1" class="fnanchor">1</a></span> has expressed it, “the plant can
-make organic matter out of inorganic elements, just this the
-animal cannot do at all. The thing of legs and locomotion,
-of spine and speech, can build his organic walls only out of
-organic bricks ruthlessly ripped from existing walls of other
-animals or plants.” It is true that man has need of certain
-inorganic salts in his daily diet, but they are in the nature
-of aids to nutrition (aside from such as are necessary for the
-formation of bone and teeth), contributing in some measure
-toward regulation and control of nutritive processes rather<span class="pagenum" id="Page_3">3</span>
-than as a source of energy to the body. Inorganic substances,
-however, are an integral part of the essential tissues and
-organs of the body, being combined with the organic constituents
-of the living cells. Indeed, electrolytes are perhaps
-the substances that put life into the proteids of the protoplasm,
-and it is truly important for the integrity and functional
-power of living cells that the proportion of inorganic constituents
-therein be kept in a constant condition of quality
-and quantity. Still, the food of mankind is essentially organic
-in nature, and while it may be exceedingly varied in
-character, ranging from the simple vegetable dietary of the
-natives of India and the Far East to the voluminous admixture
-of varied forms of animal and vegetable foodstuffs so
-acceptable to the <i>bon vivant</i> of our western civilization, the
-principles contained therein are few in number.</p>
-
-<p>The organic foodstuffs are of three distinct types and are
-classified under three heads, viz.: Proteids or Albuminous
-foodstuffs, Carbohydrates, and Fats. All animal and vegetable
-foods, whatever their nature and whatever their origin,
-are composed simply of representatives of one or more of
-these three classes of food principles.</p>
-
-<p>Proteid substances are characterized by containing about
-16 per cent of nitrogen. In addition, they contain on an
-average 52 per cent of carbon, 7 per cent of hydrogen, 23
-per cent of oxygen, and 0.5–2.0 per cent of sulphur. A
-certain class of proteids, known as nucleoproteids because
-of their occurrence in the nuclei of cells, contain likewise a
-small amount of phosphorus in organic combination. Proteid
-or albuminous substances constitute the chemical basis
-of all living cells, whether animal or vegetable. This means,
-expressed in different language, that the organic substance
-of all organs and tissues, whether of animals or plants, is
-made up principally of proteid matter. Proteid substances
-occupy, therefore, a peculiar position in the nutrition of man<span class="pagenum" id="Page_4">4</span>
-and of animals in general. They constitute the class of essential
-foodstuffs without which life is impossible. For tissue-building
-and for the renewal of tissues and organs, or their
-component cells, proteid or albuminous foodstuffs are an
-absolute requirement. The vital part of all tissue is proteid,
-and only proteid food can serve for its growth or renewal.
-Hence, no matter how generous the supply of carbohydrates
-and fats, without some admixture of proteid food the body
-will weaken and undergo “nitrogen starvation.” It is to be
-noted, however, that while the element nitrogen (16 per
-cent) gives character to the proteid or albuminous foodstuffs,
-so that they are frequently spoken of or classified as the
-“nitrogenous foodstuffs,” it is not the nitrogen <i>per se</i> that is
-so essential for the nutrition of the body. Man lives in an atmosphere
-of oxygen and nitrogen. He can and does absorb
-and utilize the free oxygen of the air he breathes; indeed, it
-is absolutely essential for his existence, but the free nitrogen
-likewise drawn into the lungs at each inspiration is of no
-avail for the needs of the body. Further, there are many
-compounds of nitrogen, some of them closely allied to the
-proteid foodstuffs in chemical composition, which are just
-as useless as free nitrogen in meeting the wants of the body
-for nitrogenous foods.</p>
-
-<p>Dame Nature is very discriminating; she demands a definite
-form of nitrogenous compound, some peculiar or specific
-grouping of the nitrogen element with other elements in the
-food that can make good the waste of proteid tissue. In the
-inactive and fibrous tissues of animals, such as are found in
-bones, tendons, and ligaments, there is present a substance
-known as collagen, which, when boiled with water, as in the
-making of soups, is transformed into gelatin. This body,
-because of its close chemical relationship to proteid or albuminous
-substances, is known as an albuminoid. Yet, though
-it has essentially the same chemical composition as ordinary<span class="pagenum" id="Page_5">5</span>
-albuminous substances and shows many of the reactions characteristic
-of the latter, it cannot take the place of true proteid
-in building up or repairing the tissues of the body. To
-quote again from Dr. Curtis: “Tissue is nitrogenous, so
-that, of course, only nitrogenous food can serve for its making;
-but of the two kinds of nitrogenous principles, proteids
-and albuminoids, behold, proteids only are of avail! Why
-this is so is unknown, since albuminoid is equally nitrogenous
-with proteid; but so it is&mdash;proteid and proteid alone
-can fulfil the high function of furnishing the material basis
-of life. Gelatin cannot even go to make the very kind of
-tissue of which itself is a derivative. Alongside of its
-brother proteid, gelatin stands as a prince of the blood whose
-escutcheon bears the ‘bend sinister.’ Such a one, though of
-royal lineage, may never aspire to the throne.” It is thus
-quite clear that the true proteid foods are tissue builders in
-the broadest sense of the term, and it is equally evident that
-they are absolutely essential for life, since no other kind or
-form of foodstuff can take their place in supplying the needs
-of the body. Every living cell, whether of heart, muscle,
-brain, or nerve, requires its due allowance of proteid material
-to maintain its physiological rhythm. No other foodstuff
-stands in such intimate relationship to the vital processes,
-but so far as we know at present any form of true proteid,
-whether animal or vegetable, will serve the purpose.</p>
-
-<p>Carbohydrates include two closely related classes of compounds,
-viz., sugars and starches. They are entirely free
-from nitrogen, containing only carbon (44.4 per cent), hydrogen
-(6.2 per cent), and oxygen (49.4 per cent), and hence are
-classified as non-nitrogenous foods. Obviously, they cannot
-serve as tissue builders, but by oxidation they yield energy
-for heat and work. They constitute an easily oxidizable
-form of fuel, and when supplied in undue amounts they
-may undergo transformation within the body into fat, which<span class="pagenum" id="Page_6">6</span>
-is temporarily deposited in tissues and organs for future
-needs.</p>
-
-<p>Fats, like carbohydrates, are free from nitrogen, but differ
-from them in containing a much larger percentage of carbon,
-and hence have greater fuel value per pound. Fats contain
-on an average 76.5 per cent of carbon, 11.9 per cent of
-hydrogen, and 11.5 per cent of oxygen. With their larger
-content of carbon and smaller proportion of oxygen, fats are
-less easily oxidizable than sugars, requiring a larger intake
-of oxygen for their combustion, but when oxidized they yield
-more heat per pound than carbohydrates.</p>
-
-<p>Fats and carbohydrates are thus seen to be the natural fuel
-foodstuffs of the body. They cannot serve for the upbuilding
-or renewal of tissue, but by oxidation they constitute an
-economical fuel for maintaining body temperature and for
-power to run the bodily machinery. It should be remembered,
-however, that anything capable of being burned in
-the body may serve as fuel material; hence proteid food,
-though of specific value as a tissue builder, may likewise by
-its oxidation yield energy for heat and work, but its combustion,
-owing to the content of nitrogen, is never complete.
-Further, its use as fuel is uneconomical and undesirable for
-reasons to be discussed later, but it is well to know that its
-oxidation, though incomplete, is accompanied by the liberation
-of energy, as in the oxidation of non-nitrogenous foods.
-A portion of the carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen of the proteid
-molecule will burn within the body to gaseous products, as
-do sugars and fats, but there remains a nucleus of nitrogen,
-with some carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen, which resists combustion
-and must be gotten rid of by the combined labors of
-liver and kidneys. Fats and carbohydrates, on the other
-hand, undergo complete combustion to simple gaseous products,
-carbon dioxide and water, which are easily removed by
-the lungs, skin, etc.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_7">7</span></p>
-
-<p>These three classes of foodstuffs exist in a great variety
-of combinations or admixtures in nature. In many cases,
-noticeably in milk, all three occur together in fairly large
-quantities. In animal foods, such as meats, fish, etc., proteid
-and fat alone are found, while in perfectly lean meat
-proteid only is present, excepting a small amount of fat.
-Again, the white of the egg contains proteid alone. Hence,
-a meat and egg diet would be essentially a proteid diet. In
-vegetable foods, as in the cereals, there is found an admixture
-of proteid and starch, the latter predominating in many
-cases, as in wheat flour. The following table<span class="nowrap">,<a id="FNanchor_2" href="#Footnote_2" class="fnanchor">2</a></span> showing the
-chemical composition of various food materials, may be of
-service in throwing light on the relative distribution of the
-three classes of foodstuffs in natural products.</p>
-
-
-<p class="tabtitle">THE CHEMICAL COMPOSITION OF SOME COMMON FOOD MATERIALS</p>
-
-<div class="center">
-<table id="chemcomp" class="mtb1em" summary="">
-<tr>
-<th class="blm"><div>Food Materials.</div></th>
-<th class="brl prl03"><div>Proteid.</div></th>
-<th class="brl"><div>Carbo-hydrate.</div></th>
-<th class="brl"><div>Fat.</div></th>
-<th class="brl"><div>Water.</div></th>
-<th class="brl"><div>Mineral Matter.</div></th>
-<th class="brm"><div>Fuel Value per pound.</div></th>
-</tr>
-<tr class="fs75">
-<td class="blm"></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div><div>per cent</div></div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div><div>per cent</div></div></td>
-<td class="tac brl prl03"><div><div>per cent</div></div></td>
-<td class="tac brl prl03"><div><div>per cent</div></div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div><div>per cent</div></div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div><div>calories</div></div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="food">Fresh beef, loin, lean, edible portion</td>
-<td class="val1"><div>24.2</div></td>
-<td class="val2"><div>0  </div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>3.7</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>70.8</div></td>
-<td class="val3"><div>1.3</div></td>
-<td class="val4"><div>615</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="food">Fresh beef, round, lean, edible portion</td>
-<td class="val1"><div>22.3</div></td>
-<td class="val2"><div>0  </div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>2.8</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>73.6</div></td>
-<td class="val3"><div>1.3</div></td>
-<td class="val4"><div>540</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="food">Fresh Porterhouse steak, edible portion</td>
-<td class="val1"><div>21.9</div></td>
-<td class="val2"><div>0  </div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>20.4</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>60.0</div></td>
-<td class="val3"><div>1.0</div></td>
-<td class="val4"><div>1270</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="food">Fresh beef liver</td>
-<td class="val1"><div>21.0</div></td>
-<td class="val2"><div>1.7</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>4.5</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>71.2</div></td>
-<td class="val3"><div>1.6</div></td>
-<td class="val4"><div>605</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="food">Fresh beef tongue</td>
-<td class="val1"><div>19.0</div></td>
-<td class="val2"><div>0  </div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>9.2</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>70.8</div></td>
-<td class="val3"><div>1.0</div></td>
-<td class="val4"><div>740</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="food">Fresh sweetbreads</td>
-<td class="val1"><div>16.8</div></td>
-<td class="val2"><div>0  </div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>12.1</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>70.9</div></td>
-<td class="val3"><div>1.6</div></td>
-<td class="val4"><div>825</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="food">Fresh beef kidney</td>
-<td class="val1"><div>16.9</div></td>
-<td class="val2"><div>0.4</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>4.8</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>76.7</div></td>
-<td class="val3"><div>1.2</div></td>
-<td class="val4"><div>520</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="food">Cooked beef, roasted</td>
-<td class="val1"><div>22.3</div></td>
-<td class="val2"><div>0  </div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>28.6</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>48.2</div></td>
-<td class="val3"><div>1.3</div></td>
-<td class="val4"><div>1620</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="food">Cooked round steak</td>
-<td class="val1"><div>27.6</div></td>
-<td class="val2"><div>0  </div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>7.7</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>63.0</div></td>
-<td class="val3"><div>1.8</div></td>
-<td class="val4"><div>840</div><span class="pagenum" id="Page_8">8</span></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="food">Broiled tenderloin steak</td>
-<td class="val1"><div>23.5</div></td>
-<td class="val2"><div>0  </div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>20.4</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>54.8</div></td>
-<td class="val3"><div>1.2</div></td>
-<td class="val4"><div>1300</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="food">Dried beef, canned</td>
-<td class="val1"><div>39.2</div></td>
-<td class="val2"><div>0  </div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>5.4</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>44.8</div></td>
-<td class="val3"><div>11.2</div></td>
-<td class="val4"><div>960</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="food">Stewed kidneys, canned</td>
-<td class="val1"><div>18.4</div></td>
-<td class="val2"><div>2.1</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>5.1</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>71.9</div></td>
-<td class="val3"><div>2.5</div></td>
-<td class="val4"><div>600</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="food">Fresh corned beef, edible portion</td>
-<td class="val1"><div>15.3</div></td>
-<td class="val2"><div>0  </div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>26.2</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>53.6</div></td>
-<td class="val3"><div>4.9</div></td>
-<td class="val4"><div>1395</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="food">Fresh breast of veal, lean</td>
-<td class="val1"><div>21.2</div></td>
-<td class="val2"><div>0  </div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>8.0</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>70.3</div></td>
-<td class="val3"><div>1.0</div></td>
-<td class="val4"><div>730</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="food">Fresh leg of lamb, edible portion</td>
-<td class="val1"><div>19.2</div></td>
-<td class="val2"><div>0  </div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>16.5</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>63.9</div></td>
-<td class="val3"><div>1.1</div></td>
-<td class="val4"><div>1055</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="food">Lamb chops, broiled</td>
-<td class="val1"><div>21.7</div></td>
-<td class="val2"><div>0  </div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>29.9</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>47.6</div></td>
-<td class="val3"><div>1.3</div></td>
-<td class="val4"><div>1665</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="food">Roast leg of lamb, edible portion</td>
-<td class="val1"><div>19.4</div></td>
-<td class="val2"><div>0  </div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>12.7</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>67.1</div></td>
-<td class="val3"><div>0.8</div></td>
-<td class="val4"><div>900</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="food">Roast leg of mutton, edible portion</td>
-<td class="val1"><div>25.9</div></td>
-<td class="val2"><div>0  </div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>22.6</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>50.9</div></td>
-<td class="val3"><div>1.2</div></td>
-<td class="val4"><div>1420</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="food">Fresh lean ham</td>
-<td class="val1"><div>25.0</div></td>
-<td class="val2"><div>0  </div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>14.4</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>60.0</div></td>
-<td class="val3"><div>1.3</div></td>
-<td class="val4"><div>1075</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="food">Smoked ham, fat, edible portion</td>
-<td class="val1"><div>14.8</div></td>
-<td class="val2"><div>0  </div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>52.3</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>27.9</div></td>
-<td class="val3"><div>3.7</div></td>
-<td class="val4"><div>2485</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="food">Chicken, broilers, edible portion</td>
-<td class="val1"><div>21.5</div></td>
-<td class="val2"><div>0  </div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>2.5</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>74.8</div></td>
-<td class="val3"><div>1.1</div></td>
-<td class="val4"><div>505</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="food">Turkey, edible portion</td>
-<td class="val1"><div>21.1</div></td>
-<td class="val2"><div>0  </div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>22.9</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>55.5</div></td>
-<td class="val3"><div>1.0</div></td>
-<td class="val4"><div>1360</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="food">Roast turkey, edible portion</td>
-<td class="val1"><div>27.8</div></td>
-<td class="val2"><div>0  </div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>18.4</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>52.0</div></td>
-<td class="val3"><div>1.2</div></td>
-<td class="val4"><div>1295</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="food">Fricasseed chicken, edible portion</td>
-<td class="val1"><div>17.6</div></td>
-<td class="val2"><div>2.4</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>11.5</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>67.5</div></td>
-<td class="val3"><div>1.0</div></td>
-<td class="val4"><div>855</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="food">Fresh cod, dressed</td>
-<td class="val1"><div>11.1</div></td>
-<td class="val2"><div>0  </div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>0.2</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>58.5</div></td>
-<td class="val3"><div>0.8</div></td>
-<td class="val4"><div>215</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="food">Fresh mackerel, edible portion</td>
-<td class="val1"><div>18.7</div></td>
-<td class="val2"><div>0  </div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>7.1</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>73.4</div></td>
-<td class="val3"><div>1.2</div></td>
-<td class="val4"><div>645</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="food">Fresh halibut, steaks</td>
-<td class="val1"><div>18.6</div></td>
-<td class="val2"><div>0  </div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>5.2</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>75.4</div></td>
-<td class="val3"><div>1.0</div></td>
-<td class="val4"><div>565</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="food">Fresh shad, edible portion</td>
-<td class="val1"><div>18.8</div></td>
-<td class="val2"><div>0  </div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>9.5</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>70.6</div></td>
-<td class="val3"><div>1.3</div></td>
-<td class="val4"><div>750</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="food">Fresh smelt, edible portion</td>
-<td class="val1"><div>17.6</div></td>
-<td class="val2"><div>0  </div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>1.8</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>79.2</div></td>
-<td class="val3"><div>1.7</div></td>
-<td class="val4"><div>405</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="food">Cooked bluefish, edible portion</td>
-<td class="val1"><div>26.1</div></td>
-<td class="val2"><div>0  </div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>4.5</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>68.2</div></td>
-<td class="val3"><div>1.2</div></td>
-<td class="val4"><div>670</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="food">Broiled Spanish mackerel, edible portion</td>
-<td class="val1"><div>23.2</div></td>
-<td class="val2"><div>0  </div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>6.5</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>68.9</div></td>
-<td class="val3"><div>1.4</div></td>
-<td class="val4"><div>715</div><span class="pagenum" id="Page_9">9</span></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="food">Salt codfish, edible portion</td>
-<td class="val1"><div>25.4</div></td>
-<td class="val2"><div>0  </div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>0.3</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>53.5</div></td>
-<td class="val3"><div>24.7</div></td>
-<td class="val4"><div>410</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="food">Salt mackerel, edible portion</td>
-<td class="val1"><div>22.0</div></td>
-<td class="val2"><div>0  </div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>22.6</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>42.2</div></td>
-<td class="val3"><div>13.2</div></td>
-<td class="val4"><div>1345</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="food">Canned salmon, edible portion</td>
-<td class="val1"><div>21.8</div></td>
-<td class="val2"><div>0  </div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>12.1</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>63.5</div></td>
-<td class="val3"><div>2.6</div></td>
-<td class="val4"><div>915</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="food">Canned sardines, edible portion</td>
-<td class="val1"><div>23.0</div></td>
-<td class="val2"><div>0  </div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>19.7</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>52.3</div></td>
-<td class="val3"><div>5.6</div></td>
-<td class="val4"><div>162</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="food">Fresh round clams</td>
-<td class="val1"><div>6.5</div></td>
-<td class="val2"><div>4.2</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>0.4</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>86.2</div></td>
-<td class="val3"><div>2.7</div></td>
-<td class="val4"><div>215</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="food">Fresh oysters, solid</td>
-<td class="val1"><div>6.0</div></td>
-<td class="val2"><div>3.3</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>1.3</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>88.3</div></td>
-<td class="val3"><div>1.1</div></td>
-<td class="val4"><div>230</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="food">Fresh hen’s eggs</td>
-<td class="val1"><div>13.4</div></td>
-<td class="val2"><div>0  </div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>10.5</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>73.7</div></td>
-<td class="val3"><div>1.0</div></td>
-<td class="val4"><div>720</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="food">Boiled hen’s eggs</td>
-<td class="val1"><div>13.2</div></td>
-<td class="val2"><div>0  </div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>12.0</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>73.2</div></td>
-<td class="val3"><div>0.8</div></td>
-<td class="val4"><div>765</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="food">Butter</td>
-<td class="val1"><div>1.0</div></td>
-<td class="val2"><div>0  </div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>85.0</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>11.0</div></td>
-<td class="val3"><div>3.0</div></td>
-<td class="val4"><div>3605</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="food">Full cream cheese</td>
-<td class="val1"><div>25.9</div></td>
-<td class="val2"><div>2.4</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>33.7</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>34.2</div></td>
-<td class="val3"><div>3.8</div></td>
-<td class="val4"><div>1950</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="food">Whole cow’s milk</td>
-<td class="val1"><div>3.3</div></td>
-<td class="val2"><div>5.0</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>4.0</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>87.0</div></td>
-<td class="val3"><div>0.7</div></td>
-<td class="val4"><div>325</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="food">Corn meal, unbolted</td>
-<td class="val1"><div>8.4</div></td>
-<td class="val2"><div>74.0</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>4.7</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>11.6</div></td>
-<td class="val3"><div>1.3</div></td>
-<td class="val4"><div>1730</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="food">Oatmeal</td>
-<td class="val1"><div>16.1</div></td>
-<td class="val2"><div>67.5</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>7.2</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>7.3</div></td>
-<td class="val3"><div>1.9</div></td>
-<td class="val4"><div>1860</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="food">Rice</td>
-<td class="val1"><div>8.0</div></td>
-<td class="val2"><div>79.0</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>0.3</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>12.3</div></td>
-<td class="val3"><div>0.4</div></td>
-<td class="val4"><div>1630</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="food">Wheat flour, entire wheat</td>
-<td class="val1"><div>13.8</div></td>
-<td class="val2"><div>71.9</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>1.9</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>11.4</div></td>
-<td class="val3"><div>1.0</div></td>
-<td class="val4"><div>1675</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="food">Boiled rice</td>
-<td class="val1"><div>2.8</div></td>
-<td class="val2"><div>24.4</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>0.1</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>72.5</div></td>
-<td class="val3"><div>0.2</div></td>
-<td class="val4"><div>525</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="food">Shredded wheat</td>
-<td class="val1"><div>10.5</div></td>
-<td class="val2"><div>77.9</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>1.4</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>8.1</div></td>
-<td class="val3"><div>2.1</div></td>
-<td class="val4"><div>1700</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="food">Macaroni</td>
-<td class="val1"><div>13.4</div></td>
-<td class="val2"><div>74.1</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>0.9</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>10.3</div></td>
-<td class="val3"><div>1.3</div></td>
-<td class="val4"><div>1665</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="food">Brown bread</td>
-<td class="val1"><div>5.4</div></td>
-<td class="val2"><div>47.1</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>1.8</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>43.6</div></td>
-<td class="val3"><div>2.1</div></td>
-<td class="val4"><div>1050</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="food">Wheat bread or rolls</td>
-<td class="val1"><div>8.9</div></td>
-<td class="val2"><div>56.7</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>4.1</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>29.2</div></td>
-<td class="val3"><div>1.1</div></td>
-<td class="val4"><div>1395</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="food">Whole wheat bread</td>
-<td class="val1"><div>9.4</div></td>
-<td class="val2"><div>49.7</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>0.9</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>38.4</div></td>
-<td class="val3"><div>1.3</div></td>
-<td class="val4"><div>1140</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="food">Soda crackers</td>
-<td class="val1"><div>9.8</div></td>
-<td class="val2"><div>73.1</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>9.1</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>5.9</div></td>
-<td class="val3"><div>2.1</div></td>
-<td class="val4"><div>1925</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="food">Oyster crackers</td>
-<td class="val1"><div>11.3</div></td>
-<td class="val2"><div>70.5</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>10.5</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>4.8</div></td>
-<td class="val3"><div>2.9</div></td>
-<td class="val4"><div>1965</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="food">Ginger bread</td>
-<td class="val1"><div>5.8</div></td>
-<td class="val2"><div>63.5</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>9.0</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>18.8</div></td>
-<td class="val3"><div>2.9</div></td>
-<td class="val4"><div>1670</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="food">Sponge cake</td>
-<td class="val1"><div>6.3</div></td>
-<td class="val2"><div>65.9</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>10.7</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>15.3</div></td>
-<td class="val3"><div>1.8</div></td>
-<td class="val4"><div>1795</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="food">Lady fingers</td>
-<td class="val1"><div>8.8</div></td>
-<td class="val2"><div>70.6</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>5.0</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>15.0</div></td>
-<td class="val3"><div>0.6</div></td>
-<td class="val4"><div>1685</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="food">Apple pie</td>
-<td class="val1"><div>3.1</div></td>
-<td class="val2"><div>42.8</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>9.8</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>42.5</div></td>
-<td class="val3"><div>1.8</div></td>
-<td class="val4"><div>1270</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="food">Custard pie</td>
-<td class="val1"><div>4.2</div></td>
-<td class="val2"><div>26.1</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>6.3</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>62.4</div></td>
-<td class="val3"><div>1.0</div></td>
-<td class="val4"><div>830</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="food">Squash pie</td>
-<td class="val1"><div>4.4</div></td>
-<td class="val2"><div>21.7</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>8.4</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>64.2</div></td>
-<td class="val3"><div>1.3</div></td>
-<td class="val4"><div>840</div><span class="pagenum" id="Page_10">10</span></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="food">Indian meal pudding</td>
-<td class="val1"><div>5.5</div></td>
-<td class="val2"><div>27.5</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>4.8</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>60.7</div></td>
-<td class="val3"><div>1.5</div></td>
-<td class="val4"><div>815</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="food">Tapioca pudding</td>
-<td class="val1"><div>3.3</div></td>
-<td class="val2"><div>28.2</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>3.2</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>64.5</div></td>
-<td class="val3"><div>0.8</div></td>
-<td class="val4"><div>720</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="food">Fresh asparagus</td>
-<td class="val1"><div>1.8</div></td>
-<td class="val2"><div>3.3</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>0.2</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>94.0</div></td>
-<td class="val3"><div>0.7</div></td>
-<td class="val4"><div>105</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="food">Fresh lima beans</td>
-<td class="val1"><div>7.1</div></td>
-<td class="val2"><div>22.0</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>0.7</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>68.5</div></td>
-<td class="val3"><div>1.7</div></td>
-<td class="val4"><div>570</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="food">Dried lima beans</td>
-<td class="val1"><div>18.1</div></td>
-<td class="val2"><div>65.9</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>1.5</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>10.4</div></td>
-<td class="val3"><div>4.1</div></td>
-<td class="val4"><div>1625</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="food">Dried beans</td>
-<td class="val1"><div>22.5</div></td>
-<td class="val2"><div>59.6</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>1.8</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>12.6</div></td>
-<td class="val3"><div>3.5</div></td>
-<td class="val4"><div>1605</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="food">Cooked beets</td>
-<td class="val1"><div>2.3</div></td>
-<td class="val2"><div>7.4</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>0.1</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>88.6</div></td>
-<td class="val3"><div>1.6</div></td>
-<td class="val4"><div>185</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="food">Fresh cabbage, edible portion</td>
-<td class="val1"><div>1.6</div></td>
-<td class="val2"><div>5.6</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>0.3</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>91.5</div></td>
-<td class="val3"><div>1.0</div></td>
-<td class="val4"><div>145</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="food">Green corn, edible portion</td>
-<td class="val1"><div>3.1</div></td>
-<td class="val2"><div>19.7</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>1.1</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>75.4</div></td>
-<td class="val3"><div>0.7</div></td>
-<td class="val4"><div>470</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="food">Dried peas</td>
-<td class="val1"><div>24.6</div></td>
-<td class="val2"><div>62.0</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>1.0</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>9.5</div></td>
-<td class="val3"><div>2.9</div></td>
-<td class="val4"><div>1655</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="food">Green peas</td>
-<td class="val1"><div>7.7</div></td>
-<td class="val2"><div>16.9</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>0.5</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>74.6</div></td>
-<td class="val3"><div>1.0</div></td>
-<td class="val4"><div>465</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="food">Raw potatoes, edible portion</td>
-<td class="val1"><div>2.2</div></td>
-<td class="val2"><div>18.4</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>0.1</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>78.3</div></td>
-<td class="val3"><div>1.0</div></td>
-<td class="val4"><div>385</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="food">Boiled potatoes</td>
-<td class="val1"><div>2.5</div></td>
-<td class="val2"><div>20.9</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>0.1</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>75.5</div></td>
-<td class="val3"><div>1.0</div></td>
-<td class="val4"><div>440</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="food">Fresh tomatoes</td>
-<td class="val1"><div>0.9</div></td>
-<td class="val2"><div>3.9</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>0.4</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>94.3</div></td>
-<td class="val3"><div>0.5</div></td>
-<td class="val4"><div>105</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="food">Baked beans, canned</td>
-<td class="val1"><div>6.9</div></td>
-<td class="val2"><div>19.6</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>2.5</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>68.9</div></td>
-<td class="val3"><div>2.1</div></td>
-<td class="val4"><div>600</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="food">Apples, edible portion</td>
-<td class="val1"><div>0.4</div></td>
-<td class="val2"><div>14.2</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>0.5</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>84.6</div></td>
-<td class="val3"><div>3.0</div></td>
-<td class="val4"><div>290</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="food">Bananas, yellow, edible portion</td>
-<td class="val1"><div>1.3</div></td>
-<td class="val2"><div>22.0</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>0.6</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>75.3</div></td>
-<td class="val3"><div>0.8</div></td>
-<td class="val4"><div>460</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="food">Fresh cranberries</td>
-<td class="val1"><div>0.4</div></td>
-<td class="val2"><div>9.9</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>0.6</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>88.9</div></td>
-<td class="val3"><div>0.2</div></td>
-<td class="val4"><div>215</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="food">Oranges, edible portion</td>
-<td class="val1"><div>0.8</div></td>
-<td class="val2"><div>11.6</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>0.2</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>86.9</div></td>
-<td class="val3"><div>0.5</div></td>
-<td class="val4"><div>240</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="food">Peaches, edible portion</td>
-<td class="val1"><div>0.7</div></td>
-<td class="val2"><div>9.4</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>0.1</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>89.4</div></td>
-<td class="val3"><div>0.4</div></td>
-<td class="val4"><div>190</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="food">Fresh strawberries</td>
-<td class="val1"><div>1.0</div></td>
-<td class="val2"><div>7.4</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>0.6</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>90.4</div></td>
-<td class="val3"><div>0.6</div></td>
-<td class="val4"><div>180</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="food">Dried prunes, edible portion</td>
-<td class="val1"><div>2.1</div></td>
-<td class="val2"><div>73.3</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>0.0</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>22.3</div></td>
-<td class="val3"><div>2.3</div></td>
-<td class="val4"><div>1400</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="food">Almonds, edible portion</td>
-<td class="val1"><div>21.0</div></td>
-<td class="val2"><div>17.3</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>54.9</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>4.8</div></td>
-<td class="val3"><div>2.0</div></td>
-<td class="val4"><div>3030</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="food">Peanuts, edible portion</td>
-<td class="val1"><div>25.8</div></td>
-<td class="val2"><div>24.4</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>38.6</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>9.2</div></td>
-<td class="val3"><div>2.0</div></td>
-<td class="val4"><div>2560</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="food">Pine nuts, edible portion</td>
-<td class="val1"><div>33.9</div></td>
-<td class="val2"><div>6.9</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>49.4</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>6.4</div></td>
-<td class="val3"><div>3.4</div></td>
-<td class="val4"><div>2845</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="food">Brazil nuts, edible portion</td>
-<td class="val1"><div>17.0</div></td>
-<td class="val2"><div>7.0</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>66.8</div></td>
-<td class="val1"><div>5.3</div></td>
-<td class="val3"><div>3.9</div></td>
-<td class="val4"><div>3265</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="food bbm">Soft-shell walnuts, edible portion</td>
-<td class="val1 bbm"><div>16.6</div></td>
-<td class="val2 bbm"><div>16.1</div></td>
-<td class="val1 bbm"><div>63.4</div></td>
-<td class="val1 bbm"><div>2.5</div></td>
-<td class="val3 bbm"><div>1.4</div></td>
-<td class="val4 bbm"><div>3285</div><span class="pagenum" id="Page_11">11</span></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>In commenting on these figures, reference to which will be
-made from time to time in other connections, it may be wise
-to emphasize the large amount of water almost invariably
-present in natural foodstuffs. Further, it is to be noted that,
-in animal products especially, the variations in proteid-content
-are in large measure coincident with variations in the amount
-of water present. In other words, foods of animal origin if
-freed entirely of water would, as a rule, show essentially the
-same percentage of proteid matter. Fat is naturally variable,
-according to the condition of the animal at the time it was
-slaughtered. Among the vegetable products, carbohydrate,
-mainly in the form of starch, becomes exceedingly conspicuous,
-though proteid is by no means lacking. Indeed,
-in some cereals, as in oatmeal, in dried peas and beans, the
-content of proteid will average as high as in fresh beef, while
-in addition 50–70 per cent of the entire substance is made up
-of carbohydrate. Again, in the edible nuts, the content of
-proteid runs high, in some cases higher than in fresh beef,
-while at the same time carbohydrate and fat are noticeably
-large. Further, it is to be noted that in nuts there is here
-and there some striking individuality, as in pine nuts and
-Brazil nuts, both of which show a noticeable lack of carbohydrate
-as contrasted with peanuts, almonds, and walnuts;
-a fact of some importance in cases where a vegetable food
-rich in proteid is desired, but with freedom from starch.</p>
-
-<p>Another generality, to be thoroughly understood, is that
-while the figures given for proteid express quite clearly and
-with reasonable degree of accuracy the relative amounts of
-proteid matter present in the foodstuffs in question, there
-may be important differences in availability of which the
-percentage figures give no suggestion. In other words, the
-analytical data deal solely with the total content of proteid,
-while there is needed in addition information as to the relative
-digestibility, or availability by the body, of the different<span class="pagenum" id="Page_12">12</span>
-kinds of proteid food. For example, roast mutton, cream
-cheese, and dried peas contain approximately the same
-amount of proteid. Are we then to infer that these three
-foods have the same nutritive value so far as proteid is concerned?
-Surely not, since no account is taken of the relative
-digestibility of the three foods. It is one of the axioms
-of physiology that the true nutritive value of any proteid
-food is dependent not alone upon the amount of proteid contained
-therein, but upon the quantity of proteid that can be
-digested and absorbed; or, in other words, made available for
-the needs of the body. The same rule holds good for both
-fats and carbohydrates, but as proteid is the more important
-foodstuff, and is as a rule taken more sparingly, the
-question of availability has greater import with the proteid
-foods.</p>
-
-<p>The availability or digestibility of foods can be determined
-only by physiological experiment. By making a comparison
-for a definite period of time of the amount of a given food ingredient
-consumed and the amount that passes unchanged
-through the intestine, an estimate of its digestibility can be
-made. The result, to be sure, is not wholly free from error,
-since we cannot always distinguish between the undigested
-food and so-called metabolic products coming from the digestive
-juices and from the walls of the intestine; but the errors
-are not large, and results so obtained are full of meaning.
-In a general way it may be stated that with animal foods,
-such as meats, eggs, and milk, about 97 per cent of the contained
-proteid is digested and thereby rendered available for
-the body. With ordinary vegetable foods, on the other hand,
-as they are usually prepared for consumption, only about
-85 per cent of the proteid is made available. This is partially
-due to the presence in the vegetable tissue of cellulose,
-which in some measure prevents that thorough attack of the
-proteid by the digestive juices which occurs with animal<span class="pagenum" id="Page_13">13</span>
-foods. With a mixed diet, <i>i. e.</i>, with a variable admixture
-of animal and vegetable foods, it is usually considered that
-about 92 per cent of the proteid contained therein will undergo
-digestion.</p>
-
-<p>Regarding differences in the availability of fats, it may be
-stated that, as a rule, the fatty matter contained in vegetable
-foods is less readily, or less thoroughly, digested than that
-present in foods of animal origin. In the latter, about 95
-per cent of the fat is digested and absorbed. This figure,
-however, is generally taken as representing approximately the
-digestibility or availability of the fat contained in man’s daily
-dietary, since by far the larger proportion of the fat consumed
-is of animal origin. Carbohydrates, on the other hand, are
-much more easily utilized by the body. Naturally, sugars,
-owing to their great solubility and ready diffusibility, offer
-little difficulty in the way of easy digestion; but starches
-likewise, though not so readily assimilable, are digested, as
-a rule, to the extent of 98 per cent or more of the amount
-consumed. It is thus evident that in any estimate of the
-food value of a given diet, chemical composition is to
-be checked by the digestibility or availability of the food
-ingredients.</p>
-
-<p>As has been stated several times, the proteid foodstuffs
-are the more important, since proteid matter is essential to
-animal life. Man must have a certain amount of proteid
-food to maintain the body in a condition of strength and
-vigor. The other essential is that the daily food furnish
-sufficient energy to meet the needs of the body for heat and
-power. This means that in addition to proteid, which primarily
-serves a particular purpose, there must be enough
-non-nitrogenous food (either carbohydrate or fat or both) to
-provide the requisite fuel for oxidation or combustion to
-meet the demands of the body for heat and for work; both
-of which are subject to great variation owing to differences<span class="pagenum" id="Page_14">14</span>
-in the temperature of the surrounding air, and especially because
-of variations in the degree of bodily activity. The
-energy which a given foodstuff will yield can be ascertained
-by laboratory experiment, in which a definite weight of the
-substance is burned or oxidized in a calorimetric bomb under
-conditions where the exact amount of heat liberated can be
-accurately measured. The fuel, or energy, value so obtained
-is expressed in calories or heat units. A calorie may be defined
-as the amount of heat required to raise 1 gram of water
-1°&nbsp;C., or, to be more exact, the amount of heat required to
-raise 1 gram of water from 15° to 16°&nbsp;C. This unit is
-usually spoken of as the small calorie, to distinguish it
-from the large calorie, which represents the amount of heat
-required to raise 1 kilogram of water 1°&nbsp;C. Hence, the
-large calorie is equal to one thousand small calories. When
-burned in a calorimeter, 1 gram of carbohydrate yields on
-an average 4100 gram-degree units of heat, or small calories;
-1 gram of fat yields 9300 small calories. Both of these non-nitrogenous
-foods burn or oxidize to the same products&mdash;viz.,
-carbon dioxide and water&mdash;when utilized in the body
-as when burned in the calorimeter; hence, the figures given
-represent the physiological heat of combustion, per gram, of
-the two classes of foodstuffs. Obviously, the fuel values of
-different foods belonging to the same group or class will
-show slight variation, but the above figures represent average
-values.</p>
-
-<p>Unlike fats and carbohydrates, proteids are not burned
-completely in the body; hence, the physiological fuel value
-of a proteid is less than the value obtained by oxidation in
-a bomb calorimeter. In the body, proteids yield certain decomposition
-products which are removed through the excreta,
-and which represent a certain quantity of potential energy
-thus lost to the economy. The average fuel value of proteids
-burned outside of the body is placed at 5711 calories<span class="pagenum" id="Page_15">15</span>
-per gram<span class="nowrap">,<a id="FNanchor_3" href="#Footnote_3" class="fnanchor">3</a></span> or 5.7 large calories. Deducting the heat value
-of the proteid decomposition products contained in the excreta,
-the physiological fuel value of proteids is reduced on
-an average to about 4.1 large calories per gram<span class="nowrap">.<a id="FNanchor_4" href="#Footnote_4" class="fnanchor">4</a></span> Rubner
-considers that the physiological fuel value of vegetable proteids
-is somewhat less than that of animal proteids; conglutin,
-for example, yielding 3.96 calories, as contrasted
-with 4.3 calories furnished by egg-albumin, or 4.40 calories
-from casein. On a mixed diet, where 60 per cent of the
-ingested proteid food is of animal origin and 40 per cent
-vegetable, the fuel value available to the body would be
-about 4.1 calories per gram of proteid, on the assumption
-that the physiological heat value of vegetable proteids averages
-3.96 calories per gram and that of animal proteids 4.23
-calories per gram (Rubner).</p>
-
-<p>At present, we accept for all purposes of computation the
-following figures as representing the physiological or available
-(to the body) fuel value of the three classes of organic
-foodstuffs:</p>
-
-<div class="center">
-<table class="" summary="fuel value of main foodstuffs">
-<tr>
-<td class="tal">1 gram of proteid</td>
-<td class="tal pl4"><span class="ilb">4.1&nbsp;Large&nbsp;Calories</span></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal">1 gram of fat</td>
-<td class="tal pl4">9.3&emsp;"&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;"</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal">1 gram of carbohydrate</td>
-<td class="tal pl4">4.1&emsp;"&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;"</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<p>From these data, it is evident at a glance that 1 gram of
-fat is isodynamic with 2.27 grams of either carbohydrate or
-proteid; and since carbohydrate and fat are of use to the
-body mainly because of their energy value, it is obvious that
-50 grams of fat taken as food will be of as much service to
-the body as 113 grams of starch. In view of the relatively
-high fuel value of fats, it follows that the physiological heat
-of combustion of any given food material will correspond<span class="pagenum" id="Page_16">16</span>
-largely with the content of fat therein. This is quite
-apparent from the data given in the table showing chemical
-composition of food materials, where the fuel value per pound
-is seen to run more or less closely parallel with the percentage
-of fat. Experience, as well as direct physiological
-experiment, teaches us, however, that fat and carbohydrate
-cannot be interchanged indefinitely, because of the difficulty
-in utilization of fat when the amount is increased beyond a
-certain point. Personal experience provides ample evidence
-of the difference in availability between the two classes of
-foodstuffs. Carbohydrates are easily utilizable, fats with
-more difficulty. Palate, as well as stomach, rebels at large
-quantities of fat; a statement that certainly holds good for
-most civilized people, though exceptions may be found, as in
-the Esquimeaux and certain savage races.</p>
-
-<p>In the nourishment of the body, the various factors that aid
-in the utilization of food are of great moment and must not
-be overlooked. It is not enough that the body be supplied
-with the proper proportion of nutrients, with sufficient proteid
-to meet the demand for nitrogen, and with carbohydrate
-and fat adequate to yield the needed energy; but all those
-physiological processes which have to do with the preparation
-of the foodstuffs for absorption into the circulating blood
-and lymph must be in effective working order. There is an
-intricacy of detail here which calls for careful oversight, and
-it is one of the functions of the nervous system to control
-and regulate both the mechanical and the chemical processes
-that are concerned in this seemingly automatic progression
-of foodstuffs from their entry into the mouth cavity to their
-final discharge from the alimentary tract, after removal of
-the last vestige of true nutritive material.</p>
-
-<p>Mastication; deglutition; secretion of the various digestive
-juices, saliva, gastric juice, pancreatic juice, bile, intestinal
-juice, etc.; peristalsis, or the rhythmical movements of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_17">17</span>
-muscular walls of the gastro-intestinal tract; the solvent
-action of the several digestive fluids on the different types
-of foodstuffs; the absorption of the products formed as a
-preliminary step in their transportation to the tissues and
-organs of the body, where they are to serve their ultimate purpose
-in nutrition; the interaction of these several processes
-one on the other; and, finally, the influence of the various
-nerve fibres and nerve centres concerned in the control of
-these varied activities,&mdash;all must work together in harmony
-and precision if the full measure of available nitrogen and
-energy-yielding material is to be extracted and absorbed
-from the ingested food, without undue expenditure of physiological
-labor. Further, the various processes of cell and
-tissue metabolism, by which the absorbed food material is
-built up into living protoplasm, and the chemical processes
-of oxidation, hydrolysis, reduction, etc., by which the intra
-and extra cellular material is broken down progressively into
-varied katabolic or excretory products, with liberation of
-energy; all these must move forward harmoniously and with
-due regard to the preservation of an even balance between
-intake and outgo, if the nutrition of the body is to be maintained
-at a proper level, and with that degree of physiological
-economy which is coincident with good health and high
-efficiency.</p>
-
-<p>We may well pause here and consider briefly some of these
-processes which play so prominent a part in the proper utilization
-of the three classes of organic foodstuffs. The first
-digestive fluid which the ingested food comes in contact
-with is the saliva. Sensory nerve fibres, chiefly of the
-glossopharyngeal and lingual nerves which supply the mouth
-and tongue, are stimulated by the sapid substances of the
-food, and likewise by mere contact of the food particles with
-the mucous membrane lining the mouth cavity as the food is
-masticated and rolled about prior to deglutition. Impulses<span class="pagenum" id="Page_18">18</span>
-communicated in this way to the above sensory nerves are
-transmitted to certain nerve centres in the medulla oblongata,
-whence impulses are reflected back through secretory nerves
-going to the individual salivary glands, thereby calling forth
-a secretion. The production of saliva is thus a simple reflex
-act, in which the food consumed serves as a true stimulant
-or excitant. Pawlow<span class="nowrap">,<a id="FNanchor_5" href="#Footnote_5" class="fnanchor">5</a></span> indeed, claims a certain degree of
-adaptability of the secretion to the character of the food
-taken into the mouth. Thus, he finds that dry, solid food
-excites a large flow of saliva, such as would be needed to
-masticate it properly and bring it into a suitable condition
-for swallowing. On the other hand, foods containing an
-abundance of water cause only a scanty flow of saliva. The
-situation of this secretory centre in the medulla, and the many
-branchings of nerve cells in this locality would naturally
-suggest the possibility of salivary secretion being incited by
-stimuli from a variety of sources. This is indeed the case,
-and it is worthy of note that a flow of saliva may result from
-stimulation of the sensory fibres of the vagus nerves as well
-as of the splanchnic and sciatic, thus indicating how a given
-secreting gland may be called into activity by impulses or
-stimuli which come to the centre through very indirect and
-devious pathways. Further, the secretory centre may be
-stimulated, and likewise inhibited, by impulses which have
-their origin in higher nerve centres in the brain. These
-facts are of great importance in throwing light upon the
-ways in which a secretion like saliva is called forth and its
-digestive action thus made possible. The thought and the
-odor of savory food cause the mouth to water, the flow of
-saliva so incited being the result of psychical stimulation.
-Similarly, fear, embarrassment, and anxiety frequently cause
-a dry mouth and parched throat through inhibition of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_19">19</span>
-secretory centre by impulses which have their origin in higher
-centres in the brain.</p>
-
-<p>The application of these facts to our subject is perfectly
-obvious, since they suggest at once how the production or
-secretion of an important digestive fluid&mdash;upon which the
-utilization of a given class of foodstuffs may be quite dependent&mdash;is
-controlled and modified through the nervous
-system by a variety of circumstances. We might reason
-that the appearance, odor, and palatability of food are factors
-of prime importance in its utilization by the body; that the
-æsthetics of eating are not to be ignored, since they have an
-important influence upon the flow of the digestive secretions.
-A peaceful mind, pleasurable anticipation, freedom from
-care and anxiety, cheerful companionship, all form desirable
-table accessories which play the part of true psychical stimuli
-in accelerating the flow of the digestive juices and thus pave
-the way for easy and thorough digestion. Further, it is
-easy to see how thorough mastication of food may prolong
-mechanical stimulation of the salivary glands and thus increase
-the flow of the secretion, while the longer stay of
-sapid substances in the mouth cavity increases the duration
-of the chemical stimulation of the sensory fibres of the lingual
-and glossopharyngeal nerves. In this connection, we may cite
-the view recently advanced by Pawlow that the individual
-salivary glands respond normally to different stimuli. Thus,
-there are three pairs of salivary glands concerned in the production
-of saliva,&mdash;the submaxillary, parotid, and sublingual,&mdash;all
-of which pour their secretions through separate ducts
-into the mouth cavity. By experiment, Pawlow has found
-that in the dog the submaxillary gland yields a copious flow
-of saliva when stimulated by acids, the chewing of meats,
-the sight of food, etc., while the parotid gland fails to respond.
-On the other hand, the latter gland responds with an abundant
-secretion when dry food, such as dry powdered meat,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_20">20</span>
-dried bread, etc., is placed in the mouth. With this gland,
-the inference is that dryness is the active stimulus.</p>
-
-<p>As a digestive secretion, saliva serves several important
-purposes. By moistening the food it renders mastication and
-deglutition possible; its natural alkalinity tends to neutralize
-somewhat such acidity as may be present in the food;
-it dissolves various solid substances, thus making a solution
-capable of stimulating the taste nerves; lastly, and most
-important, it has a marked digestive and solvent action on
-starchy foods. A large proportion of the non-nitrogenous
-food consumed by man&mdash;in most countries&mdash;is composed of
-some form of starch, and this the body cannot use until it
-has undergone conversion into soluble forms, such as dextrins
-and sugar. This it is the function of saliva to accomplish,
-and it owes its activity in this direction to the presence
-of a soluble ferment or enzyme known as ptyalin.</p>
-
-<p>Enzymes, which play so important a part in all digestive
-processes, are a peculiar class of substances produced by the
-living cells which constitute the various secreting glands.
-They are of unknown composition, and are peculiar in that
-the chemical changes they induce are the result of what is
-termed catalysis, <i>i. e.</i>, contact. That is, the enzyme or catalyzer
-does not enter into the reaction, it is not destroyed
-or used up, but by its mere presence sets in motion or
-accelerates a reaction between two other substances. The
-ordinary illustration from the inorganic world is spongy
-platinum, which, if placed in contact with a mixture of
-oxygen and hydrogen, causes the two gases to unite with
-formation of water, although the two gases alone at ordinary
-temperature will not so combine. In this reaction the
-platinum is not altered, neither does it apparently enter into
-the reaction; it is a simple catalyzer. The chemical nature of
-the change which most digestive enzymes produce is usually
-defined as hydrolytic, in which the substance undergoing<span class="pagenum" id="Page_21">21</span>
-transformation is made to combine with water, thus becoming
-hydrolyzed, this reaction generally being accompanied by a
-cleavage or splitting of the molecule into simpler substances.
-It is to be noted further that enzymes are specific in their
-action. An enzyme that acts upon starch, for example, cannot
-act on proteids or fats. Some digestive fluids have the
-power of producing changes in different classes of foodstuffs,
-but such diversity of action is always assumed to be due to
-the presence in the same fluid of different enzymes. Emil
-<span class="nowrap">Fischer<a id="FNanchor_6" href="#Footnote_6" class="fnanchor">6</a></span> has advanced the theory that the specificity of an
-enzyme is related to the geometrical structure of the substance
-undergoing change; <i>i. e.</i>, that each enzyme is capable
-of acting upon or attaching itself only to such molecules
-as have a definite structure with which the enzyme is in harmony.
-Or, the enzyme may be considered as a key which will
-fit only into the lock (structure) of the molecule it acts upon.</p>
-
-<p>One characteristic feature of enzymes is the incompleteness
-of their action. Thus, the enzyme of saliva transforms
-starch by a series of progressive changes into soluble starch,
-two or more dextrins, and the sugar maltose as the chief end-product.
-A mixture of starch paste and saliva under ordinary
-conditions, however, never results in the formation of
-a hundred per cent of maltose, but there always remains a
-variable amount of dextrin which appears to resist further
-change. This is apparently due to what is known as the reversible
-action of enzymes. Thus, the chemical reactions
-involved here are reversible actions, <i>i. e.</i>, they take place in
-opposite directions. The catalyzer not only accelerates or
-incites a reaction in the direction of breaking down the substance
-acted upon, but it also aids in the recomposition of
-the products so formed into the original or kindred substance.
-With reversible reactions of this sort the opposite changes<span class="pagenum" id="Page_22">22</span>
-sooner or later strike an equilibrium, which remains constant
-until some alteration in the conditions brings about an
-inequality and the reactions proceed until a new equilibrium
-is established. In the body, however, where the circulating
-blood and lymph provide facilities for the speedy removal by
-absorption of the soluble products formed, the reaction may
-proceed until the original substance undergoing change is
-completely transformed into the characteristic end-product.
-This reversible action of enzymes is an important feature,
-and helps explain certain nutritional changes to be referred
-to later. Whether all enzymes behave in this way is not as
-yet determined.</p>
-
-<p>Another peculiarity of digestive enzymes is their extreme
-sensitiveness to changes in their environment. Powerful in
-their ability to transform relatively large quantities of a
-given foodstuff into simple products better adapted for absorption
-and utilization by the body, they are, however, quickly
-checked in their action, and even destroyed, when the conditions
-surrounding them are slightly interfered with. They
-require for their best action a temperature closely akin to
-that of the healthy body, and any great deviation therefrom
-will result at once in an inhibition of their activity. Further,
-they demand a certain definite reaction of the fluid or mixture,
-if their working power is to be maintained at the maximum.
-Indeed, many enzymes, like the ptyalin of saliva, are
-quickly destroyed if the reaction is greatly changed. Enzymes
-are thus seen to be more or less unstable substances,
-endowed with great power as digestive agents, but sensitive
-to a high degree and working advantageously only under
-definite conditions. Many perversions of digestion and of
-nutrition are connected not only with a lack of the proper
-secretion of some one or more digestive enzyme, but also
-with the lack of proper surroundings for the manifestation
-of normal or maximum activity.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_23">23</span></p>
-
-<p>With these statements before us, we can readily picture for
-ourselves the initial results following the ingestion of starch-containing
-foods properly cooked; and it may be mentioned
-here that the cooking is an essential preliminary, for uncooked
-starch cannot be utilized in any degree by man. With the
-mind in a state of pleasurable anticipation, with freedom
-from care and worry, which are so liable to act as deterrents
-to free secretion, and with the food in a form which appeals
-to the eye as well as to the olfactories, its thorough mastication
-calls forth and prolongs vigorous salivary secretion, with
-which the food becomes intimately intermingled. Salivary
-digestion is thus at once incited, and the starch very quickly
-commences to undergo the characteristic change into soluble
-products. As mouthful follows mouthful, deglutition alternates
-with mastication, and the mixture passes into the
-stomach, where salivary digestion can continue for a limited
-time only, until the secretion of gastric juice eventually establishes
-in the stomach-contents a distinct acid reaction,
-when salivary digestion ceases through destruction of the
-starch-converting enzyme. Need we comment, in view of
-the natural brevity of this process, upon the desirability for
-purely physiological reasons of prolonging within reasonable
-limits the interval of time the food and saliva are commingled
-in the mouth cavity? It seems obvious, in view of
-the relatively large bulk of starch-containing foods consumed
-daily, that habits of thorough mastication should be fostered,
-with the purpose of increasing greatly the digestion of starch
-at the very gateway of the alimentary tract. It is true that
-in the small intestine there comes later another opportunity
-for the digestion of starch; but it is unphysiological, as it is
-undesirable, for various reasons, not to take full advantage of
-the first opportunity which Nature gives for the preparation
-of this important foodstuff for future utilization. Further,
-thorough mastication, by a fine comminution of the food<span class="pagenum" id="Page_24">24</span>
-particles, is a material aid in the digestion which is to take
-place in the stomach and intestine. Under normal conditions,
-therefore, and with proper observance of physiological good
-sense, a large proportion of the ingested starchy foods can be
-made ready for speedy absorption and consequent utilization
-through the agency of salivary digestion.</p>
-
-<p>Nowhere in the body do we find a more forcible illustration
-of economical method in physiological processes than in
-the mechanism of gastric secretion. Years ago, it was thought
-that the flow of gastric juice was due mainly to mechanical
-stimulation of the gastric glands by contact of the food
-material with the lining membrane of the stomach. This,
-however, is not the case, as Pawlow has clearly shown, and
-it is now understood that the flow of gastric juice is started by
-impulses which have their origin in the mouth and nostrils;
-the sensations of eating, the smell, sight, and taste of food
-serving as psychical stimuli, which call forth a secretion from
-the stomach glands, just as the same stimuli may induce an
-outpouring of saliva. These sensations, as Pawlow has ascertained,
-affect secretory centres in the brain, and impulses are
-thus started which travel downward to the stomach through
-the vagus nerves, and as a result gastric juice begins to flow.
-This process, however, is supplemented by other forms of
-secretion, likewise reflex, which are incited by substances,
-ready formed in the food, and by substances&mdash;products of
-digestion&mdash;which are manufactured from the food in the
-stomach. Soups, meat juice, and the extractives of meat,
-likewise dextrin and kindred products, when present in the
-stomach, are especially active in provoking secretion. Substances
-which in themselves have less flavor, as water, milk,
-etc., are far less effective in this direction, while the white
-of eggs and bread are entirely without action in directly
-stimulating secretion. When the latter foods have been in
-the stomach for a time, however, and the proteid material has<span class="pagenum" id="Page_25">25</span>
-undergone partial digestion, then absorption of the products
-so formed calls forth energetic secretion of gastric juice. It
-is thus seen that there are three distinct ways&mdash;all reflex&mdash;by
-which gastric juice is caused to flow into the stomach as
-a prelude to gastric digestion. Further, it has been shown
-by Pawlow that there is a relationship between the volume
-and character of the gastric juice secreted and the amount
-and composition of the food ingested, thus suggesting a certain
-adjustment in the direction of physiological economy
-well worthy of note. A diet of bread, for example, leads to
-the secretion of a smaller volume of gastric juice than a corresponding
-weight of meat produces, but the juice secreted
-under the influence of bread is richer in pepsin and acid, <i>i. e.</i>,
-it has a greater digestive action than the juice produced by
-meat. The suggestion is that gastric juice assumes different
-degrees of concentration, with different proportions of acid
-and pepsin, to meet the varying requirements of a changing
-dietary.</p>
-
-<p>As has been indicated, pepsin and hydrochloric acid are
-the important constituents of gastric juice. It is noteworthy,
-however, that it is the combination of the two that is effective
-in digestion. Pepsin without acid is of no avail, and
-acid without pepsin can accomplish little in the digestion of
-food. Pepsin and acid are secreted by different gland cells
-in the stomach, and gastric insufficiency, or so-called indigestion,
-may arise from either a condition of apepsia or
-from hypoacidity. It is worthy of comment that the amount
-of hydrochloric acid secreted during 24 hours by the normal
-individual, under ordinary conditions of diet, amounts to
-what would constitute a fatal dose of acid if taken at one time
-in concentrated form. At the outset of gastric secretion, the
-fluid shows only a slight degree of acidity, but as secretion
-proceeds, the acidity rises to 0.2–0.3 per cent of hydrochloric
-acid. The main action of gastric juice is exerted on proteid<span class="pagenum" id="Page_26">26</span>
-foods, which under its influence are gradually dissolved and
-converted into soluble products known as proteoses and peptones.
-It is a process of peptonization, in which the proteid
-of the food is gradually broken down into so-called hydrolytic
-cleavage products. The enzyme, like the ptyalin of saliva,
-is influenced by temperature, maximum digestive action being
-manifested at about 38°&nbsp;C., the temperature of the body.
-Further, a certain degree of acidity is essential for procuring
-the highest degree of efficiency. Ordinarily, it is stated that
-digestive action proceeds best in the presence of 0.2 per cent
-hydrochloric acid, but what is more essential for vigorous
-digestion is a certain relationship between the acid, pepsin,
-and proteid undergoing digestion. As pepsin and the amount
-of proteid are increased, the amount of acid, and its percentage
-somewhat, must be correspondingly increased if digestion
-is to be maintained at the maximum.</p>
-
-<p>Another important function of gastric juice is that of curdling
-milk, due to the presence in the secretion of a peculiar
-enzyme known as rennin. The latter ferment acts upon the
-casein of milk,&mdash;the chief proteid constituent,&mdash;transforming
-it into a related substance commonly called paracasein.
-This then reacts with the calcium salts present in milk, forming
-an insoluble curd or calcium compound. From this point
-on, the digestion of milk-casein by gastric juice is the same as
-that of any other solid proteid, it being gradually transformed
-by the pepsin-acid into soluble cleavage products. Why gastric
-juice should be provided with this special enzyme, capable
-of acting solely on the casein of milk, can only be conjectured,
-but we may assume that it has to do with the economical
-use of this important food. As the sole nutriment of
-the young, milk occupies a peculiar position as a foodstuff,
-and being a liquid, its proteid constituent might easily escape
-complete digestion were it to pass on too hastily through the
-gastro-intestinal tract. Experiment has shown that when<span class="pagenum" id="Page_27">27</span>
-liquid food alone is taken into the stomach it is pushed forward
-into the small intestine in a comparatively short time.
-Curdled as it is by rennin, however, casein must stay for a
-longer period in the stomach, like any other solid food, and
-its partial digestion by gastric juice thereby made certain.
-For the reasons above stated, it is apparent why milk should
-not be treated as a drink in our daily diet. Remembering
-that when milk reaches the stomach it is converted into a
-solid clot or curd, there is obvious reason for sipping it, instead
-of taking it by the glassful, thereby favoring the formation
-of small, individual clots instead of one large curd, and
-thus facilitating instead of retarding digestion.</p>
-
-<p>Among other factors in gastric digestion, the muscular
-movements of the stomach walls are to be emphasized, since
-we have here a mechanical aid to digestion of no small moment,
-and likewise a means of accomplishing the onward
-movement of the stomach contents. The outer walls of the
-stomach are composed of a thick layer of circular muscular
-fibres, especially conspicuous at the pyloric end of the organ,
-where the latter is joined on to the intestine; a smaller, less
-conspicuous layer of longitudinal muscle fibres, and some
-oblique fibres. At the pylorus, the circular fibres are so
-arranged as to form a structure which, aided by a peculiar
-folding of the inner mucous membrane, serves as a sphincter,
-closing off the stomach from the duodenum, the beginning of
-the small intestine. The movements of the stomach were
-first made the subject of careful investigation by Dr. Beaumont
-in his study of the celebrated case of Alexis St. Martin,
-a French Canadian, who, in 1822, was accidentally wounded
-by the discharge of a musket, with the resultant formation of
-a permanent fistulous opening in the stomach. Dr. Beaumont,
-in the <span class="nowrap">description<a id="FNanchor_7" href="#Footnote_7" class="fnanchor">7</a></span> of his observations, writes that “by<span class="pagenum" id="Page_28">28</span>
-the alternate contractions and relaxations of these bands (of
-muscle) a great variety of motion is induced on this organ
-(the stomach), sometimes transversely, and at other times
-longitudinally. These alternate contractions and relaxations,
-when affecting the transverse diameter, produce what are
-called <i>vermicular</i> or <i>peristaltic</i> motions.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. When they all
-act together, the effect is to lessen the cavity of the stomach,
-and to press upon the contained aliment, if there be any in
-the stomach. These motions not only produce a constant
-disturbance, or <i>churning</i> of the contents of this organ, but
-they compel them, at the same time, to revolve around the
-interior, from point to point, and from one extremity to the
-other.” Of more recent investigations, the most important
-are those made by Cannon<span class="nowrap">,<a id="FNanchor_8" href="#Footnote_8" class="fnanchor">8</a></span> with the X-ray apparatus. From
-these later studies, it is evident that Dr. Beaumont’s view of
-the entire stomach being involved in a general rotary movement
-is not correct, since in reality the movements are confined
-mainly to the pyloric end of the stomach, the fundus
-or portion nearer the œsophagus not being directly involved.
-This means that when food material passes into the stomach,
-it may remain at the fundic end for some time more or less
-undisturbed before admixture with the gastric juice occurs,
-and under such conditions, until acidity creeps in, the salivary
-digestion of starch can continue.</p>
-
-<p>According to the observations of Cannon, the contractile
-movements of the stomach commence shortly after the entrance
-of food, the contractions starting from about the
-middle of the stomach and passing on toward the pylorus.
-These waves of contraction follow each other very closely,
-certainly not more than one or two minutes apart, and perhaps
-less, while the resulting movements bring about an
-intimate commingling of food and gastric juice in the pyloric<span class="pagenum" id="Page_29">29</span>
-portion of the stomach; followed by a gradual diffusion of
-the semi-fluid mixture into the fundus accompanied by a
-gradual displacement of the more solid food in the latter
-region. These movements of the stomach are more or less
-automatic, arising from stimuli&mdash;the acid secreted&mdash;originating
-in the stomach itself, although it is considered that the
-movements are subject to some regulation from extrinsic
-nerve fibres, such as the vagi and the splanchnics. As digestion
-proceeds and the mass in the stomach becomes more
-fluid, the pyloric sphincter relaxes and a certain amount of
-the fluid material is forced into the intestine by the pressure
-of the contraction wave. This is repeated at varying intervals,
-depending presumably in some measure upon the consistency
-of the mass in the stomach, until after some hours
-of digestion the stomach is completely emptied.</p>
-
-<p>Especially interesting and suggestive are the experiments
-made by <span class="nowrap">Cannon<a id="FNanchor_9" href="#Footnote_9" class="fnanchor">9</a></span> on the length of time the different types
-of foodstuffs remain in the stomach. Using cats as subjects,
-he found that fats remain for a long period in the stomach;
-they leave that organ slowly, the discharge into the intestine
-being at about the same rate as the absorption of fat
-from the small intestine or its passage into the large intestine.
-Carbohydrate foods, on the other hand, begin to leave the
-stomach soon after their ingestion. They pass out rapidly,
-and at the end of two hours reach a maximum amount in the
-small intestine almost twice the maximum for proteids, and
-two and a half times the maximum for fats, both of which
-maxima are reached only at the end of four hours. Carbohydrates
-remain in the stomach about half as long as proteids.
-Proteids, Cannon finds, frequently do not leave the stomach
-at all during the first half-hour after they are eaten. After<span class="pagenum" id="Page_30">30</span>
-two hours, they accumulate in the small intestine to a degree
-only slightly greater than that reached by carbohydrates an
-hour and a half earlier. The departure of proteids from the
-stomach is therefore slower at first than that of either fats or
-carbohydrates. When a mixture of equal parts of carbohydrates
-and proteids is fed, the discharge from the stomach is
-intermediate in rapidity. When fat is added to either carbohydrates
-or proteids it retards the passage of both foodstuffs
-through the pylorus.</p>
-
-<p>It is evident from what has been stated that the gastric
-digestion of proteid foods is a comparatively slow process,
-involving several hours of time; and further, that food material
-in general remains in the stomach for varying periods,
-dependent upon its chemical composition. It would appear
-further, that relaxation of the pyloric sphincter, allowing
-passage of chyme into the intestine, must depend somewhat
-upon chemical stimulation, as this offers the most plausible
-explanation of the diversity of action seen with the different
-foodstuffs. As has been pointed out, gastric digestion is
-primarily a process for the conversion of proteid food into
-soluble products. It would be a mistake, however, to assume
-that the digestion of proteid foods is complete in the stomach.
-Stomach digestion is to be considered more as a preliminary
-step, paving the way for further changes to be carried forward
-by the combined action of intestinal and pancreatic
-juice in the small intestine. The importance of gastric digestion
-is frequently overrated. It is unquestionably an important
-process, but not absolutely essential for the maintenance
-of life. Dogs have lived and flourished with their stomachs
-removed, the intestine being joined to the œsophagus. The
-intestine is a much more important part of the alimentary
-tract; it is likewise far more sensitive to changing conditions
-than the stomach, and undoubtedly one function of the latter
-organ is to protect the intestine and preserve it from insult.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_31">31</span>
-The stomach may be compared to a vestibule or reservoir,
-capable of receiving without detriment moderately large
-amounts of food, together with fluid, in different forms and
-combinations, with the power to hold them there until by
-action of the gastric juice they are so transformed that their
-onward passage into the intestine can be permitted with perfect
-safety. Then, small portions of the properly prepared
-material may be discharged from time to time through the
-pylorus without danger of overloading the intestine, and in
-a form capable of undergoing rapid and complete digestion.
-Further, the stomach as a reservoir is very useful in bringing
-everything to a proper and constant temperature before
-allowing its entry into the intestine. Another fact of some
-importance is that, contrary to the general view, absorption
-from the stomach of the products of digestion is not very
-rapid under ordinary conditions. Even water and soluble
-salts pass very slowly into the circulation from the stomach.
-Like the partially digested food material, they are carried
-forward through the pyloric sphincter into the intestine,
-where absorption of all classes of material is most marked.</p>
-
-<p>It is in the small intestine that both digestion and absorption
-are seen at their best. It is here that all three classes of
-foodstuffs are acted upon simultaneously through the agency
-of the pancreatic juice, intestinal juice, and bile. Here, too,
-are witnessed some of the most complicated and interesting
-reactions and changes occurring in the whole range of digestive
-functions. Especially noteworthy is the peculiar mechanism
-by which the secretion of pancreatic juice is set up and
-maintained. On demand, pancreatic juice is manufactured
-in the pancreas and poured into the intestine just beyond the
-pylorus through a small duct&mdash;the duct of Wirsung. Secretion
-is started by contact of the acid contents of the stomach
-with the mucous membrane of the small intestine, so that as
-soon as the acid chyme passes through the pyloric sphincter<span class="pagenum" id="Page_32">32</span>
-there commences an outflow of pancreatic juice into the intestine.
-While acid is plainly the inciting agent in this
-secretory process, its action is indirect. It does not cause
-secretion through reflex action on nerve fibres, but it acts
-upon a substance formed in the mucous membrane of the intestine,
-transforming it into <i>secretin</i>, which is absorbed by
-the blood and carried to the pancreas, where it excites secretory
-activity. As would be expected from the foregoing
-statements, the secretion of pancreatic juice commences very
-soon after food finds its way into the stomach, and naturally
-increases in amount with the onward passage of acid chyme
-into the intestine, the maximum flow being obtained in the
-neighborhood of the third or fourth hour, after which the
-secretion gradually decreases. In man, it is estimated on
-the basis of one or two observations that the amount secreted
-during 24 hours is about 700&nbsp;cc., or a pint and a half. Careful
-experiments, however, tend to show that the quantity of
-secretion depends in some measure at least upon the character
-of the food, and also that the composition of the secretion
-varies with the character of the food. Thus, on a diet composed
-mainly of meat, the proteid-digesting enzyme is especially
-conspicuous, while on a bread diet, with its large
-content of starch, the starch-digesting enzyme is increased in
-amount. In other words, there is suggested the possibility
-of an adaptation in the composition of the secretion to the
-character of the food to be digested.</p>
-
-<p>Pancreatic juice is an alkaline fluid, rather strongly alkaline
-in fact, from its content of sodium carbonate, and is
-especially characterized by the presence of at least three
-distinct enzymes; viz., trypsin, a proteid-digesting ferment;
-lipase, a fat-splitting enzyme; and amylopsin, a starch-digesting
-enzyme. It has already been pointed out how
-dependent the secretion of pancreatic juice is upon the co-operation
-of the intestinal mucous membrane. A similar<span class="pagenum" id="Page_33">33</span>
-dependence is found when the digestive activity of the secretion
-is studied. As just stated, pancreatic juice contains a
-proteid-digesting enzyme. This statement, however, is not
-strictly correct, for if the secretion is collected through a
-cannula so that it does not come in contact with the mucous
-membrane of the intestine, it is found free from any digestive
-action on proteids. The secretion is activated, however,
-by contact with the duodenal membrane. Expressed
-in different language, pancreatic juice as it is secreted by the
-gland does not contain ready-formed trypsin; it does contain,
-however, an inactive pro-enzyme, which, under the influence
-of a specific substance contained in the intestinal
-mucous membrane, known as enterokinase, is transformed
-into the active enzyme trypsin. There is thus seen another
-suggestive example of the close physiological relationship
-between the small intestine and the activity of the pancreatic
-gland, or its secretion.</p>
-
-<p>The chemical changes taking place in the small intestine
-are many and varied. The acid chyme, with its admixture
-of semi-digested food material, as it passes through the pyloric
-sphincter into the small intestine, is at once brought into
-immediate contact with bile, pancreatic juice, and intestinal
-juice, all of which are more or less alkaline in reaction. As
-a result, the acidity of the gastric juice is rapidly overcome,
-and the enzyme pepsin, which up to this point could exert
-its characteristic digestive action, is quickly destroyed by the
-accumulating alkaline salts. Pepsin digestion thus gives way
-to trypsin digestion,&mdash;most effective in an alkaline medium,&mdash;and
-the proteids of the food, already semi-digested by
-pepsin-acid, are further transformed by trypsin; aided and
-abetted by another enzyme, known as erepsin, secreted by
-the mucous membrane of the intestine. These two enzymes
-are much more powerful agents than pepsin. It is true that
-they begin work where pepsin left off, but most striking is<span class="pagenum" id="Page_34">34</span>
-the character of the end-products which result from their
-combined action, since they are small molecules and there
-is a surprising diversity of them. In other words, while
-gastric digestion breaks down the proteid foodstuffs into soluble
-bodies, such as proteoses and peptones closely related to
-the original proteids, in pancreatic digestion as it takes place
-in the intestine there is a profound breaking down, or disruption
-of the proteid molecule into a row of comparatively
-simple nitrogenous fragments, many of them crystalline bodies;
-such as leucin, tyrosin, glutaminic acid, aspartic acid, arginin,
-lysin, histidin, etc., known chemically as monoamino-acids
-and diamino-acids. We have no means of knowing to how
-great an extent these more profound disruptive changes of
-the proteid molecule take place in the intestine. Whether
-practically all of the ingested proteid food is broken down
-into these relatively simple compounds prior to absorption, or
-whether only a small fraction suffers this change, cannot be
-definitely stated.</p>
-
-<p>A few years ago, the majority of physiologists held to the
-view that in the digestion of proteid food all that was essential
-was its conversion into soluble and diffusible forms which
-would permit of ready absorption into the blood. The belief
-was prevalent that, since the proteid of the food was destined
-to make good the proteid of the blood and through the latter
-the proteids of the tissues, any change beyond what was
-really necessary for absorption of the proteid would be uneconomical
-and indeed wasteful. On the other hand, due
-weight must be given to the fact that in trypsin digestion,
-proteid can be quickly broken down into simple nitrogenous
-compounds, and that in the enzyme erepsin, present in the
-mucous membrane of the intestine, we have an additional
-ferment very efficient in bringing about cleavage of proteoses
-and peptone into amino-acids. From these latter facts it might
-be argued that, in the digestion of proteid foodstuffs by the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_35">35</span>
-combined action of gastric and pancreatic juice in the alimentary
-tract, a large proportion of the proteid is destined to
-undergo complete conversion into amino-acids, and that from
-these fragments the body, by a process of synthesis, can construct
-its own peculiar type of proteid.</p>
-
-<p>This latter suggestion is worthy of a moment’s further consideration.
-As is well known, every species of animal has
-its own particular type of proteid, adapted to its particular
-needs. The proteids of one species directly injected into the
-blood of another species are incapable of serving as nutriment
-to the body, and frequently act as poisons. Man in his wide
-choice of food consumes a great variety of proteids, all different
-in some degree from the proteids of his own tissues. Is
-it not possible, therefore, that it is the true function of pancreatic
-and intestinal digestion to break down the different
-proteids of the food completely into simple fragments, so that
-the body can reconstruct after its own particular pattern the
-proteids essential for its nourishment? Or, we can follow
-the suggestion contained in the work of Abderhalden<span class="nowrap">,<a id="FNanchor_10" href="#Footnote_10" class="fnanchor">10</a></span> who
-finds that in the long continued digestion of various proteids
-by pancreatic juice there results in addition to the amino-acids
-a very resistant residue, non-proteid in nature, which
-is termed polypeptid. In other words, Abderhalden believes
-that pepsin, trypsin, and erepsin are not capable of bringing
-about a <i>complete</i> breaking down of proteids into amino-acids,
-but that there always remains a nucleus of the proteid not
-strictly proteid in nature, though related thereto,&mdash;polypeptid,&mdash;which
-may serve as a starting-point for the synthesis
-or construction of new proteid molecules, the various
-amino-acids being employed to finish out the structure and
-give the particular character desired. This view, however,
-is rendered somewhat untenable by the more recent experiments<span class="pagenum" id="Page_36">36</span>
-of Cohnheim<span class="nowrap">,<a id="FNanchor_11" href="#Footnote_11" class="fnanchor">11</a></span> who claims that proteids can be <i>completely</i>
-broken down by pepsin, trypsin, and erepsin, and consequently
-polypeptids would hardly be available for the synthesis of proteids.
-Moreover, Bergell and <span class="nowrap">Lewin<a id="FNanchor_12" href="#Footnote_12" class="fnanchor">12</a></span> have ascertained that
-there is present in the liver an enzyme or ferment which has
-the power of digesting or breaking down certain dipeptids
-and polypeptids into amino-acids. Hence, it follows that if
-any polypeptids are absorbed from the intestine, they would
-naturally be carried to the liver, where further cleavage into
-fragments suitable for synthetical processes might occur. In
-any event, there is good ground for the belief that the more
-or less complete disruption of the proteid molecule into small
-fragments renders possible a synthetical construction of new
-proteid to meet the demands of the organism; a fact of great
-importance in our conception of the possibilities connected
-with this phase of proteid nutrition.</p>
-
-<p>Fatty foods undergo little or no chemical alteration until
-they reach the small intestine. During their stay in the
-stomach they naturally become liquid from the heat of
-the body, and there is more or less liberation of fat from
-the digestive action of gastric juice on cell walls, connective
-tissues, etc. Most food fat is in the form of so-called neutral
-fat, which must undergo hydrolysis or saponification
-before it can be absorbed and thus made available for the
-body. This is accomplished by the enzyme lipase, or steapsin,
-of the pancreatic juice, aided indirectly by the presence
-of bile. Under the influence of this fat-splitting enzyme all
-neutral fats, whether animal or vegetable, are broken apart,
-through hydrolysis, into glycerin and a free fatty acid; the
-latter reacting in some measure with the sodium carbonate of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_37">37</span>
-the pancreatic juice to form a sodium salt, or soluble soap,
-while perhaps the larger part of the fatty acid is held in solution
-by the bile present. Soap, free acid, and glycerin are then
-absorbed from the intestine and are found again combined in
-the lymph as neutral fat. In this way the fats of the food
-are rendered available for the nourishment of the body.</p>
-
-<p>The next important chemical change taking place in the
-small intestine is that induced by the amylopsin of the pancreatic
-juice, which, acting in essentially the same manner as
-the ptyalin of saliva, converts any unaltered starch into dextrins
-and sugar. The latter substance, maltose, is exposed
-to the action of another enzyme contained in the intestinal
-secretion termed maltase, which transforms it into dextrose,
-a monosaccharide.</p>
-
-<p>In these ways the proteids, fats, and carbohydrates of the
-food are gradually digested, so far as conditions will admit,
-digestion being practically completed by the time the material
-reaches the ileocæcal valve at the beginning of the
-large intestine. Throughout the length of the small intestine
-absorption proceeds rapidly; water, salts, and the products
-of digestion passing out from the intestine into the circulating
-blood and lymph. At the ileocæcal valve, however,
-the contents of the intestine are practically as fluid as at the
-beginning of the small intestine, due to the fact that water
-is continually being secreted into the intestine. In the large
-intestine, the contents become less and less fluid through
-reabsorption of the water, and as the propulsive movements
-of the circular and longitudinal muscle fibres of the intestinal
-wall carry the material onward toward the rectum, the last
-portions of available nutriment are absorbed. Finally, in
-varying degree, certain putrefactive changes are observed in
-the large intestine involving a breaking down of some residual
-proteid matter, through the agency of micro-organisms
-almost invariably present, with formation of such substances<span class="pagenum" id="Page_38">38</span>
-as indol, skatol, phenol, fatty acids, etc. These processes,
-however, in health are held rigidly in check, and count for
-little in fitting the food for absorption. Digestion, on the
-other hand, extending as we have seen from the mouth cavity
-to the ileocæcal valve, is the handmaiden of nutrition, preparing
-all three classes of organic foodstuffs for their passage
-into the circulating blood and lymph, and thus paving the
-way for their utilization by the hungry tissue cells.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_39">39</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_II">CHAPTER II</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="chaptitle">ABSORPTION, ASSIMILATION, AND THE PROCESSES
-OF METABOLISM</p>
-
-<p class="chaptopics"><span class="smcap">Topics</span>: Physiological peculiarities in absorption. Chemical changes in
-epithelial walls of intestine. Two pathways for absorbed material.
-Function of the liver as a regulator of carbohydrate. Absorption of
-proteid products. Assimilation of food products. Anabolism. Katabolism.
-Metabolism. Processes of metabolism. Older views regarding
-oxidation. Discoveries of Lavoisier. The views of Liebig.
-Theory of luxus consumption. Oxidation in the body not simple
-combustion. Oxygen not the <i>cause</i> of the decompositions. Oxidation
-not confined to any one place. Intracellular enzymes. Living cells
-the guiding power in katabolism. Some intermediary products of
-tissue metabolism. Chemical structure of different proteids. Decomposition
-products of nucleoproteids. Relation to uric acid. Action
-of specific intracellular enzymes. Creatin and creatinin. Relation
-to urea. Proteid katabolism a series of progressive chemical decompositions.
-Intracellular enzymes as the active agents.</p>
-
-<p>Digestion being completed, and the available portion
-of the foodstuffs thereby converted into forms suitable
-for absorption, the question naturally arises, In what manner
-are these products transported from the alimentary tract to the
-tissues and organs of the body? In attempting to answer
-this question, we shall find many illustrations of the precise
-and undeviating methods which prevail in the processes of
-nutrition. For example, it would seem plausible to assume
-that the different forms of sugar entering into man’s ordinary
-diet, all of them being soluble, would be directly absorbed
-and at once utilized, but such is far from being the
-case. Milk-sugar and cane-sugar, both appearing in greater<span class="pagenum" id="Page_40">40</span>
-or less degree in our daily dietaries, if introduced directly
-into the blood, are at once excreted through the kidneys unchanged.
-The body cannot use them, and they are gotten
-rid of as speedily as possible, much as if they were poisons.
-When taken by way of the mouth, however, they are utilized,
-simply because in the intestine two enzymes are present there,
-known as lactase and invertase, which break each of the
-sugars apart into two smaller molecules. In other words,
-milk-sugar and cane-sugar are disaccharides, and if they are to
-be absorbed in forms capable of being made use of by the body
-they must be split apart into simpler sugars, viz., monosaccharides,
-such as dextrose, levulose, etc. The great bulk
-of the carbohydrate food consumed by man is in the form of
-starch, and this, as we have seen, is converted into maltose
-by the action of saliva and pancreatic juice. Maltose, however,
-like cane-sugar, is a disaccharide, and the body has no
-power to burn it or utilize it directly; but in the intestine
-and elsewhere is an enzyme termed maltase, which breaks
-up maltose into two molecules of the monosaccharide dextrose,
-and this the body can use. Man frequently consumes
-starch to the extent of a pound a day, and if utilized it must
-all undergo transformation into maltose, and then into dextrose.
-There is no apparent reason why maltose should not
-be absorbed and assimilated as readily as dextrose, but so
-urgent is the necessity for this conversion into dextrose that
-in the blood itself there is present maltase, to effect the transformation
-of any maltose that may gain entrance there. We
-are here face to face with a simple fact in nutrition. The
-body cannot utilize disaccharides directly. Why it is so we
-cannot say, but the fact is a good illustration of the principle
-that nothing can be taken for granted in our study of
-nutrition.</p>
-
-<p>For years, physiologists assumed that the ordinary physical
-laws of osmosis, imbibition, and diffusion were quite adequate<span class="pagenum" id="Page_41">41</span>
-to explain the passage of digested food materials into
-the blood and lymph. If a substance was soluble and diffusible,
-that was sufficient; it would quite naturally be absorbed
-in harmony with its diffusion velocity. This, however, is
-not wholly true, since experiment shows that the rapidity of
-absorption of diffusible substances through the wall of the
-intestine is by no means always proportional to the diffusion
-velocity of the substance. The lining membrane of the
-small intestine, where absorption mainly takes place, is not
-to be compared to a dead parchment membrane. On the
-contrary, it is made up of living protoplasmic cells; absorption
-is not a physical, but a physiological, process, in which
-the living epithelium cells stand as guardians of the portals,
-ready to challenge and, if need be, modify the rate of passage.
-Osmosis and diffusion undoubtedly play some part in
-absorption, but they alone are not sufficient to account for
-what actually takes place in the absorption of digestion
-products, and other substances from the living intestine.</p>
-
-<p>The primary products formed in the digestion of proteid
-foods&mdash;the proteoses and peptones&mdash;afford another illustration
-of physiological peculiarity in absorption. These bodies
-are readily soluble and quite diffusible, yet they are never
-found to any extent in the circulating blood and lymph during
-health. It is of course possible, as has been previously
-suggested, that as soon as formed they undergo transformation
-into simpler decomposition products in the small intestine;
-but this is by no means certain. If proteoses and
-peptones are injected directly into the blood, they cause a
-marked disturbance, influencing at once blood-pressure, affecting
-the coagulability of the blood, and in many other ways
-exhibiting a pronounced deleterious action which at once indicates
-they are out of their normal environment. They are
-not at home in the circulating blood, and the latter medium
-gets rid of them as speedily as possible; they behave like<span class="pagenum" id="Page_42">42</span>
-veritable poisons, and yet they are the primary products
-formed in the digestion of all proteid foodstuffs. On the
-basis of all physical laws governing diffusion they should be
-absorbed, and help to renew the proteids of the blood and
-later the proteids of the tissues. Yet, as we have said, they
-are not normally present in the blood or lymph. Apparently,
-in the very act of absorption, as they pass through the epithelial
-cells of the intestinal wall, before they gain entrance to
-the blood stream, they undergo transformation into serum-albumin
-and globulin, the characteristic blood proteids. The
-other alternative is that, as previously mentioned, they are
-completely broken down in the intestine into amino-acids,
-etc., and these simpler products synthesized, as they pass
-through the intestinal wall toward the blood, into serum-albumin
-and globulin. Certainly as yet, there is no evidence
-that the amino-acids, as such, go through the epithelial cells
-of the intestine; they are not found in the blood or lymph to
-any appreciable extent, yet the proteids of the blood are reinforced
-in some manner by the products of proteid digestion.
-Whichever view is correct, one thing is perfectly obvious,
-viz., that in the act of absorption the products resulting from
-the gastric and pancreatic digestion of proteid foods are exposed
-to some influence, presumably in the epithelial cells
-of the intestinal wall, by which there is a reconstruction of
-proteid. Further, the proteid substances so formed are of the
-type peculiar to the blood of that particular species of animal.
-The proteids of beef, mutton, chicken, oatmeal, or bread go
-to make the proteids of human blood.</p>
-
-<p>From these statements, it is obvious that what we term absorption
-is something more than a simple diffusion of soluble
-substances from the alimentary tract into the blood current.
-The process is much more complex than appears on the surface,
-and our lack of definite knowledge, in spite of numerous
-efforts to unravel the mystery, merely strengthens the view<span class="pagenum" id="Page_43">43</span>
-that we are dealing here with an obscure physiological problem,
-and not a simple physical one. Digestion induces a splitting
-up of the food proteid into fragments, large or small, while
-incidental to absorption there is apparently a reconstruction,
-or synthesis, of proteid from the fragments so formed. The
-process seems somewhat costly, physiologically speaking, yet
-when one considers the variety of proteids consumed as food,
-it is easy to comprehend how essential it is that in some
-manner, as in absorption, there be opportunity for construction
-of the specific proteids of the blood and lymph.</p>
-
-<p>We find an analogous process in the absorption of fats.
-As we have seen, the fats of the food are broken apart in the
-small intestine into glycerin and free fatty acid, a portion
-of the latter, and perhaps all, combining with the alkali of the
-intestinal juices to form soluble soaps, or sodium salts of the
-respective fatty acids. The neutral fats present in animal
-and vegetable foods are all alike in containing the glyceryl
-radicle, but they differ in the character of the fatty acids
-present. Further, one form of animal fat, like that from beef,
-may contain quite a different proportion of stearin, palmitin,
-and olein than is present in the fat of another animal, like
-mutton. By digestion, however, they are all broken apart
-into fatty acid and glycerin. These acids and their salts can
-be readily detected in the intestine, but they are not found
-in the blood or lymph, yet shortly after fatty food is taken
-the lymph is seen to be milky from fat. Obviously, the fatty
-acids liberated in the intestine are absorbed, either as soluble
-soaps or as free fatty acids dissolved in bile, but as they pass
-through the epithelial cells of the intestine into the lacteal
-radicles, there is a synthesis or reconstruction of fat; and as
-a result, neutral fats and not soaps are found in the lymph.
-Here, then, we have a process quite analogous to what apparently
-occurs in the absorption of proteid, though less complex;
-and it is possible that this is one of the factors which<span class="pagenum" id="Page_44">44</span>
-aids in the formation of a specific fat mixture corresponding,
-in a measure, to the type of fat present in the particular species.
-It is well understood that the fat of an animal’s tissues
-may be modified somewhat by the character of the fat fed, yet
-in spite of this there is a certain degree of constancy in composition
-which calls for explanation. Sheep and oxen feeding
-in the same pasture have fat widely different in the
-proportion of stearin, palmitin, etc. The fat of man’s tissues
-is fairly definite in composition, yet he eats a great variety of
-fatty foods. One man may consume large amounts of hard
-mutton fat with its relatively large content of stearin, while
-another individual may take his fat mainly in the form of the
-soft butter fats, with their relatively large content of olein
-and palmitin. In both cases, the fat of the man’s tissues will
-be essentially the same. To be sure, the changes that take
-place in the tissue cells, reinforced by the construction of
-fat from other sources, may be partly responsible for this
-constancy of composition, but the transformations incidental
-to absorption are quite possibly, in some measure, helpful
-thereto.</p>
-
-<p>The great bulk of the digested food material is absorbed
-from the small intestine, and there are two pathways open
-through which the absorbed material can gain access to the
-blood. The one path leads directly to the liver, and substances
-taking this course are exposed to the action of this
-organ, before they enter into the general circulation. The
-other path is through the lacteal or lymphatic system, and
-constitutes a roundabout way for substances to enter the
-blood stream, since they must first pass through the thoracic
-duct before entering the main circulation. As a general
-truth, it may be stated that fats are absorbed through the
-latter channel, while carbohydrates and proteids follow the
-first path. The innumerable blood capillaries in the villi of
-the intestine take up the products resulting from the digestion<span class="pagenum" id="Page_45">45</span>
-of proteids and carbohydrates, through which they are
-passed into the portal vein, and thereby distributed throughout
-the liver. This means that both carbohydrates and proteids&mdash;or
-their decomposition products&mdash;are exposed to a
-variety of possible changes in this large glandular organ,
-before they can enter into the tissues of the body. As we
-have seen, practically all carbohydrate food is converted into
-a monosaccharide, principally dextrose, in the alimentary
-tract; and it is in this form of a simple sugar that the carbohydrate
-passes into the blood. This might easily mean a
-pound of sugar absorbed during the twenty-four hours, and
-would obviously give to the blood a high degree of concentration,
-unless the excess was quickly disposed of. Sugar is
-very diffusible, and if it accumulates to any extent in the
-blood it is quickly gotten rid of by excretion through the
-kidneys. This, however, is wasteful, physiologically and
-otherwise, and does not ordinarily occur except in diseased
-conditions. Further, physiologists have learned that a certain
-small, but definite, amount of sugar in the blood is a
-necessary requirement in nutrition, and it is the function of
-the liver to maintain the proper carbohydrate level.</p>
-
-<p>We must again emphasize the great importance of carbohydrate
-food; there is a far larger amount of starchy food
-consumed than of any other foodstuff, and it is more readily
-available as a source of energy. Its presence in the blood,
-in the form of sugar, is constantly demanded, but it must be
-kept within the proper limits for the uses of the different
-tissues and organs of the body. The liver serves as an effective
-regulator, maintaining, in spite of all fluctuations in the
-supply and demand, a definite percentage of sugar such as is
-best adapted to keep the tissues of the body in a normal and
-healthy condition. This regulation by the liver is rendered
-possible through the ability of the hepatic cells to transform
-the sugar brought to the gland into glycogen, so-called animal<span class="pagenum" id="Page_46">46</span>
-starch, which is stored up in the liver until such time as it is
-needed by the body. The process is one of dehydration, the
-reverse of what takes place in the intestine when ordinary
-starch is converted into maltose and dextrose. The efficiency
-of this regulating mechanism depends also upon the ability of
-the liver to transform glycogen into sugar, presumably through
-the agency of an enzyme in the hepatic cells. Hence, glycogen
-may be looked upon as a temporary reserve supply of
-carbohydrate, manufactured and stored in the liver during
-digestion, when naturally large amounts of sugar are passing
-into the portal blood, and to be drawn upon whenever from
-any cause the content of sugar in the blood threatens to
-fall below normal. Obviously, there must be some delicate
-machinery for the adjustment of these opposite changes in
-the liver, and we may well believe that it is associated with
-the composition of the blood itself, which in some fashion
-stimulates and inhibits, as may be required, the functional
-activity of the liver, or its component cells. In any event,
-we have in this so-called glycogenic function of the liver a
-most effective means for accomplishing the complete and
-judicious utilization of all the sugar formed from the carbohydrates
-of the food, after it has once passed beyond the confines
-of the alimentary tract into the blood; preventing all
-loss, and at the same time guarding against all danger, from
-undue accumulation of sugar in the circulation. We see,
-too, how wise the provision that all sugar should pass from
-the alimentary canal into the portal circulation and not by
-way of the lymphatics, since by the latter channel the regulating
-action of the liver would be mainly lost. Further, recalling
-how soluble and diffusible sugar is, we may well marvel
-that it practically all passes from the intestine by way of the
-blood, and escapes entry into the lymphatics. Surely, this
-marked shunning of the other equally accessible pathway
-affords a striking illustration of selective action such as<span class="pagenum" id="Page_47">47</span>
-might be expected in a physiological process, but not in harmony
-with the ordinary physical laws of osmosis or diffusion.
-In conformity with this statement, it may be mentioned that
-appropriate experiments have clearly demonstrated that the
-different sugars available as food are not absorbed from the
-intestine in harmony with their diffusion velocity, but show
-deviations therefrom which can be explained only on the
-ground that the intestinal wall exercises some selective action,
-due to the living cells composing it. Likewise interesting in
-their bearing on nutrition are the observations of Hofmeister<span class="nowrap">,<a id="FNanchor_13" href="#Footnote_13" class="fnanchor">13</a></span>
-who finds by experiments on dogs that the assimilation limit
-of the different sugars shows marked variation. Thus, dextrose,
-levulose, and cane-sugar have the highest assimilation,
-while milk-sugar is far less easily and completely assimilated.
-If this is equally true of man, it indicates that starchy foods,
-with their ultimate conversion into dextrose, are to be ranked
-as having a high assimilation limit, thus affording additional
-evidence of their high nutritive value.</p>
-
-<p>In the absorption of proteid products, their passage from
-the intestine by way of the portal circulation insures exposure
-to the action of the hepatic cells, before they are distributed
-by the general circulation throughout the body. It is
-only under conditions of an excessive intake of proteid foods
-that their products are absorbed by way of the lymphatics.
-These points are clearly established, and there is every ground
-for believing that substantial reasons exist to account for this
-single line of departure. Just what the liver does, however,
-is uncertain. In fact, as already indicated, there is lack of
-definite knowledge as to how far the proteid foods are broken
-down in digestion, prior to absorption. The combined action
-of pepsin, trypsin, and erepsin, if sufficiently long continued,
-can accomplish a complete disruption of the proteid molecule.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_48">48</span>
-We are inclined to assume in a general way that the “proteids
-taken as food cannot find a place in the economy of the
-animal body till they have been, as it were, melted down and
-recast.<span class="nowrap">”<a id="FNanchor_14" href="#Footnote_14" class="fnanchor">14</a></span> How far this melting down or disruption extends
-in normal digestion, we do not at present know. As already
-stated, neither proteoses and peptones, nor the amino-acids, are
-found in the blood stream in sufficient amounts, or with that
-frequency, to suggest absorption in these forms. Possibly, as
-some physiologists have suggested, the amount of any of these
-products to be found at any one time in a given quantity of
-blood is too small for certain recognition, yet in the twenty-four
-hours the amount passing from intestine to liver might be
-sufficiently large to equal the total proteid absorbed. We can,
-however, at present only conjecture, and must rest content
-with the simple statement that in the digestion of the proteid
-foodstuffs, proteoses, peptones, and amino-acids are
-formed, and that by transformation or total reconstruction of
-these products, special types of proteid are manufactured
-either in the epithelial cells of the intestinal walls during
-absorption, or elsewhere in the body after absorption. If this
-latter is the case, the liver might readily be regarded as a
-likely spot for the synthesis to occur.</p>
-
-<p>Bearing in mind what has been said regarding the production
-of specific types of proteid by every species of animal,
-we can the more readily conceive of a synthesis “out of
-fragments of the original molecules rearranged and put together
-in new combinations, by processes in which the intestine
-can hardly be supposed to play a part.” This, the liver
-might well be assumed as capable of accomplishing, and if
-we were disposed to accept this view we might use as an
-argument the fact that the products of proteid digestion
-are taken directly to this organ, before being cast loose in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_49">49</span>
-the tissues and organs of the body. There is perhaps as
-good ground for assuming that a synthesis or reconstruction
-of proteid takes place all over the body; that, as suggested
-by Leathes, “the synthesis of proteids is a function
-of every cell in the body, each one for itself, and that the
-material out of which all proteids in the body are made is
-not proteid in any form, but the fragments derived from
-proteids by hydrolysis, probably the amido-acids, which in
-different combinations and different proportions are found
-in all proteids, and into which they are all resolved by the
-processes, autolytic or digestive, which can be carried out
-in every cell in the body.” It is certainly a reasonable
-hypothesis, and since we lack positive knowledge it cannot
-at present be disproved. All that we can affirm in the light
-of established fact is that the products of proteid digestion are
-absorbed from the intestine by way of the portal circulation,
-and that either in their passage through the intestinal wall,
-or later on in the liver or elsewhere, there is a construction
-of new proteid to meet the wants of the body. The liver,
-indeed, may be effective in both construction and destruction
-of proteid, but there is no way of telling at present just
-how far it acts in either direction.</p>
-
-<p class="mb18em">Regarding the absorption of fats, a single statement will
-suffice, in addition to what has already been said. Fats gain
-access to the general circulation by passing from the intestine
-into the lacteal radicles, thence into the lymphatics, whence
-they move onward into the thoracic duct, and from there are
-emptied into the great veins at the neck. A small amount
-is apparently absorbed in the form of soap by the portal circulation,
-but by far the larger amount of fat gains access to
-the blood stream without going through the liver.</p>
-
-<p>In these ways, the blood and lymph are continually supplied
-with proteid, fat, and carbohydrate from the ingested<span class="pagenum" id="Page_50">50</span>
-food, and as these fluids surround and permeate the organized
-elements of the tissues, the latter are enabled to gain
-what they need to maintain their nutritive balance. Living
-matter is essentially unstable; it is the seat of chemical
-changes of various kinds, anabolic or constructive, and katabolic
-or destructive. The more comprehensive term “metabolic”
-is applied to all of these changes that take place in
-living matter. In anabolism, the dead, inert proteids, fats,
-and carbohydrates are more or less assimilated and made a
-part of the living matter of the tissue cells, while at the same
-time a certain amount of the food material, probably the
-larger amount, is simply stored as such, or left to circulate in
-the blood and lymph, without being raised to the higher level
-of living protoplasm. In katabolism, this accumulated material,
-and in some degree the living substance itself, is broken
-down or disintegrated with liberation of the stored-up energy,
-which manifests itself in the form of heat and mechanical
-work. At times, the anabolic processes predominate and
-there is a relatively large accumulation of stored-up materials;
-while at other times, katabolism, with its attendant chemical
-decompositions, predominates, and the body loses correspondingly.
-The point to be emphasized here is that the living
-body, with its multitude of living cells, is the seat of incessant
-change. Construction and destruction are continually
-going forward side by side; sometimes the one and sometimes
-the other predominating, according to existing conditions.
-The living protoplasm with its attendant storage material is,
-under ordinary conditions, constantly being made good from
-the assimilated food, a part of which is raised to the dignity
-of living matter and becomes an integral part of the living
-cells, while the larger portion is simply stored for future
-uses, or circulates in the blood and lymph which bathe them.
-Doubtless, this storage or circulating material is the main
-source of the energy which constantly flows from the cells<span class="pagenum" id="Page_51">51</span>
-in the form of heat and of work, as a result of the disruptive
-changes that constitute katabolism.</p>
-
-<p>Worthy of special notice is the fact that cell protoplasm
-is essentially proteid in nature; water and proteid make
-up the larger part of its substance, to which are added
-small proportions of carbohydrate, fat, and mineral matter.
-Proteid is the basis of cell protoplasm; it is the chemical
-nucleus of living matter, and owing to the large size of
-its molecule, with its large number of contained atoms, is
-capable of many combinations and many alterations. Most
-of the reactions characteristic of katabolism centre around
-this proteid, but the disruptive changes that occur undoubtedly
-involve more largely the circulating materials present
-in the blood and lymph, and which bathe the cells, rather
-than the so-called fixed, or organ proteid, of the cell substance
-itself. Still, while the circulating blood and lymph
-furnish largely the substances which are made to undergo
-disintegration in katabolism, the living protoplasmic cell is
-the controlling power which regulates the extent and character
-of the decompositions, and proteid matter is the chemical
-basis of protoplasm. From these statements, we again
-have suggested the significant importance of the proteid foods
-in nutrition, since they alone can furnish the material which
-constitutes the chemical basis of living cells. The human
-body, which represents the highest form of animal life, is
-merely, as stated by another, “literally a nation of cells derived
-from a single cell called the ovum, living together, but
-dividing the work, transformed variously into tissues and
-organs, and variously surrounded by protoplasm products”
-(Waller).</p>
-
-<p>The processes involved in metabolism are not easily unravelled.
-The word itself is simple, but it is employed to
-designate that complex of “chemical changes in living organisms
-which constitute their life, the changes by which their<span class="pagenum" id="Page_52">52</span>
-food is assimilated and becomes part of them, the changes
-which it undergoes while it shares their life, and finally those
-by which it is returned to the condition of inanimate matter.
-Gathered together under this one phrase are some of the most
-intricate and inaccessible of natural phenomena. It implies
-also, and gently insists on the idea, that all the phenomena
-of life are at bottom chemical reactions” (Leathes). Regarding
-the processes of anabolism, as in the construction of
-living protoplasm out of inert food materials, we can say
-nothing. This is altogether beyond our ken at present, and
-doubtless will remain so, since it involves a chemical alteration,
-or change, akin to that of bringing the dead to life. With
-the processes of katabolism, however, we may hope for more
-satisfactory results; and, indeed, to-day we have considerable
-information of value as to some of the methods, at least,
-which are the cause of this phase of nutrition. This knowledge,
-however, has been slow of attainment.</p>
-
-<p>In the earlier years of the sixteenth century, when anatomy
-and physiology were beginning to make progress, the savants
-of that day, hampered as they were by grave misconceptions
-and by the lack of any understanding of chemical phenomena,
-could not take advantage, naturally, of the suggestion that as
-wood burns or oxidizes in the air with liberation of heat, so
-might the food substances, absorbed by the body, undergo
-oxidation in the tissues and thus give rise to animal heat.
-Such suggestions were at that time as a closed book, and so
-we find Vesalius, in 1543, teaching the Galenic doctrines in
-physiology then prevalent. The conception of heat production,
-as it existed at that time, may be inferred from the following
-quotation<span class="nowrap">:<a id="FNanchor_15" href="#Footnote_15" class="fnanchor">15</a></span> “The parts of the food absorbed from
-the alimentary canal are carried by the portal blood to the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_53">53</span>
-liver, and by the influence of that great organ are converted
-into blood. The blood thus enriched by the food is by the
-same great organ endued with the nutritive properties summed
-up in the phrase ‘natural spirits.’ But blood thus endowed
-with natural spirits is still crude blood, unfitted for the
-higher purposes of the blood in the body. Carried from the
-liver by the vena cava to the right side of the heart, some of
-it passes from the right ventricle through innumerable invisible
-pores in the septum to the left ventricle. As the heart
-expands it draws from the lungs through the vein-like artery
-air into the left ventricle. And in that left cavity, the blood
-which has come through the septum is mixed with the air
-thus drawn in, and by the help of that heat, which is innate
-in the heart, which was placed there as the source of the heat
-of the body by God in the beginning of life, and which remains
-there until death, is imbued with further qualities, is
-laden with ‘vital spirits,’ and so fitted for its higher duties.
-The air thus drawn into the left heart by the pulmonary vein,
-at the same time tempers the innate heat of the heart and
-prevents it from becoming excessive.” In other words, heat
-was considered as a divine gift, and as can readily be seen,
-there was an utter lack of appreciation of the use of air in
-breathing. Even van Helmont, who lived in 1577–1644,
-and was in a sense an alchemist, still gave credence to the
-spirits, viz., that the food absorbed from the stomach and
-intestine is in the liver endued with natural spirits, while in
-the heart the natural spirits are converted into vital spirits,
-and in the brain the vital spirits are transformed into animal
-spirits<span class="nowrap">.<a id="FNanchor_16" href="#Footnote_16" class="fnanchor">16</a></span> Later, Malpighi discovered the true structure of
-the lungs, and Borelli, in 1680, exposed the erroneous views
-then prevalent regarding the purpose of breathing. It is not
-true, says Borelli, that the use of breathing is to cool the excessive<span class="pagenum" id="Page_54">54</span>
-heat of the heart or to ventilate the vital flame, but
-we must believe that this great machinery of the lungs, with
-their accompanying blood vessels, is for some grand purpose.
-In a long and vigorous argument, he contends that the “air
-taken in by breathing is the chief cause of the life of animals,
-far more essential than the working of the heart and the circulation
-of the blood.” He quotes the experiments of Boyle,
-who showed in 1660 “that even in a partial vacuum brought
-about by his air pump, flame was extinguished and life soon
-came to an end; the candle went out and the mouse or the
-sparrow died.”</p>
-
-<p>At this time, and for long afterwards, the belief was prevalent
-that the air taken up by the blood in the lungs was
-the air of the atmosphere in its entirety. No one appears to
-have thought of the possibility of only a part of the air being
-used, for at that time there was no suspicion that air was a
-mixture of substances. Mayow, however, in 1668, showed
-that it was not the whole air which was employed for respiration,
-but a particular part only. At this time, great attention
-was being given to a study of nitre or saltpetre; its wonderful
-properties in combustion were being recognized, and
-Mayow, who was a chemist of repute, claimed that it had its
-origin partly in the air and partly in the earth. The air
-“which surrounds us, and which, since by its tenuity escapes
-the sharpness of our eyes, seems to those who think about
-it to be an empty space, is impregnated with a certain universal
-salt, of a nitro-saline nature, that is to say, with a
-vital, fiery, and in the highest degree fermentative spirit,” to
-which the name of “igneo-aereus” was applied. Nitre was
-shown to be composed of a <i>sal fixum</i> or sal alkali,&mdash;potash as
-it is now called,&mdash;and was obviously derived from the earth,
-while the other part of nitre was made up of the <i>spiritus
-acidus</i>, or nitric acid. For a time it was supposed that the
-whole of this <i>spiritus acidus</i> was contained in the atmosphere,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_55">55</span>
-but it was soon recognized that this could not be the
-case, since nitric acid was found to be a corrosive liquid, destructive
-to life and quite incapable of supporting combustion.
-Hence, Mayow concluded that only a part of the acid
-exists in the atmosphere, viz., that part which he termed
-<i>spiritus nitro-aereus</i>. In combustion, there is something in
-the air which is necessary for the burning of every flame,
-unless perchance igneo-aereal particles should pre-exist in
-the thing to be burnt. These igneo-aereal particles form
-“the more active and subtle part of air which is thus necessary
-for combustion, exist in nitre and indeed constitute its
-‘more active and fiery part.’” Mayow fully recognized that
-burning and breathing involved in a measure the same process;
-both consisted in the consumption of the igneo-aereal particles
-present in the air. “If a small animal and a lighted
-candle be shut up in the same vessel, the entrance into which
-of air from without be prevented, you will see in a short
-time the candle go out, nor will the animal long survive its
-funeral torch. Indeed, [says Mayow] I have found by observation
-that an animal shut up in a flask together with
-a candle will continue to breathe for not much more than
-half the time than it otherwise would, that is, without the
-candle.” Something contained in the air, necessary alike
-for supporting combustion and for sustaining life, passes
-from the air into the blood. Mayow expressed his thoughts
-in these words: “And indeed it is very probable that certain
-particles of a nitro-saline nature, and those very subtle,
-nimble, and of very great fermentative power, are separated
-from the air by the aid of the lungs and introduced into the
-mass of the blood. And so necessary for life of every kind
-is that aereal salt (constituent) that not even plants can
-grow in earth the access of air to which is shut off. But if
-that same earth be exposed to air and so forthwith impregnated
-with that fecundating salt, it at once becomes fit again<span class="pagenum" id="Page_56">56</span>
-for growing.<span class="nowrap">”<a id="FNanchor_17" href="#Footnote_17" class="fnanchor">17</a></span> Mayow fully appreciated the importance of
-his nitro-aereal particles in the processes of life; he had indeed
-a fairly accurate conception of a sound theory of animal
-heat; he saw that they were equally necessary for burning,
-or combustion, and for respiration, and so was enabled to
-draw a parallelism between the two processes; he pointed
-out that they were essential for the ordinary activity of the
-muscles of the body, that as muscle work was increased more
-particles from the air were required; indeed, he clearly foresaw
-the need which the body had for these igneo-aereal particles
-in all the chemical processes of life. And thus was
-foreshadowed a conception of oxidation, a hundred years before
-Priestley evolved his phlogiston theories and Lavoisier
-discovered oxygen.</p>
-
-<p>The discoveries of Lavoisier, published in 1789, led to a
-clear understanding of combustion as a process of oxidation,
-and paved the way for a fuller knowledge of the part played
-by the oxygen of the air in the chemical reactions going on in
-the animal body. Lavoisier showed that the oxygen drawn
-into the lungs with the air breathed was used in the body for
-the oxidation of certain substances, carbon being transformed
-thereby into carbon dioxide, and hydrogen into water. Further,
-he noted that these oxidations were carried forward on
-a large scale, and he emphasized the importance of oxygen
-as being the true cause of the varied decompositions taking
-place in the living body. The larger the amount of oxygen
-inspired, the more extensive the oxidation, and consequently
-the rate of respiration as modifying the intake of oxygen
-served in his opinion as a regulator to control the extent of
-the oxidative processes. He pointed out that a definite relationship
-existed between the amount of work done by the
-body and the oxygen consumed; greater muscular activity,
-lower temperature of the surrounding air, the activities attending<span class="pagenum" id="Page_57">57</span>
-the digestive functions, all seemed to be associated
-with a greater utilization of oxygen. Oxidation was the
-pivot around which all the chemical reactions of the body
-seemed to centre. Lavoisier, however, was not a physiologist,
-and he was, quite naturally perhaps, led into some errors.
-For example, he considered that the process of combustion
-or oxidation took place in the lungs, certain fluids rich in
-carbon and hydrogen formed in the different organs of the
-body being brought there for exposure to the inspired oxygen.
-Further, his views implied a simple and complete combustion,
-in which complex substances rich in carbon were
-directly and completely oxidized to carbon dioxide and water,
-in much the same manner as combustion occurs outside the
-body. Again, he assumed that the amount of oxygen taken
-into the lungs determined the extent of oxidation, just as the
-use of the bellows, by increasing the draft of air, causes the
-fire to burn more brightly.</p>
-
-<p>To Liebig (1842) the next great advance was due. This
-phenomenally clear-minded man, while recognizing at their
-full value the fundamental theories advanced by Lavoisier,
-saw and fully appreciated their incompleteness, and he likewise
-understood their failure to explain many of the phenomena
-of life more familiar to the physiological mind than
-to that of a simple chemist like Lavoisier. Liebig had made
-a special study of the chemical composition of foodstuffs, and
-likewise of the tissues and organs of the body. He had,
-moreover, given great attention to the decomposition products
-formed in the body, especially the nitrogenous substances excreted
-through the kidneys, as well as the carbon dioxide and
-water passed out through the lungs and skin. It was not
-strange, therefore, that he should take exception to Lavoisier’s
-view that oxidation in the body consisted in the combustion
-of a fluid, rich in carbon and hydrogen, which was
-brought to the lungs. On the contrary, Liebig contended<span class="pagenum" id="Page_58">58</span>
-that it was the organic compounds, proteids, fats, and carbohydrates,
-that underwent oxidation, and not necessarily in
-the lungs, but all over the body, wherever organs and tissues
-were active. Especially noteworthy was the view advanced
-by Liebig, and upheld for many years, that of these three
-classes of compounds the proteids alone served for the construction
-of organized tissues, like muscle, and that in the
-activity of this tissue, as in muscle contraction or muscle
-work, the energy for the work was derived solely from the
-breaking down or oxidation of this organized proteid. On
-this ground he termed the proteid foodstuffs “plastic,” or
-tissue-building foods. Liebig further pointed out that the
-substances of the body have the power of combining with and
-holding on to the inspired oxygen, and that fats and carbohydrates,
-<i>i. e.</i>, the non-nitrogenous compounds, easily undergo
-oxidation or combustion, and thereby furnish the heat
-of the body. For this reason he termed the corresponding
-foodstuffs “respiratory” foods. Proteids, on the other hand,
-according to Liebig’s view, are capable of combustion only
-in slight degree. The cause of the decomposition of proteid
-substances in the body was to be traced solely to muscle
-work, <i>i. e.</i>, the energy of muscle contraction, or muscle work,
-was derived from the breaking down of the proteids of the
-muscle tissue, and work was the stimulus which brought
-about proteid decomposition. Non-nitrogenous substances
-played no part in these reactions; muscle work was without
-influence on these compounds, oxygen being the sole stimulus
-which led to their combustion, and heat was the sole product
-of the combustion.</p>
-
-<p>If Liebig’s theory is correct, that the proteids of the body
-are decomposed only as the result or the accompaniment of
-muscle work, and the proteids of the food are used up only
-as they take the place of the organized proteid so metabolized,
-it follows that with a like degree of muscular activity a given<span class="pagenum" id="Page_59">59</span>
-body will always decompose the same amount of proteid. If
-excess of proteid food is taken, the surplus will be stored in
-the tissues, or, in other words, the excretion of nitrogen will
-not be influenced by the amount of proteid consumed in the
-food. This was the line of argument made use of by various
-<span class="nowrap">physiologists<a id="FNanchor_18" href="#Footnote_18" class="fnanchor">18</a></span> who were disposed to criticise Liebig’s view,
-and quite naturally the question was soon made the subject
-of many experiments. It will suffice here merely to say that
-many concordant results were obtained, showing that an
-abundance of proteid food leads to an increase in the excretion
-of nitrogen, muscle activity remaining at a constant
-level. Hence, as Voit states, some other ground than muscle
-work must be sought as the true cause of proteid katabolism.
-Consequently, we find this hypothesis of Liebig replaced by
-the theory of “luxus consumption,” in which it is maintained
-that while whatever proteid is used up by the work of the
-muscle must be made good from the proteid of the food, any
-excess of proteid absorbed from the intestinal canal is to be
-considered as “luxus,” and like the non-nitrogenous foods
-may be burned up in the blood, by the oxygen therein, without
-being previously organized. Hence, we see suggested
-two causes for the decomposition of proteid in the body, viz.,
-the work of the muscle and the oxygen of the blood. Further,
-as stated by C Voit<span class="nowrap">,<a id="FNanchor_19" href="#Footnote_19" class="fnanchor">19</a></span> the nitrogen excretion of the
-hungry or fasting animal affords, according to these views,
-a measure of the extent to which tissue proteid must be
-broken down in the maintenance of life, and of the amount
-of proteid food necessary to be consumed in order to make
-good the loss; viz., the minimum proteid requirement.
-Again, since any excess of proteid food beyond this minimal
-requirement, according to the theory, is destined to be burned<span class="pagenum" id="Page_60">60</span>
-up in the blood, or elsewhere, to furnish heat the same as non-nitrogenous
-foods, it follows that the excess of proteid food
-can be replaced by non-nitrogenous aliment.</p>
-
-<p>Oxidation, however, is the keynote in any explanation of
-the processes of metabolism, whether nitrogenous or non-nitrogenous
-matter is involved. Both alike undergo oxidation,
-but it is not simple oxidation or combustion that we
-have to deal with. In the time of Lavoisier, as already
-stated, it was thought that oxygen alone was the cause of
-the decomposition going on in the body, but simply increasing
-the intake of air or oxygen, as in quickened breathing
-or deeper inspiration, does not increase correspondingly the
-rate of oxidation. In other words, it is not a direct combination
-of oxygen with the carbon and hydrogen of the
-foodstuffs, or tissue elements, that takes place in the body,
-but rather a gradual, progressive decomposition of complex
-organic compounds into simpler products; made possible,
-however, by the agency of the oxygen carried from the lungs
-by the circulating blood. It was demonstrated years ago that
-animals breathing pure oxygen do not consume any more of
-the gas than when breathing ordinary air, and likewise no
-more carbon dioxide is produced in the one case than in
-the other. Fifty years ago, Liebig and other physiologists
-showed that frogs’ muscle placed in an atmosphere free of
-oxygen could be made to contract or do work for some
-considerable time, and with liberation of heat. This fact
-implies a breaking down of muscle substance into simpler
-bodies, but there is here no free oxygen to act as the inciting
-cause; indeed, what actually occurs is a cleavage or splitting
-up of substances in the muscle tissue, but at the expense of
-oxygen in some form of combination in the muscle. This
-oxygen must have been taken from the blood at some previous
-time and stored in the tissue for future use. Again,
-as C Voit has expressed it, if oxygen were really the immediate<span class="pagenum" id="Page_61">61</span>
-cause of the decompositions taking place in the organism,
-we should expect combustion to occur in harmony with
-the well-known relationship of the three classes of organic
-foodstuffs to oxygen. In other words, fats would undergo
-combustion most readily, carbohydrates next, and lastly the
-nitrogenous or albuminous compounds. In reality, however,
-proteid matter is decomposed in largest quantity; a generous
-addition of proteid food is always accompanied by an increased
-consumption of oxygen. Yet oxygen is not the
-inciting cause of the proteid decomposition, as is seen from
-the fact that in muscle work, where the intake of oxygen is
-greatly increased, there is no noticeable change in the amount
-of proteid material broken down. Plainly, in the body we
-have to deal not with a direct oxidation of the complex compounds
-of the tissues or of the food, but rather with a gradual
-cleavage of these higher compounds into simpler substances,
-these latter undergoing progressively a still further breaking
-down with intake of oxygen. To repeat, oxygen is not the
-<i>cause</i> of the decompositions within the body, but the extent of
-the breaking down of the tissue or food material is the determining
-factor in the amount of oxygen taken on and used up.
-The products of decomposition contain more oxygen than the
-original substances undergoing the breaking down process,
-which means that oxygen is taken from the blood and used
-in the physiological combustion that is going on. It is not,
-however, strictly a combustion process; it is more complicated
-and more gradual than ordinary combustion, involving
-first of all a series of what may be termed oxidative cleavages,
-in which large molecules are gradually, step by step, broken
-down into simpler molecules, and these latter then oxidized
-to still simpler forms. Hence, we find the oxidative changes
-preceded by a variety of alterations in which oxygen may
-take no part whatever; such as hydrolytic cleavage, where
-the elements of water are taken on as a necessary step in the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_62">62</span>
-cleavage process; dissociation of a simple sort, as when a
-large molecule breaks up directly into smaller molecules, etc.</p>
-
-<p>These statements by no means detract from the importance
-of oxygen in the katabolic processes of the body, but it is
-physiological oxidation that we have to do with, and not
-simple combustion. Oxygen is not the direct cause of the
-transformations taking place in the body. As one looks
-over the history of progress in our knowledge of nutrition
-from the time of Lavoisier to the present, it is easy to note
-the gradual change of view regarding oxidation in the living
-organism. Step by step, it has been demonstrated that there
-are many factors involved in this breaking down of complex
-substances; that while oxygen is an ever present requirement,
-there are other equally important factors to be taken
-into account. The contrast between the older views and
-those now current is clearly shown by the difference in attitude
-regarding the <i>place</i> in the body where oxidation occurs.
-Thus, in the earlier days, when the view was gradually gaining
-ground that nutritional changes were mainly the result
-of oxidation, and that the oxygen drawn into the lungs in
-inspiration was a primary factor, then, as we have seen, the
-lungs were considered as the laboratory where the transformation
-takes place. This view, however, was soon exploded,
-and next we find the blood, the lymph, and other fluids, but
-especially the blood, looked on as the locality where oxidation
-occurs. This was indeed quite a natural view to hold, since
-the blood is the carrier of oxygen, but we now know, in harmony
-with the fact that the breaking down of complex food
-material is a complicated process, involving various kinds of
-chemical change, that these katabolic processes are not located
-in any one place, but occur all over the body wherever there
-are active tissues. As has been previously stated, the human
-body is a “nation” of cells, all of which are more or less
-active, and it is in these miniature laboratories mainly that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_63">63</span>
-oxidation and all the other nutritional changes coincident to
-life take place. Muscle tissue and nerve tissue, the large
-secreting glands, such as the liver, stomach, and pancreas,
-all are the seat of oxidative and other changes which we
-class under the broad term of nutritional. To these cells,
-therefore, we must look for an explanation of the causes of
-oxidation, and the other transformations of a kindred nature
-that take place in the body.</p>
-
-<p>In our brief survey of digestion, and of the methods there
-followed for the proper utilization of the organic foodstuffs,
-it was seen that the unorganized ferments or enzymes are the
-active agents in accomplishing the breaking down of proteids,
-and the less profound alteration of fats and carbohydrates.
-Is it not possible that the tissues of the body are likewise
-supplied with enzymes of various types, and that upon these
-powerful agents rests the responsibility for the different
-kinds of decomposition, oxidation and other changes, that
-take place in the body? Some years ago much interest was
-aroused by the observation that certain glands in the body,
-if simply warmed at body temperature with water, in the
-presence of some germicidal agent sufficient to prevent putrefactive
-changes, underwent what is now termed autodigestion,
-<i>i. e.</i>, a process of self-digestion, with formation of various
-products, notably such as would naturally result from the
-breaking down of proteid material by ordinary proteolytic
-enzymes. This would seem to imply the presence in the
-glands of a proteid-splitting enzyme, the products formed
-being proteoses, peptones, amino-acids, etc., just such products
-as result from the action of trypsin. To-day, we know that
-practically all tissues and organs can, under suitable conditions,
-undergo autolysis, and in many instances the enzymes
-themselves can be separated from the tissues by appropriate
-treatment. Liver, muscle, lymph glands, spleen, kidneys,
-lungs, thymus, etc., all contain what are very appropriately<span class="pagenum" id="Page_64">64</span>
-called intracellular enzymes. These enzymes are of various
-kinds. Especially conspicuous are the hydrolytic, proteid-splitting
-enzymes, which behave in a manner quite similar
-to, if not identical with, that of the digestive enzymes of
-the gastro-intestinal tract, <i>i. e.</i>, pepsin, trypsin, and erepsin.
-Further, there are other hydrolytic cleavages taking place in
-tissue cells, such as the cleavage of fats, due as we now know
-to intracellular enzymes of the lipase type, and by which
-neutral fats are split apart into glycerin and fatty acid.
-Again, there are in many organs intracellular enzymes which
-act upon the complex nucleoproteids of the tissue, causing
-them to break apart into proteid and nucleic acid, the latter
-being further broken down by other enzymes with liberation
-of the contained nuclein or purin bases. Many other chemical
-reactions are brought about by specific enzymes of various
-kinds, present in the cells of particular glandular organs.
-Thus, intracellular enzymes have been found, as in the liver,
-which are able to transform amino-acids into amides, and still
-others capable of splitting up amides.</p>
-
-<p>Equally important, and even more suggestive, are the data
-which have been collected recently regarding oxidative processes
-in the tissues of the body. Specific ferments, known
-as oxidases, are found widely distributed in many organs and
-tissues, and it is difficult to escape the conclusion that as intracellular
-enzymes they have an important part to play in
-some, at least, of the transformations characteristic of tissue
-katabolism<span class="nowrap">.<a id="FNanchor_20" href="#Footnote_20" class="fnanchor">20</a></span> As a single example, mention may be made of
-aldehydase, which accomplishes the oxidation of substances
-having the structure of aldehydes into corresponding acids.
-Ferments or enzymes of this class are found in the liver,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_65">65</span>
-spleen, salivary glands, lungs, brain, kidneys, etc., and they
-may well be considered as important agents in the chemical
-transformations going on in the tissues of the body. It would
-take us too far afield to enter into a detailed consideration of
-these intracellular enzymes; it must suffice to emphasize the
-general fact that in all the tissues and organs of the body there
-are present a large number of enzymes of different types, endowed
-with different lines of activity, and consequently capable
-of accomplishing a great variety of results in metabolism.
-Oxidation may still be a dominant feature in nutrition, oxidative
-changes may characterize more or less every tissue and
-organ in the body, but the processes are subtle and are not to
-be defined in harmony with simple chemical or physical laws.
-The living cell, with its intracellular enzymes, is the guiding
-and controlling power by which the processes of katabolism are
-regulated in harmony with the needs of the body. Complex
-organic matter is broken down step by step in the various
-tissues, with gradual liberation of the contained energy;
-processes of hydrolytic cleavage alternate with processes of
-oxidation, the molecules acted upon growing smaller with
-each downward step, until at last the final end-products are
-reached, viz., carbon dioxide, water, and urea, which the
-body eliminates through various channels as true physiological
-waste-products.</p>
-
-<p>It will be advisable for us to consider briefly some of these
-intermediary products of tissue metabolism, since in any discussion
-of nutritive changes it is quite essential to have some
-understanding of the chemical relationship existing between
-the various products which result from the breaking down
-of proteid and other materials in tissue katabolism. This is
-especially true of proteid material, since in the gradual disintegration
-of this substance in tissue metabolism many intermediary
-bodies are formed, which undoubtedly exercise
-some physiological influence prior to their transformation<span class="pagenum" id="Page_66">66</span>
-into simpler bodies, with ultimate formation of the final
-product, urea. As has been pointed out so many times, the
-proteid foods are peculiar in that they alone contain the necessary
-nitrogen, and in the peculiar form able to meet the
-physiological requirements of the body. Variations in the
-proteid intake are of necessity accompanied by variations in
-the formation of nitrogenous intermediary products, and both
-quality and quantity of these substances must be given due
-attention in any study of nutrition. Further, it is only by
-an understanding of the general or ground structure of proteids
-that we can hope to attain knowledge of the processes
-going on in the different tissues and organs in connection
-with metabolism, while a true appreciation of the chemical
-peculiarities of the individual proteids will help to explain the
-different nutritional value of vegetable as contrasted with
-animal proteids.</p>
-
-<p>Our understanding of the chemical structure of any organic
-substance is based primarily upon a study of the decomposition
-products which result from its breaking down,
-under the influence of various chemical agencies. Simple
-proteid substances when acted upon by pancreatic juice reinforced
-by the enzyme erepsin, or when boiled with dilute
-acids, undergo hydrolytic cleavage with ultimate formation of
-a large number of relatively simple bodies, mostly amino-acids,
-the chemical structure of which throws some light
-upon the nature of the proteid. Thus, in the pancreatic
-digestion of proteid in the intestine we may adopt the following
-scheme as showing in a general way the progressive
-transformation that occurs, understanding at the same time
-that like transformations may be accomplished by corresponding
-intracellular enzymes in the tissues and organs of
-the body; and further, that by the long-continued action of
-hydrolytic agents there is a complete breaking down into
-amino-acids and other simple products.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_67">67</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp100" id="i-67" style="max-width: 30.125em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/i-67.jpg" alt="" />
- <div><p class="hide2">Native proteid, Protoproteose, Deuteroproteose, Heteroproteose, Primary proteoses, Secondary proteoses, Peptone, Amino-acids</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Among these end-products, or amino-acids, are leucin,
-tyrosin, aspartic acid, glutaminic acid, glycocoll, arginin,
-lysin, histidin, and likewise the peculiar aromatic body tryptophan.
-The chemical make-up of these substances may be
-indicated by the following structural formulæ, which, if even
-only partially understood, will suggest to the non-chemical
-mind some idea of close chemical relationship:</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp100" id="i-67a" style="max-width: 30.125em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/i-67a.jpg" alt="" />
- <div class="caption"><p><span class="ilb">Glutaminic&nbsp;acid                                                Aspartic&nbsp;acid&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;</span></p></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp100" id="i-67b" style="max-width: 31.3125em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/i-67b.jpg" alt="" />
- <div class="caption"><p><span class="ilb">Glycocoll                                                                        Leucin&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;</span></p></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter1 illowp100" id="i-67c" style="max-width: 30.625em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/i-67c.jpg" alt="" />
- <div class="caption"><p>&emsp;&emsp;Tyrosin</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter2 illowp100" id="i-67d" style="max-width: 30.5625em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/i-67d.jpg" alt="" />
- <div class="caption"><p>&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;Tryptophan</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_68">68</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp100" id="i-68a" style="max-width: 30.6875em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/i-68a.jpg" alt="" />
- <div class="caption"><p><span class="ilb">Arginin                                        Lysin                                    Histidin&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;</span></p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>In these various decomposition products there is apparent
-certain definite lines of resemblance, on which is based one
-or more suggestions regarding possible ways in which these
-chemical groups are linked, or bound together, in the proteid
-molecule. Thus, there is apparently present a complex or
-nucleus which may be indicated as</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp100" id="i-68b" style="max-width: 30.6875em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/i-68b.jpg" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p>The proteid molecule is presumably built up of amino-acids
-variously joined together, this synthesis being accomplished,
-doubtless, by the condensation of different types of
-amino-acids, in which the first of the above groups represents
-the more common method of union. We may indeed conjecture
-that such methods of condensation take place in the
-human body, in the epithelial cells of the intestine, and in the
-tissues in general; and that by such methods, construction of
-proteid is accomplished out of the various fragments split off
-by digestion, etc. In a tentative way, the principle may be
-illustrated by the fusion of leucin and glutaminic acid,&mdash;following
-Hofmeister’s suggestion,&mdash;in which a still larger
-complex is formed:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_69">69</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp100" id="i-69" style="max-width: 27.75em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/i-69.jpg" alt="" />
- <div class="caption"><p><span class="ilb">               Leucin                             Glutaminic&nbsp;acid&emsp;&emsp;</span></p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>In this way, step by step, the proteid molecule is built up,
-and naturally in katabolism the proteid breaks down along
-certain definite lines of cleavage, with formation of katabolic
-products containing those groups, or chemical nuclei, which
-characterize the different proteid molecules. For it is to be
-clearly understood that there are many different forms of
-proteid, perhaps superficially alike, but possessed of physiological
-individuality. This is well illustrated by the two
-primary proteoses formed in digestion. As will be recalled,
-there are at first two proteoses produced, protoproteose and
-heteroproteose. These are, superficially at least, not radically
-unlike; they possess essentially the same percentage
-composition, but when broken down by vigorous chemical
-methods they show a totally different make-up. In other
-words, at the very beginning of digestion there is a splitting
-up of the proteid into two parts, which have quite a different
-chemical structure, as is clearly indicated by the difference in
-the character and amount of the decomposition products
-yielded by hydrolytic cleavage. Thus, heteroalbumose as
-derived from blood-fibrin contains 39 per cent of its total
-nitrogen in basic form, <i>i. e.</i>, in a form which goes over into
-the basic bodies, arginin, lysin, and histidin, etc. On the
-other hand, protoalbumose from the same source yields hardly
-25 per cent of basic nitrogen. Further, heteroalbumose yields
-only a very small amount of tyrosin, while protoalbumose
-gives on decomposition a large amount of this substance.
-Again, heteroalbumose furnishes a large yield of leucin
-and glycocoll, while protoalbumose gives no glycocoll and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_70">70</span>
-only a little leucin. Obviously, these two proteoses have
-an inner structure quite divergent one from the other, and
-owing to this fact they must play a quite different rôle in
-metabolism.</p>
-
-<p>Even greater differences in inner chemical structure are
-found among native proteids. By way of illustration, we
-may take egg-albumin, the casein of cow’s milk, gliadin of
-wheat, and the edestin of hemp seed. These are all typical
-proteids; they are all useful as food, but they are radically
-different in their inner chemical structure, as is clearly indicated
-by the following data<span class="nowrap">,<a id="FNanchor_21" href="#Footnote_21" class="fnanchor">21</a></span> which show the percentage
-yield of the different amino-acids and ammonia:</p>
-
-<div class="center">
-<table class="mtb1em" cellpadding="2" summary="amino acids in various proteins">
-<tr>
-<th class="blm"></th>
-<th class="brl"><div>Leucin.</div></th>
-<th class="brl"><div>Tyrosin.</div></th>
-<th class="brl"><div>Glutam-<br />inic Acid.</div></th>
-<th class="brl"><div>Arginin.</div></th>
-<th class="brl"><div>Lysin.</div></th>
-<th class="brl"><div>Histidin.</div></th>
-<th class="brm"><div>Ammonia.</div></th>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal pall blm">Egg-albumin</td>
-<td class="tar pr1 brl"><div>6.1</div></td>
-<td class="tar pr13"><div>1.1</div></td>
-<td class="tar pr13 brl"><div>9.0</div></td>
-<td class="tar pr13"><div>. . .</div></td>
-<td class="tar pr1 brl"><div>. . .</div></td>
-<td class="tar pr13 brl"><div>. . .</div></td>
-<td class="tar pr2 brm"><div>1.6</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal pall blm">Casein</td>
-<td class="tar pr1 brl"><div>10.5</div></td>
-<td class="tar pr13"><div>4.5</div></td>
-<td class="tar pr13 brl"><div>10.7</div></td>
-<td class="tar pr13"><div>4.8</div></td>
-<td class="tar pr1 brl"><div>5.8</div></td>
-<td class="tar pr13 brl"><div>2.6</div></td>
-<td class="tar pr2 brm"><div>1.9</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal pall blm">Gliadin</td>
-<td class="tar pr1 brl"><div>5.7</div></td>
-<td class="tar pr13"><div>1.2</div></td>
-<td class="tar pr13 brl"><div>37.3</div></td>
-<td class="tar pr13"><div>3.2</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0</div></td>
-<td class="tar pr13 brl"><div>0.6</div></td>
-<td class="tar pr2 brm"><div>5.1</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal pall blm bbm">Edestin</td>
-<td class="tar pr1 brl bbm"><div>19.9</div></td>
-<td class="tar pr13 bbm"><div>2.7</div></td>
-<td class="tar pr13 brl bbm"><div>14.0</div></td>
-<td class="tar pr13 brl bbm"><div>14.2</div></td>
-<td class="tar pr1 brl bbm"><div>1.6</div></td>
-<td class="tar pr13 brl bbm"><div>2.2</div></td>
-<td class="tar pr2 brm bbm"><div>2.3</div></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<p>These are not mere technical differences, but they represent
-divergences of structure which cannot help counting as
-material factors in nutritional processes. Especially noticeable
-is the large yield of glutaminic acid from wheat proteid,
-as contrasted with the proteid (casein) of animal origin. As a
-rule, glutaminic acid forms a larger proportion of the decomposition
-products of vegetable than of animal proteids. Similarly,
-arginin is present in much larger proportion in most
-vegetable proteids than in most animal proteids. While
-many other data more or less trustworthy might be added,
-these figures will suffice to emphasize the main point under
-discussion, viz., that individual proteids show marked variation<span class="pagenum" id="Page_71">71</span>
-in the amount of the several amino-acids which serve as
-corner-stones or nuclei in the building up of the molecule,
-and consequently they must yield correspondingly different
-katabolic products when serving the body as food.</p>
-
-<p>Turning now to another phase of tissue metabolism, we
-may consider briefly the nucleoproteids and their characteristic
-decomposition products; bodies which are widely distributed
-as cleavage products formed in the disintegration of
-most cell protoplasm, and having special interest in nutrition
-because of their chemical relationship to that well-known
-substance, uric acid. Nucleoproteids of some type are found
-in all cells; consequently they are present in all tissues, in
-all glandular organs, and their widespread distribution constitutes
-evidence of their great physiological importance.
-Nucleoproteids are compound substances made up of some
-form of proteid and nucleic acid. By simple hydrolysis with
-dilute mineral acids they are broken down into proteid,
-phosphoric acid, and one or more bodies known as nuclein
-bases. Of these latter substances, there are four well-defined
-bodies, viz., adenin, hypoxanthin, guanin, and xanthin, which
-from their peculiar chemical constitution are known as “purin
-bases.” In the body, there is present in many cells a peculiar
-intracellular enzyme termed <i>nuclease</i>, which has the power
-of liberating these purin bases from their combination as a
-component part of tissue nucleoproteids, or of the contained
-nucleic acid. In autolysis or self-digestion of many glands,
-such as the spleen, thymus, etc., this chemical reaction is
-easily induced by action of the contained nuclease. Further,
-the liberated purin bases then undergo change because of
-the presence of certain deamidizing enzymes, and as a result
-guanin is transformed into xanthin, and adenin is converted
-into hypoxanthin. These ferments are true intracellular
-enzymes, and are termed respectively <i>guanase</i> and <i>adenase</i>.
-The real essence of the reaction they accomplish is clearly indicated<span class="pagenum" id="Page_72">72</span>
-by the following formulæ, which likewise show the
-chemical nature and relationship of the four substances:</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp100" id="i-72a" style="max-width: 32.5em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/i-72a.jpg" alt="" />
- <div class="caption"><p><span class="ilb">Guanin                                                             Xanthin&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;</span></p></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp100" id="i-72b" style="max-width: 31.5625em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/i-72b.jpg" alt="" />
- <div class="caption"><p><span class="ilb">Adenin                                                             Hypoxanthin&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;</span></p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>These two enzymes are typical hydrolyzing enzymes, but
-it is to be noted that there is not only a taking on of water
-with a retention of the oxygen, but there is also a giving off
-of ammonia, by which the transformation is made possible.
-Adenin is known as an amino-purin and guanin as an amino-oxypurin,
-while hypoxanthin is an oxypurin and xanthin a
-dioxypurin. In other words, the two intracellular enzymes
-are able to transform the two amino-purins into the corresponding
-oxypurins; <i>i. e.</i>, the enzymes are deamidizing ferments,
-liberating the NH<sub>2</sub> group of the adenin and guanin
-and thus forming two new compounds. These reactions,
-though more or less technical, are emphasized in this way not
-merely because they illustrate the action of intracellular
-enzymes in intermediary metabolism, thus affording a striking
-example of the gradual changes that take place in ordinary
-katabolic processes, but especially because they throw light
-upon the production of another substance common in body
-metabolism, viz., uric acid. It has long been known that
-nucleoproteids, nucleins, and other compounds containing<span class="pagenum" id="Page_73">73</span>
-these purin radicles, when taken as food, cause at once an
-increased output of uric acid, and it has been clearly recognized
-that in some way this latter substance, as a product of
-metabolism, must come from the transformation of nuclein
-bases. To-day, we understand that in many tissues, as in the
-liver, spleen, lungs, and muscle, there is present a peculiar
-oxidizing ferment, an oxidase, by the action of which hypoxanthin
-can be converted into xanthin, and the latter directly
-oxidized to uric acid. This conversion into uric acid is purely
-a process of oxidation, brought about by a typical intracellular
-oxidase, known specifically as “xanthin oxidase,” the reaction
-involved being as follows:</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp100" id="i-73a" style="max-width: 28em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/i-73a.jpg" alt="" />
- <div class="caption"><p><span class="ilb">Xanthin                                                              Uric&nbsp;acid</span></p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>From these several reactions, it is clear how various intracellular
-enzymes working one after the other are able
-gradually to evolve uric acid from tissue nucleoproteids.
-Further, it is to be noted that there is another tissue oxidase&mdash;contained
-principally in the kidneys, muscle, and liver&mdash;which
-has the power of oxidizing and thus destroying uric
-acid, with formation, among other substances, of urea. Remembering
-that urea has the following chemical constitution</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp87" id="i-73b" style="max-width: 5.625em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/i-73b.jpg" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p>it is easy to see, by comparison of the formulæ, how uric acid
-might easily yield two molecules of urea through simple
-oxidation. In this way, excess of uric acid produced in the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_74">74</span>
-body can be converted into urea, and in this harmless form
-be excreted from the system.</p>
-
-<p>Finally, reference should be made here to several other
-products of tissue metabolism, products of the breaking down
-of proteid matter in the body, since they are liable to prove of
-interest to us in other connections. Thus creatin, abundant in
-the muscle and other places; the related substance creatinin,
-present in the urine; methyl guanidin, a decomposition product
-of creatin; and urea, all call for a word of description.
-The chemical relationship of these bodies is clearly indicated
-by the following formulæ:</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp100" id="i-74a1" style="max-width: 23.5625em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/i-74a1.jpg" alt="" />
- <div class="caption"><p>Creatin&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;Creatinin&emsp;</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp100" id="i-74a2" style="max-width: 23.4375em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/i-74a2.jpg" alt="" />
- <div class="caption"><p><span class="ilb">Methyl&nbsp;guanidin                             Urea&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;</span></p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Creatinin is chemically the anhydride of creatin, <i>i. e.</i>, it can
-be formed from creatin by the simple extraction of one molecule
-of water, H<sub>2</sub>O. Creatin, by hydrolytic cleavage, will
-break down into one molecule of urea and one molecule of
-sarcosin or methyl glycocoll, as shown in the following
-equation:</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp100" id="i-74b" style="max-width: 31em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/i-74b.jpg" alt="" />
- <div class="caption"><p><span class="ilb">              Creatin                                                Sarcosin                                    Urea</span></p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Methyl guanidin is a decomposition product of creatin, while
-guanidin, as can be seen from the formula, is like urea, excepting<span class="pagenum" id="Page_75">75</span>
-that the group NH replaces the oxygen of urea.
-These simple statements will suffice for our present purpose,
-viz., to indicate the more or less close chemical relationships
-existing between many of these nitrogenous decomposition
-products resulting from proteid katabolism; also to suggest
-how by slight chemical alteration one decomposition product
-may be resolved into another related substance in the processes
-of katabolism. Our conception of the processes involved
-in proteid katabolism is that of a series of progressive
-chemical decompositions, in which intracellular enzymes play
-the all-important part. The intermediary products formed
-are definite bodies because of the specific nature of the active
-enzymes, and, secondly, because of the chemical nature of
-the substances acted upon. In other words, oxidation in
-the animal body takes the shape of a series of well-defined
-chemical reactions, in which chemical constitution and specific
-enzyme action are the predetermining cause. In the absence
-of the particular chemical groups, the oxidase is unable to
-bring about oxidation, or, given the proper compound or
-mother substance in the absence of the specific oxidase, there
-is no oxidation. Hence, oxidation in the animal body is not
-the result of simple combustion, but, on the contrary, it consists
-of a series of orderly chemical processes, each one of
-which is presided over by an intracellular enzyme, specific in
-its nature, in that it is capable of acting only upon substances
-having a certain definite constitution, and leading invariably
-to a certain definite result. The processes which years ago
-were considered as due to the peculiar vital properties of the
-tissue cells, and which were supposed to be entirely dependent
-upon their morphological and functional integrity,
-are now seen to be due primarily to a great variety of
-enzymes, manufactured indeed by the living cells, but capable
-of manifesting their activity even when free from the
-influence of the living protoplasm. The varied processes of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_76">76</span>
-tissue katabolism are the result of orderly and progressive
-chemical changes, in which cleavage, hydrolysis, reduction,
-oxidation, deamidization, etc., alternate with each other
-under the influence of specific enzymes, where chemical constitution
-and the structural make-up of the various molecules
-are determining factors in the changes produced.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_77">77</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_III">CHAPTER III</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="chaptitle">THE BALANCE OF NUTRITION</p>
-
-<p class="chaptopics"><span class="smcap">Topics</span>: Body equilibrium. Nitrogen equilibrium. Carbon equilibrium.
-Loss of nitrogen during fasting. Influence of previous diet
-on loss of nitrogen in fasting. Output of carbon during fasting.
-Influence of pure proteid diet on output of nitrogen. Influence of fat
-on proteid metabolism. Effect of carbohydrate on nitrogen metabolism.
-Storing up of proteid by the body. Transformation of energy
-in the body. Respiration calorimeter. Basal energy exchange of the
-body. Circumstances influencing energy exchange. Effect of food
-on heat production. Respiratory quotient and its significance. Influence
-of muscle work on energy exchange. Elimination of carbon
-dioxide during work and with different diets. Effect of excessive
-muscular work on energy exchange. Oxygen consumption under
-different conditions. Output of matter and energy subject to great
-variation. Body equilibrium and approximate nitrogen balance to be
-expected in health.</p>
-
-<p>Man, strictly speaking, is always in a condition of
-unequilibrium. If placed upon a large and sensitive
-pair of scales with the opposite side exactly counterpoised,
-he will be found to lose weight constantly until water
-or food are taken, when the losses of an hour or two may be
-made good, or perchance more than balanced. The human
-body is a maelstrom of chemical changes; chemical decompositions
-are taking place continuously at the expense of the
-proteids, fats, and carbohydrates of the tissues and of the
-food, the stored-up energy of these organic compounds being
-thereby transformed into the active or “kinetic” forms of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_78">78</span>
-heat and motion; while carbon dioxide, water, urea, and
-some few other nitrogenous substances are being continually
-formed as the normal waste products of these tissue changes,
-and constantly or intermittently excreted. In other words,
-the body is in a perpetual condition of chemical oscillation,
-constantly consuming its own substance, rejecting the waste
-products which result, and giving off energy in the several
-forms characteristic of living beings. The condition of the
-body plainly depends upon the relation which it is able to
-maintain between the income and the expenditure of matter
-and energy. If the income equals the output, the body is
-kept in a condition approaching equilibrium; if the intake
-exceeds the outgo, the body adds to its capital of matter and
-energy; while if the expenditure is greater than the income,
-the accumulated capital is drawn upon; and this, if continued
-indefinitely, results in a drain upon the bank which must
-eventually end in disaster. It is comparatively easy, however,
-for man to maintain his body in a condition of equilibrium
-from day to day; <i>i. e.</i>, the losses of the morning can
-be made good at luncheon, or the expenditures of an entire
-day counterbalanced by a corresponding addition to capital
-the following day, in which case the body may be said to be
-in balance. It is necessary, however, to discriminate between
-body equilibrium, meaning thereby the maintenance from day
-to day of a constant body-weight, and nitrogen equilibrium,
-or carbon equilibrium. In the latter cases, what is meant is
-that the intake of nitrogen, or of carbon, exactly equals the
-output of these two elements. It is quite possible, however,
-to have a condition of nitrogen equilibrium without the body
-being in a state of balance, as when the outgo of carbon
-exceeds the intake of carbon, or when there is an increased
-output of water.</p>
-
-<p>As a rule, it may be stated that when a man puts out less
-carbon and less nitrogen than he takes in he must be gaining<span class="pagenum" id="Page_79">79</span>
-in weight; the only exception being the possible case of an
-increased excretion of water, which might more than counterbalance
-the gain. On the other hand, if he gives off more
-carbon and more nitrogen than he takes in, the body must
-lose in weight. Where the output of carbon is beyond the
-amount of carbon ingested, the lost carbon represents a drain
-upon body fat. In a reversal of this condition, <i>i. e.</i>, where
-the carbon taken in is in excess of the outgo, the body is
-gaining in fat. Theoretically, gain or loss of carbon may
-mean gain or loss of either carbohydrate or fat, but practically
-stored-up carbon generally stands for accumulated fat; and,
-correspondingly, loss of carbon represents a withdrawal from
-the store of adipose tissue, since glycogen and sugar from a
-quantitative standpoint figure only slightly in these metabolic
-processes. When the body excretes more nitrogen than is
-taken in during a given period, there is only one interpretation
-possible, viz., that the body is losing proteid or flesh.
-If, on the other hand, the nitrogen import exceeds the outgo,
-then the body must be gaining flesh. Here, again, there is
-the theoretical possibility that gain or loss of nitrogen might
-represent increase or decrease of proteid in some glandular
-organ, or even in the blood; but practically it is the relatively
-bulky muscle tissue, with its high content of proteid matter,
-that is most subject to change in metabolism. Finally, it is
-easy to see how, knowing the percentage of nitrogen in proteid
-and the percentage of carbon in fat, one can calculate
-from the nitrogen and carbon lost or gained the amounts of
-proteid or fat added to the capital stock, or withdrawn from
-the store of nutritive material.</p>
-
-<p>When there is no income, as in fasting, the body loses
-rapidly, living during the hunger period upon its store of
-energy-containing material. Many careful observations have
-been made upon people who have fasted for long periods,
-some as long as thirty days, the income consisting solely of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_80">80</span>
-water. The following <span class="nowrap">figures<a id="FNanchor_22" href="#Footnote_22" class="fnanchor">22</a></span> show the daily excretion of
-nitrogen in several notable cases:</p>
-
-<div class="center">
-<table class="mtb1em" cellpadding="2" summary="daily excretion of nitrogen">
-<tr>
-<th class="tac blm prl03"><div>Day of Fasting.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brl prl03"><div>Breithaupt.<br />59.9 Kilos.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brl prl03"><div>Cetti.<br />56.5 Kilos.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brm prl03"><div>Succi.<br />62.4 Kilos.</div></th>
-</tr>
-<tr class="fs75">
-<td class="tac blm"></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>grams</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>grams</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>grams</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar blm pr25"><div> 0</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr13"><div>13.0</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr13"><div>13.5</div></td>
-<td class="tar brm pr13"><div>16.2</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar blm pr25"><div> 1</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr13"><div>10.0</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr13"><div>13.6</div></td>
-<td class="tar brm pr13"><div>13.8</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar blm pr25"><div> 2</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr13"><div>9.9</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr13"><div>12.6</div></td>
-<td class="tar brm pr13"><div>11.0</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar blm pr25"><div> 3</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr13"><div>13.3</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr13"><div>13.1</div></td>
-<td class="tar brm pr13"><div>13.9</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar blm pr25"><div> 4</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr13"><div>12.8</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr13"><div>12.4</div></td>
-<td class="tar brm pr13"><div>12.8</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar blm pr25"><div> 5</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr13"><div>11.0</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr13"><div>10.7</div></td>
-<td class="tar brm pr13"><div>12.8</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar blm pr25"><div> 6</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr13"><div>9.9</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr13"><div>10.1</div></td>
-<td class="tar brm pr13"><div>10.1</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar blm pr25"><div> 7</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr13"><div>. . .</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr13"><div>10.9</div></td>
-<td class="tar brm pr13"><div>9.4</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar blm pr25"><div> 8</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr13"><div>. . .</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr13"><div>8.9</div></td>
-<td class="tar brm pr13"><div>8.4</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar blm pr25"><div> 9</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr13"><div>. . .</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr13"><div>10.8</div></td>
-<td class="tar brm pr13"><div>7.8</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar blm bbm pr25"><div>10</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl bbm pr13"><div>. . .</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl bbm pr13"><div>9.5</div></td>
-<td class="tar brm bbm pr13"><div>6.7</div></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<p>In Succi’s case, the fasting was continued for thirty days.
-The daily average loss of nitrogen from the 11th to the 15th
-day was 5.8 grams; from the 16th to the 20th day, 5.3 grams;
-from the 20th to the 25th day, 4.7 grams; and from the 26th
-to the 30th day, 5.3 grams. A daily loss of 5.3 grams of
-nitrogen means a breaking down, or using up, of 33 grams of
-proteid, or a little more than one ounce. On the sixth day
-of fasting, all three of these subjects showed essentially the
-same daily loss of nitrogen; viz., 10 grams, which implies a
-using up of 62.5 grams of proteid material. We must not
-be led astray by these figures, however, or draw too hasty<span class="pagenum" id="Page_81">81</span>
-conclusions therefrom regarding the requirements of the body
-for proteid food. Noting the close agreement in the nitrogen
-output of the three subjects on the sixth day, combined with
-the fact that their body-weight was essentially the same, we
-might infer that 62.5 grams of proteid matter represents the
-amount of nitrogenous food necessary to maintain nitrogen
-equilibrium and keep the body in a condition of balance.
-Such a conclusion, however, would be quite erroneous for
-several reasons. First, a man fasting, if he was in an ordinary
-condition of nutrition prior to the fast, has in his tissues
-a large store of fat. It is considered that in fasting only
-about 10–12 per cent of the total energy of the body is derived
-from tissue proteid; the major part comes from the fat
-stored up. When there is no income to make good the loss,
-the body must naturally draw upon its own store. A certain
-amount of proteid must be used up daily, but in addition
-there are the energy requirements to be considered. These
-are met mainly by fat and carbohydrate, and so long as fat
-endures proteid will be drawn upon only, or mainly, to meet
-the nitrogen requirement; but if the fat gives out, then proteid
-must be used in larger quantity, as a source of energy.
-Hence in fasting, the daily loss of nitrogen will be governed
-largely by the condition of the body as regards fat. Thus,
-Munk has reported the case of a well-nourished and fat person,
-suffering from disease of the brain, who gave off daily in
-the later stages of starvation only one-third the amount of
-nitrogen voided by Cetti, who had been poorly nourished.
-Obviously, in fasting, as soon as the adipose tissue of the body
-has been largely used up, there will be an increase in the
-amount of tissue proteid consumed, since under such conditions
-the heat of the body and the energy of muscular work
-(work of the heart and involuntary muscles) must come from
-the decomposition of proteid. In harmony with this statement,
-it is frequently observed that in cases of starvation<span class="pagenum" id="Page_82">82</span>
-there comes toward the end a sudden and marked increase
-in the output of nitrogen.</p>
-
-<p>Secondly, the elimination of nitrogen during the earlier
-days of fasting is governed in large measure by the character
-and extent of the diet on the days just preceding the fast.
-This is well illustrated by some experiments conducted by
-C Voit on a dog. In the first series of experiments, the dog
-received daily 2500 grams of meat prior to fasting; in the
-second series, 1500 grams of meat were fed daily before the
-fast; while in the third series, a mixed diet relatively poor in
-proteid was given. The following <span class="nowrap">figures<a id="FNanchor_23" href="#Footnote_23" class="fnanchor">23</a></span> show the amounts
-of proteid used up by the dog (calculated from the nitrogen
-excreted) each day of the fasting period, under the different
-conditions:</p>
-
-<div class="center">
-<table class="mtb1em" cellpadding="2" summary="protein used up by fasting dog">
-<tr>
-<th class="tal blm"></th>
-<th class="tac brl prl03"><div>First Series.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brl prl03"><div>Second Series.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brm prl03"><div>Third Series.</div></th>
-</tr>
-<tr class="fs75">
-<td class="tal blm"></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>grams</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>grams</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>grams</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm prl03">First fasting day</td>
-<td class="tar brl pr2"><div>175</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr2"><div>77</div></td>
-<td class="tar brm pr2"><div>40</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl03">Second&ensp;"&emsp;&emsp;"</td>
-<td class="tar brl pr2"><div>72</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr2"><div>54</div></td>
-<td class="tar brm pr2"><div>33</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl03">Third &emsp;"&emsp;&emsp;"</td>
-<td class="tar brl pr2"><div>56</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr2"><div>46</div></td>
-<td class="tar brm pr2"><div>30</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl03">Fourth&#8201;&ensp;"&emsp;&emsp;"</td>
-<td class="tar brl pr2"><div>50</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr2"><div>53</div></td>
-<td class="tar brm pr2"><div>36</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl03">Fifth&emsp;&ensp;"&emsp;&emsp;"</td>
-<td class="tar brl pr2"><div>36</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr2"><div>43</div></td>
-<td class="tar brm pr2"><div>35</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm bbm pl03">Sixth &emsp;&#8201;"&emsp;&emsp;"</td>
-<td class="tar brl bbm pr2"><div>39</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl bbm pr2"><div>37</div></td>
-<td class="tar brm bbm pr2"><div>37</div></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<p>We see very clearly in these experiments the effects of
-the large quantities of proteid fed on the destruction of
-proteid in the early days of fasting. When the body is rich
-in proteid from food previously taken, the metabolism of nitrogenous
-matter is very large at first, as in the first series
-of experiments. Indeed, in this series, even on the fifth day of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_83">83</span>
-fasting, the amount of proteid metabolized was larger than
-on the second day of the third series. We have here a forcible
-illustration of the physiological axiom that excess of proteid
-matter in the tissues, or in the blood, stimulates proteid
-metabolism; and it affords convincing proof of the contention
-that in the first days of fasting the output of nitrogen, or the
-amount of proteid used up, will depend in large measure upon
-the proteid condition of the body at the time of the fast.
-Equally noticeable is the fact that there comes a time&mdash;the
-sixth day in the above experiment&mdash;when the nitrogen output
-reaches a common level, irrespective of the previous proteid
-condition of the body. Further, it is easy to see that
-the greater loss of nitrogen, <i>i. e.</i>, the large breaking down of
-proteid during the first few days of fasting, in those cases
-where proteid food has been freely taken, suggests the existence
-in the tissues of two forms of proteid. We may term
-them, following the nomenclature of Voit, as circulating and
-morphotic, or tissue, proteid; or, we may designate them as
-labile and stable forms of proteid. In other words, following
-the usually accepted view, this circulating or labile proteid
-represents reserve or surplus material which is easily
-decomposed and hence rapidly gotten rid of, while the stable
-proteid is more slowly oxidized, and its metabolism may be
-taken as representing more nearly the real necessities of the
-body. However this may be, it is plainly manifest that the
-nitrogen output, meaning the metabolism of proteid matter,
-during hunger or fasting is modified by a variety of circumstances,
-notably the previous nutritive condition of the body
-as regards both fat and proteid. It is hardly necessary to
-add that the amount of muscular work performed is another
-factor of importance in this connection. Fat in the body
-represents inert material stored up mainly for nutritive purposes;
-hence, in hunger it is used largely, and serves to protect
-more important tissues. Thus, experiments have shown<span class="pagenum" id="Page_84">84</span>
-that in long periods of fasting, adipose tissue may be consumed
-to the extent of 97 per cent of the total amount present,
-while the heart and nervous tissue will not lose over 3 per
-cent of their tissue substance. The influence of tissue fat
-upon the consumption of proteid during hunger can thus be
-fully appreciated.</p>
-
-<p>The output of carbon during fasting may be illustrated by
-the following <span class="nowrap">experiment<a id="FNanchor_24" href="#Footnote_24" class="fnanchor">24</a></span> made upon a young man, the nitrogen
-data being included for comparison, and likewise the intake
-of food, in terms of nitrogen and carbon, preceding the
-fast and for two days following the fast. The fasting was of
-five days’ duration.</p>
-
-<div class="center">
-<table class="mtb1em" cellpadding="2" summary="carbon output during fasting">
-<tr>
-<th class="tac blm prl03" rowspan="2"><div>Day.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brl prl03" rowspan="2"><div>Body-weight.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brl" colspan="2"><div>Intake.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brm" colspan="2"><div>Output.</div></th>
-</tr>
-<tr class="fs80">
-<td class="tac brl bb prl03"><div>Carbon.</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bb prl03"><div>Nitrogen.</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bb prl03"><div><span class="nowrap">Carbon.<a id="FNanchor_25" href="#Footnote_25" class="fnanchor">25</a></span></div></td>
-<td class="tac brm bb prl03"><div>Nitrogen.</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="fs75">
-<td class="tac blm"></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>kilos</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>grams</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>grams</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>grams</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>grams</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tac blm"><div> 2</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>67.4</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>438.7</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>30.96</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>303.4</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>25.81</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tac blm"><div> 3</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>66.9</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>197.6</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>12.17</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tac blm"><div> 4</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>65.7</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>188.8</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>12.85</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tac blm"><div> 5</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>64.8</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>183.2</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>13.61</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tac blm"><div> 6</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>63.9</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>180.8</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>13.69</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tac blm"><div> 7</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>63.1</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>176.2</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>11.47</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tac blm"><div> 8</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>63.9</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>439.9</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>35.65</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>270.5</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>26.83</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tac blm bbm"><div> 9</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>65.5</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>391.7</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>23.68</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>258.8</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm bbm"><div>19.46</div></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<p>On the non-fasting days, the intake consisted of an ordinary
-food mixture of proteids, fats, and carbohydrates, with
-a small addition of alcohol. The point to be emphasized<span class="pagenum" id="Page_85">85</span>
-here, however, is that the carbon-content was more than
-sufficient to meet the needs of the body. Thus, it will be
-observed that on all three of the days when food was taken,
-the income of carbon was far in excess of the output. In
-other words, on the day preceding the beginning of the fast
-the body stored up 135 grams of carbon, and on the day following
-the fast the body retained 169 grams of carbon to
-help make good the loss. Similarly, the amount of proteid
-food taken in on the day prior to the fast was considerably
-in excess of the needs of the body, 5.1 grams of nitrogen
-equivalent to 31.8 grams of proteid being stored for future
-use. Plainly, the man was not in either carbon or nitrogen
-balance prior to the fast, but was taking far more food than
-the needs of the body called for. This fact may be emphasized
-by noting that the total fuel value of the daily food,
-plus the fuel value of the alcohol, amounted on an average
-to about 4200 large calories, while the fuel value of the
-material metabolized on the feeding days averaged only 2500
-calories. Looking at the figures showing the output of
-carbon, as well as of nitrogen, during the fasting days, it is to
-be seen that in the early days of fasting, the metabolism of
-the body tends to remain at a fairly constant level, especially
-when figured per kilogram of body-weight.</p>
-
-<p>To fully appreciate what takes place in a man of the above
-body-weight fasting for five days (though living on a large
-excess of food prior to the fast), the daily losses of carbon
-and nitrogen may be translated into terms of fat and proteid.
-If it is assumed that the total carbon, aside from what necessarily
-belongs to the proteid indicated by the nitrogen figures,
-comes from the oxidation of fat, it is easy to compute the
-amounts of fat and proteid metabolized, or destroyed, each
-day of the fasting period. These are shown in the following
-table:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_86">86</span></p>
-
-<div class="center">
-<table class="mtb1em" cellpadding="2" summary="amounts of fat and protein metabolized">
-<tr>
-<th class="tac blm prl03"><div>Day.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brl prl03"><div>Proteid<br />metabolized.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brm prl03"><div>Fat<br />metabolized.</div></th>
-</tr>
-<tr class="fs75">
-<td class="tac blm"></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>grams</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>grams</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tac blm"><div> 3</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>76.1</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>206.1</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tac blm"><div> 4</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>80.3</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>191.6</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tac blm"><div> 5</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>85.1</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>181.2</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tac blm"><div> 6</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>85.6</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>177.6</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tac blm bbm"><div> 7</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>71.7</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm bbm"><div>181.2</div></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<p>Finally, if from these figures we calculate the fuel value
-of the proteid and fat oxidized per day, it is possible to gain
-a fairly clear conception of the part played by these two
-classes of tissue material during fasting, in furnishing the heat
-of the body and the energy for muscular motion, etc.</p>
-
-<div class="center">
-<table class="mtb1em" cellpadding="2" summary="metabolic heat production">
-<tr>
-<th class="tac blm prl03"><div>Day.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brl prl03"><div>Fuel Value of<br />the Proteid<br />metabolized.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brl prl03"><div>Fuel Value of<br />the Fat<br />metabolized.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brm prl03"><div>Total<br />Fuel Value.</div></th>
-</tr>
-<tr class="fs75">
-<td class="tac blm"></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>calories</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>calories</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>calories</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tac blm"><div> 3</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>303</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>1916</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>2220</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tac blm"><div> 4</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>320</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>1781</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>2102</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tac blm"><div> 5</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>339</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>1684</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>2024</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tac blm"><div> 6</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>341</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>1651</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>1992</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tac blm bbm"><div> 7</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>286</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>1684</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm bbm"><div>1970</div></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<p>These somewhat general statements, with the illustrations
-given, will serve in a brief way to emphasize some of the
-essential features of metabolism in the fasting individual;
-where there is no income of energy-containing material, and
-where the body must draw entirely upon its store of accumulated
-fat and proteid to keep the machinery in motion, maintain
-body temperature, and do the tasks of every-day life.
-When it is remembered that persons have fasted for periods<span class="pagenum" id="Page_87">87</span>
-of thirty days or longer without succumbing, it is evident
-that the body of the well-nourished man has a large reserve
-of nutritive material, which can be drawn upon in cases of
-emergency. At the same time, the facts presented show us
-that in the early days of fasting the actual amounts of tissue
-proteid and body fat consumed are not large. In Cetti’s
-case, on the sixth day of fasting the metabolized nitrogen
-amounted to 10 grams, which implies a loss of 62.5 grams of
-proteid. At this rate of loss, one pound of dry proteid
-matter in the form of tissue proteid would meet the wants
-of a man of 130 pounds body-weight for seven and a half
-days, provided of course there was a reasonable stock of fat
-to help satisfy the energy requirements. Finally, we may
-again emphasize the fact that the loss of nitrogen in the fasting
-man is by no means a measure of the minimal proteid
-requirement. By feeding fat, or carbohydrate, or both, the
-output of nitrogen can be materially diminished, although
-naturally we cannot establish a nitrogen balance by so doing,
-since the income is free from nitrogen; but we can postpone
-for a time the approach of nitrogen starvation.</p>
-
-<p>We may next profitably consider the effect of a pure proteid
-diet&mdash;such as lean meat free from fat&mdash;on the output
-of nitrogen. In studying this problem, we at once meet with
-several important and surprising facts. First, we are led to
-see that, strange as it may seem, every addition of proteid
-to the diet results in an increased excretion of nitrogen. In
-other words, increase of proteid income is followed at once
-by an increase in the metabolism of proteid, with a corresponding
-outgo of nitrogen. The hungry or fasting man
-with his income entirely cut off, and consequently suffering
-from a heavy drain upon his capital stock, would be expected,
-when suddenly supplied with fresh capital in the form of
-meat or other kind of proteid food, to hold on firmly to this
-all-important foodstuff; but such is not the case. It is impossible,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_88">88</span>
-for example, to establish nitrogen equilibrium by
-an income of proteid equal to what the individual during
-fasting is found to metabolize. As stated by another, “It is
-one of the cardinal laws of proteid metabolism that the store
-of nitrogenous substances in the body is not increased by, or
-not in proportion to, an increase in the nitrogen intake.”
-The principle is well illustrated in the fasting experiment
-just described. On the fifth day of fasting, the nitrogen output
-amounted to 11.4 grams. On the day following, the man
-took 35.6 grams of nitrogen in the form of proteid, while the
-excretion of nitrogen for that day rose to 26.8 grams. In
-other words, although deprived of all proteid income for five
-days, and during that period drawing entirely upon his proteid
-capital, the man was wholly unable to avail himself of the
-proteid so abundantly supplied at the close of the fast and
-make good the losses of the preceding days; only a small
-proportion of the proteid income could be retained. If a dog
-fed on a definite quantity of meat suddenly has his proteid
-income increased, there is at once an acceleration of proteid
-metabolism, and a corresponding increase in the output of
-nitrogen. Addition of still more proteid to his income is
-followed by an accumulation of a portion of the proteid; but
-this tends to decrease gradually, while there is a corresponding
-daily increase in the excretion of nitrogen. In this
-manner, there finally results a condition of nitrogenous equilibrium
-or nitrogen balance.</p>
-
-<p>Again, an animal brought into nitrogen equilibrium by
-excessive proteid feeding, if suddenly given a small amount
-of meat per day, tends to put out nitrogen from its own
-tissues. This tissue loss, however, decreases slowly, and
-eventually the animal is quite likely to re-establish nitrogen
-equilibrium at a lower level. There is, in other words,
-a strong tendency for the body to pass into a condition
-of nitrogen balance under different conditions of proteid<span class="pagenum" id="Page_89">89</span>
-feeding, even after a long period of nitrogen loss and with
-an abundance of proteid in the intake. The starving body,
-as we have seen, cannot make use of all the nitrogen fed,
-although we can well conceive its great need for all the proteid
-available. A certain amount of the proteid fed, or its
-contained nitrogen, is at once passed out of the body and lost,
-even though the organism be gasping, as it were, for proteid
-to make good the drain incidental to long fasting. A recent
-<span class="nowrap">writer<a id="FNanchor_26" href="#Footnote_26" class="fnanchor">26</a></span> has suggested that some explanation for these anomalies
-may be found in the supposition “that a long succession
-of generations in the past, which have lived from choice or
-necessity on a diet rich in proteids, have handed down to us,
-as an inheritance, a constitution in which arrangements exist
-for the removal of nitrogen from a considerable part of this
-proteid. The fact that the amount of proteid taken is re-adjusted
-to suit the actual needs of the body, though it
-makes these arrangements unnecessary, will not necessarily
-remove them. The denitrifying enzyme, which has been
-trained to keep guard over the entrances by which nitrogenous
-substances are admitted into the body, will continue
-to levy its toll of nitrogen, even when the amount of proteid
-presented to it is no more than the tissues which it serves
-actually require.”</p>
-
-<p>As an illustration of how the body behaves with a low
-nitrogen intake followed by a sudden increase in the income
-of proteid, some data from an experiment performed by
-<span class="nowrap">Sivén<a id="FNanchor_27" href="#Footnote_27" class="fnanchor">27</a></span> on himself may be cited:</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_90">90</span></p>
-
-
-<div class="center">
-<table class="mtb1em" cellpadding="2" summary="results of experiment">
-<tr>
-<th class="tac blm prl1"><div>Date.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brl prl03"><div>Body-weight.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brl prl03"><div>Nitrogen of<br />the Food.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brl prl03"><div>Nitrogen<br />excreted.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brm prl03"><div>Nitrogen<br />Balance.</div></th>
-</tr>
-<tr class="fs75">
-<td class="tar blm"></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>kilos</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>grams</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>grams</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>grams</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar blm pr05"><div>Nov. 6</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>65.4</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr12"><div>2.69</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr08"><div>8.31</div></td>
-<td class="tar brm pr08"><div>–5.62</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar blm pr05"><div> 7</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>65.4</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr12"><div>2.69</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr08"><div>5.37</div></td>
-<td class="tar brm pr08"><div>–2.68</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar blm pr05"><div> 8</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>65.1</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr12"><div>2.69</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr08"><div>5.71</div></td>
-<td class="tar brm pr08"><div>–3.02</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar blm pr05"><div> 9</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>65.3</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr12"><div>2.69</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr08"><div>4.88</div></td>
-<td class="tar brm pr08"><div>–2.19</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar blm pr05"><div>10</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>65.0</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr12"><div>2.69</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr08"><div>4.32</div></td>
-<td class="tar brm pr08"><div>–1.63</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar blm pr05"><div>11</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>64.9</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr12"><div>2.69</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr08"><div>4.25</div></td>
-<td class="tar brm pr08"><div>–1.56</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar blm pr05"><div>12</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>64.9</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr12"><div>2.69</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr08"><div>4.47</div></td>
-<td class="tar brm pr08"><div>–1.78</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar blm pr05"><div>13</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>64.6</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr12"><div>2.96</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr08"><div>4.88</div></td>
-<td class="tar brm pr08"><div>–1.92</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar blm pr05"><div>14</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>64.4</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr12"><div>2.96</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr08"><div>4.30</div></td>
-<td class="tar brm pr08"><div>–1.44</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar blm pr05"><div>15</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>64.3</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr12"><div>2.96</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr08"><div>4.75</div></td>
-<td class="tar brm pr08"><div>–1.79</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar blm pr05"><div>16</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>64.4</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr12"><div>2.96</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr08"><div>4.36</div></td>
-<td class="tar brm pr08"><div>–1.40</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar blm pr05"><div>17</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>64.4</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr12"><div>2.96</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr08"><div>4.13</div></td>
-<td class="tar brm pr08"><div>–1.17</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar blm pr05"><div>18</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>64.4</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr12"><div>2.96</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr08"><div>4.35</div></td>
-<td class="tar brm pr08"><div>–1.39</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar blm pr05"><div>19</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>64.4</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr12"><div>2.96</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr08"><div>4.32</div></td>
-<td class="tar brm pr08"><div>–1.36</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar blm pr05"><div>20</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>64.4</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr12"><div>2.96</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr08"><div>4.22</div></td>
-<td class="tar brm pr08"><div>–1.26</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar blm pr05"><div>21</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>64.0</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr12"><div>2.96</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr08"><div>4.06</div></td>
-<td class="tar brm pr08"><div>–1.10</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar blm"></td>
-<td class="tac brl"></td>
-<td class="tar brl"></td>
-<td class="tar brl"></td>
-<td class="tar brm bt pr08"><div>–31.31</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar blm"><div>&nbsp;</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"></td>
-<td class="tar brl"></td>
-<td class="tar brl"></td>
-<td class="tar brm"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar blm pr05"><div>22</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>64.1</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr12"><div>4.02</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr08"><div>4.22</div></td>
-<td class="tar brm pr08"><div>–0.20</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar blm pr05"><div>23</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>64.4</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr12"><div>4.02</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr08"><div>4.35</div></td>
-<td class="tar brm pr08"><div>–0.33</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar blm pr05"><div>24</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>64.4</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr12"><div>4.02</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr08"><div>4.21</div></td>
-<td class="tar brm pr08"><div>–0.19</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar blm pr05"><div>25</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>64.4</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr12"><div>4.02</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr08"><div>4.40</div></td>
-<td class="tar brm pr08"><div>–0.38</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar blm"></td>
-<td class="tac brl"></td>
-<td class="tar brl"></td>
-<td class="tar brl"></td>
-<td class="tar brm bt pr08"><div>–1.10</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar blm"><div>&nbsp;</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"></td>
-<td class="tar brl"></td>
-<td class="tar brl"></td>
-<td class="tar brm"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar blm pr05"><div>26</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>64.2</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr12"><div>8.24</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr08"><div>6.56</div></td>
-<td class="tar brm pr08"><div>+1.68</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar blm pr05"><div>27</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>64.4</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr12"><div>13.45</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr08"><div>8.67</div></td>
-<td class="tar brm pr08"><div>+4.78</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar blm pr05"><div>28</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>64.4</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr12"><div>13.66</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr08"><div>10.54</div></td>
-<td class="tar brm pr08"><div>+3.12</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar blm pr05"><div>29</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>64.0</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr12"><div>13.45</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr08"><div>11.10</div></td>
-<td class="tar brm pr08"><div>+2.35</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar blm pr05"><div>30</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>64.2</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr12"><div>13.24</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr08"><div>12.83</div></td>
-<td class="tar brm pr08"><div>+0.41</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar blm pr05"><div>Dec. 1</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>64.2</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr12"><div>13.24</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr08"><div>11.70</div></td>
-<td class="tar brm pr08"><div>+1.54</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar blm pr05"><div>2</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>63.9</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr12"><div>12.61</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr08"><div>12.00</div></td>
-<td class="tar brm pr08"><div>+0.61</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar blm"></td>
-<td class="tac brl"></td>
-<td class="tar brl"></td>
-<td class="tar brl"></td>
-<td class="tar brm bt pr08"><div>+14.49</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar blm"><div>&nbsp;</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"></td>
-<td class="tar brl"></td>
-<td class="tar brl"></td>
-<td class="tar brm"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar blm pr05"><div>3</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>64.0</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr12"><div>22.93</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr08"><div>16.24</div></td>
-<td class="tar brm pr08"><div>+6.69</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar blm pr05"><div>4</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>63.9</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr12"><div>22.41</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr08"><div>21.47</div></td>
-<td class="tar brm pr08"><div>+0.94</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar blm pr05"><div>5</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>63.9</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr12"><div>22.41</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr08"><div>23.10</div></td>
-<td class="tar brm pr08"><div>–0.69</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar blm pr05"><div>6</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>63.6</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr12"><div>23.35</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr08"><div>23.12</div></td>
-<td class="tar brm pr08"><div>+0.23</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar blm pr05"><div>7</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>63.9</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr12"><div>23.04</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr08"><div>22.82</div></td>
-<td class="tar brm pr08"><div>+0.22</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar blm pr05"><div>8</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>63.8</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr12"><div>22.62</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr08"><div>22.86</div></td>
-<td class="tar brm pr08"><div>–0.24</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar blm bbm"></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"></td>
-<td class="tar brl bbm"></td>
-<td class="tar brl bbm"></td>
-<td class="tar brm bbm bt pr08"><div>+6.15</div></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_91">91</span></p>
-
-<p>I have ventured to give these data in some detail, because
-of their exceeding great interest in several directions aside
-from the point under discussion. Confining our attention to
-the nitrogen exchange, it is to be observed that for a period
-of two weeks Sivén lived on less than 3 grams of nitrogen
-per day, and without any excessive intake of carbohydrate or
-fat. During this time, the body naturally was in a condition
-of minus balance as regards nitrogen, the output being considerably
-larger than the income. The total amount of nitrogen
-lost in the period, 31 grams, corresponds to a breaking
-down of 193 grams of tissue proteid, or over one-third of a
-pound. On increasing the income of nitrogen to 4 grams per
-day, the nitrogen loss still continued, though at a much lower
-rate; indeed, the body is seen to approach very closely to a
-condition of nitrogen equilibrium. Still further increase of
-the nitrogen income to 13 grams per day was followed at once
-by a slight accumulation of proteid, and the body showed a
-decided plus balance of nitrogen, as on November 27. This,
-however, is seen to decrease gradually with a corresponding
-daily increase in the outgo of nitrogen, until on December 2
-the body was once more practically in nitrogenous equilibrium.
-On again increasing the nitrogen income, to 23 grams per day,
-the same process was repeated, although in this case the body
-more quickly approached a condition of nitrogen balance.</p>
-
-<p>We see in these data striking confirmation of the statement
-that the nitrogen outgo tends to keep pace with the income
-of nitrogen, the body always striving to maintain a condition
-of nitrogen equilibrium. Consequently, the fasting man having
-lost largely of his store of proteid can replace the latter
-only slowly, even though he eats abundantly of proteid food.
-Thus, Sivén in the week ending December 2, though taking
-over 13 grams of nitrogen a day, retained in his body only 14.5
-grams of nitrogen during the entire seven days; while in the
-six days following, with a daily intake of 23 grams of nitrogen,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_92">92</span>
-he gained only about 8 grams additional. The human
-body does not readily store up proteid, and this is true no matter
-how greatly the tissues are in need of replenishment.</p>
-
-<p>If the daily income is reinforced by the addition of carbohydrate
-or fat, there is observed a decided influence on the
-outgo of nitrogen; the rate or extent of proteid metabolism
-is at once modified, fat and carbohydrate both having a direct
-saving effect on proteid. Neither fat nor carbohydrate can
-prevent the katabolism of proteid, but they can and do decrease
-it, and thus serve as proteid-sparers. In the fasting
-body, or where there is only an intake of proteid, the latter
-material, except for the fat contained in the tissues, must
-serve the double purpose of meeting the specific nitrogen requirements
-of the body and furnishing the requisite energy.
-The energy requirements, however, can be met more advantageously
-by either of the non-nitrogenous foodstuffs, and
-just so far as they are oxidized, so far will there be a saving
-of proteid. Herein lies the philosophy of a mixed diet, with
-its natural intermingling of proteid, fat, and carbohydrate.
-For the same reason, the body of a man rich in fat will in
-fasting lose far less proteid per day than the lean man; or,
-if fed with a given amount of proteid food, the fat man may
-attain nitrogen equilibrium, or even store up a little proteid,
-while on the same diet the lean man will lose proteid. Further,
-if a man is in nitrogen balance with a given amount of
-proteid food, the addition of fat or carbohydrate to the diet
-will permit of a reduction in the amount of proteid necessary
-to maintain nitrogenous equilibrium. Fat, however, when
-added to food, does not always protect proteid to the extent
-possibly suggested by the preceding statements. The following
-data from oft-quoted experiments by <span class="nowrap">Voit<a id="FNanchor_28" href="#Footnote_28" class="fnanchor">28</a></span> on dogs will
-serve to illustrate:</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_93">93</span></p>
-
-<div class="center htmlonly">
-<table class="mtb1em" cellpadding="2" summary="">
-<col width="23%" /><col width="22%" /><col width="28%" /><col width="27%" />
-<tr>
-<th class="tac blm brd" colspan="2"><div>Food.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brm bld" colspan="2"><div>Flesh.</div></th>
-</tr>
-<tr class="fs80">
-<td class="tac blm bb prl03"><div>Meat.</div></td>
-<td class="tac blrd bb brd"><div>Fat.</div></td>
-<td class="tac brld bb bld prl03 nowrap"><div>Metabolized.</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm bb prl03 nowrap"><div>On&nbsp;the&nbsp;Body.</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="fs75">
-<td class="tac blm"><div>grams</div></td>
-<td class="tac blrd"><div>grams</div></td>
-<td class="tac brld"><div>grams</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>grams</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar blm pr12"><div>1500</div></td>
-<td class="tac blrd"><div>0</div></td>
-<td class="tar brld pr15"><div>1512</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>–12</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar blm pr12"><div>1500</div></td>
-<td class="tac blrd"><div>150</div></td>
-<td class="tar brld pr15"><div>1474</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>+26</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar blm"><div>&nbsp;</div></td>
-<td class="tac blrd"></td>
-<td class="tar brld"></td>
-<td class="tac brm"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar blm pr12"><div>500</div></td>
-<td class="tac blrd"><div>0</div></td>
-<td class="tar brld pr15"><div>556</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>–56</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar blm bbm pr12"><div>500</div></td>
-<td class="tac bbm blrd"><div>100</div></td>
-<td class="tar bbm brld pr15"><div>520</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm bbm"><div>–20</div></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-
-<div class="epubonly">
-<div class="center">
-<table width="350" class="mtb1em" cellpadding="2" summary="">
-<tr>
-<th class="tac blm brd" colspan="2"><div>Food.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brm bld" colspan="2"><div>Flesh.</div></th>
-</tr>
-<tr class="fs80">
-<td class="tac blm bb prl03"><div>Meat.</div></td>
-<td class="tac blrd bb brd"><div>Fat.</div></td>
-<td class="tac brld bb bld prl03 nowrap"><div>Metabolized.</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm bb prl03 nowrap"><div>On&nbsp;the&nbsp;Body.</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="fs75">
-<td class="tac blm"><div>grams</div></td>
-<td class="tac blrd prl03"><div>grams</div></td>
-<td class="tac brld"><div>grams</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>grams</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar blm pr06"><div>1500</div></td>
-<td class="tac blrd"><div>0</div></td>
-<td class="tar brld pr15"><div>1512</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>–12</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar blm pr06"><div>1500</div></td>
-<td class="tac blrd"><div>150</div></td>
-<td class="tar brld pr15"><div>1474</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>+26</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar blm"><div>&nbsp;</div></td>
-<td class="tac blrd"></td>
-<td class="tar brld"></td>
-<td class="tac brm"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar blm pr06"><div>500</div></td>
-<td class="tac blrd"><div>0</div></td>
-<td class="tar brld pr15"><div>556</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>–56</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar blm bbm pr06"><div>500</div></td>
-<td class="tac bbm blrd"><div>100</div></td>
-<td class="tar bbm brld pr15"><div>520</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm bbm"><div>–20</div></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>It is to be observed that in both of these experiments the
-fairly large addition of fat results in a saving of proteid, but
-the sparing effect in the first experiment amounts to only 38
-grams of proteid for the 150 grams of fat added. In the
-second experiment, however, there is a saving of 36 grams of
-proteid, although only 100 grams of fat were fed. The radical
-point of difference in the two experiments is the amount
-of proteid ingested. Proteid food stimulates proteid metabolism;
-it likewise accelerates the metabolism of non-nitrogenous
-matter, consequently the sparing or protecting effect of
-fat on proteid is most conspicuous when the intake of proteid
-is relatively small. Only under such conditions, does fat
-protect in large degree the consumption of proteid in the
-body. In the ordinary, daily, dietary of man, with its great
-variety of food materials and with its proteid-content not
-exceeding 125 grams, fat is apt to be a conspicuous element,
-and under such conditions its sparing effect on proteid metabolism
-is most marked. Further, it must not be forgotten,
-as Voit originally pointed out, that the adipose tissue of the
-body acts like the food-fat, and consequently the proteid-sparing
-effect of the former may be added to that of the
-latter.</p>
-
-<p>The addition of carbohydrate to a meat diet produces at<span class="pagenum" id="Page_94">94</span>
-once a saving in the decomposition of proteid, as shown in
-the following figures, covering an experiment of two days:</p>
-
-
-<div class="center">
-<table width="400" class="mtb1em" cellpadding="2" summary="">
-<tr>
-<td class="tac"><div>Meat.</div></td>
-<td class="tac"><div>Sugar.</div></td>
-<td class="tac"><div><span class="ilb">Proteid&nbsp;metabolized.</span></div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal pl14">500 grams.</td>
-<td class="tal pl1">200 grams.</td>
-<td class="tal pl3">502 grams.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal pl14">500</td>
-<td class="tal pl2">0</td>
-<td class="tal pl3">564</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>Without the sugar, there was a minus balance of 64 grams
-of proteid, but addition of the carbohydrate caused practically
-a saving of all of this, with establishment of essentially
-a nitrogen balance. The sparing of proteid by carbohydrate
-is greater than by fats, a fact of considerable dietetic importance
-which is well illustrated by the following experiments
-(on dogs) taken from Voit:</p>
-
-
-<div class="center htmlonly">
-<table class="mtb1em" cellpadding="2" summary="">
-<col width="18%" /><col width="32%" /><col width="22%" /><col width="28%" />
-<tr>
-<th class="tac blm brd" colspan="2"><div>Food.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brm bld" colspan="2"><div>Flesh.</div></th>
-</tr>
-<tr class="fs80">
-<td class="tac blm"><div>Meat.</div></td>
-<td class="tac blrd prl03"><div>Non-nitrogenous&nbsp;Food.</div></td>
-<td class="tac brld prl03"><div>Metabolized.</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm prl03"><div>Balance&nbsp;of&nbsp;the&nbsp;Body.</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="fs75">
-<td class="tac blm bt"><div>grams</div></td>
-<td class="tac blrd bt"><div>grams</div></td>
-<td class="tac brld bt"><div>grams</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm bt"><div>grams</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar blm pr15"><div> 500</div></td>
-<td class="tal blrd pl2">250 Fat</td>
-<td class="tar brld pr21"><div>558</div></td>
-<td class="tar brm pr3"><div>–58</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar blm pr15"><div> 500</div></td>
-<td class="tal blrd pl2">300 Sugar</td>
-<td class="tar brld pr21"><div>466</div></td>
-<td class="tar brm pr3"><div>+34</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar blm pr15"><div> 500</div></td>
-<td class="tal blrd pl2">200 Sugar</td>
-<td class="tar brld pr21"><div>505</div></td>
-<td class="tar brm pr3"><div>–5</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar blm pr15"><div> 800</div></td>
-<td class="tal blrd pl2">250 Starch</td>
-<td class="tar brld pr21"><div>745</div></td>
-<td class="tar brm pr3"><div>+55</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar blm pr15"><div> 800</div></td>
-<td class="tal blrd pl2">200 Fat</td>
-<td class="tar brld pr21"><div>773</div></td>
-<td class="tar brm pr3"><div>+27</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar blm pr15"><div>2000</div></td>
-<td class="tal blrd pl1">200–300 Starch</td>
-<td class="tar brld pr21"><div>1792</div></td>
-<td class="tar brm pr3"><div>+208</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar blm bbm pr15"><div>2000</div></td>
-<td class="tal blrd bbm pl2">250 Fat</td>
-<td class="tar brld bbm pr21"><div>1883</div></td>
-<td class="tar brm bbm pr3"><div>+117</div></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-
-<div class="center">
-<div class="epubonly">
-<table width="500" class="mtb1em" cellpadding="2" summary="">
-<tr>
-<th class="tac blm brd" colspan="2"><div>Food.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brm bld" colspan="2"><div>Flesh.</div></th>
-</tr>
-<tr class="fs80">
-<td class="tac blm prl03"><div>Meat.</div></td>
-<td class="tac blrd prl03"><div>Non-nitrogenous&nbsp;Food.</div></td>
-<td class="tac brld prl03"><div>Metabolized.</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm prl03"><div>Balance&nbsp;of&nbsp;the&nbsp;Body.</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="fs75">
-<td class="tac blm bt"><div>grams</div></td>
-<td class="tac blrd bt"><div>grams</div></td>
-<td class="tac brld bt"><div>grams</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm bt"><div>grams</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar blm pr06"><div> 500</div></td>
-<td class="tal blrd pl2">250 Fat</td>
-<td class="tar brld pr12"><div>558</div></td>
-<td class="tar brm pr25"><div>–58</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar blm pr06"><div> 500</div></td>
-<td class="tal blrd pl2">300 Sugar</td>
-<td class="tar brld pr12"><div>466</div></td>
-<td class="tar brm pr25"><div>+34</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar blm pr06"><div> 500</div></td>
-<td class="tal blrd pl2">200 Sugar</td>
-<td class="tar brld pr12"><div>505</div></td>
-<td class="tar brm pr25"><div>–5</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar blm pr06"><div> 800</div></td>
-<td class="tal blrd pl2">250 Starch</td>
-<td class="tar brld pr12"><div>745</div></td>
-<td class="tar brm pr25"><div>+55</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar blm pr06"><div> 800</div></td>
-<td class="tal blrd pl2">200 Fat</td>
-<td class="tar brld pr12"><div>773</div></td>
-<td class="tar brm pr25"><div>+27</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar blm pr06"><div>&ensp;2000</div></td>
-<td class="tal blrd pl1">200–300 Starch</td>
-<td class="tar brld pr12"><div>1792</div></td>
-<td class="tar brm pr25"><div>+208</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar blm bbm pr06"><div>&ensp;2000</div></td>
-<td class="tal blrd bbm pl2">250 Fat</td>
-<td class="tar brld bbm pr12"><div>1883</div></td>
-<td class="tar brm bbm pr25"><div>+117</div></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>In considering the results of this experiment, it must be
-remembered that the calorific or fuel value of fat as compared
-with carbohydrate is as 9.3&nbsp;:&nbsp;4.1; in other words, fats have
-a fuel value of more than twice that of carbohydrates. In
-spite of this fact, it is clearly evident that carbohydrates as
-a class&mdash;for the different sugars and starches act alike in
-this respect&mdash;are far more efficient than fats in saving proteid.
-Thus, with an income of 500 grams of meat and 250<span class="pagenum" id="Page_95">95</span>
-grams of fat, the body of the animal lost 58 grams of proteid,
-while with a like amount of meat and 300 grams of sugar the
-body not only saved the 58 grams, but in addition stored 34
-grams of proteid, showing a plus balance to that extent. The
-sparing of proteid by carbohydrate amounts on an average,
-according to Voit, to 9 per cent&mdash;in the highest cases to 15
-per cent&mdash;of the proteid given, while the saving produced
-by fat averages only 7 per cent. Further, increasing quantities
-of carbohydrates in the food diminish the rate of proteid
-metabolism much more regularly and constantly than increasing
-quantities of fat. We may attribute this difference
-in action, in a measure at least, to the greater ease in oxidation
-and utilization of the carbohydrate. In any event,
-starches and sugars are most valuable adjuncts to the daily
-diet, because of this marked proteid-saving power, while their
-fuel value adds just so much to the total energy intake.</p>
-
-<p>A more striking illustration of the action of carbohydrate in
-sparing proteid is seen in experiments on man, where the
-nitrogen intake is reduced to a minimum, so as to constitute
-a condition of specific nitrogen-hunger. In such a case, increasing
-amounts of carbohydrate added to the intake reduce
-enormously the using up of tissue proteid. The following
-experiment with a young man 22 years old and 71.3 kilos
-body-weight, reported by Landergren<span class="nowrap">,<a id="FNanchor_29" href="#Footnote_29" class="fnanchor">29</a></span> affords good evidence
-of the extent to which this proteid sparing power may manifest
-itself.</p>
-
-<p>We see here the nitrogen consumption fall to the exceedingly
-low level of 3.34 grams per day, or 0.047 gram per kilo
-of body-weight. To appreciate the full significance of this
-drop in the extent of proteid metabolism, we may recall that
-Succi, with a body-weight of only 62.4 kilos, on the seventh
-day of fasting excreted 9.4 grams of nitrogen, corresponding<span class="pagenum" id="Page_96">96</span>
-to a metabolism of 58.7 grams of tissue proteid. In other
-words, with an intake of only 5.6 grams of proteid, the addition
-of 908 grams of carbohydrate, with a total fuel value of
-3745 calories, reduced the consumption of tissue proteid to
-20.8 grams. The same individual, if fasting, would undoubtedly
-have used up at least 70 grams of tissue proteid.</p>
-
-<div class="center">
-<table class="mtb1em" cellpadding="2" summary="">
-<tr>
-<th class="tac blm br prl1" rowspan="2"><div>Day.</div></th>
-<th class="tac" colspan="5"><div>Intake.</div></th>
-<th class="tac bld"><div>Output.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brm bld prl03" rowspan="2"><div>Proteid<br />metabolized.</div></th>
-</tr>
-<tr class="fs80">
-<td class="tar ball prl03"><div>Proteid.</div></td>
-<td class="tac ball prl03"><div>Fat.</div></td>
-<td class="tac ball prl03"><div>Carbo-<br />hydrate.</div></td>
-<td class="tac ball prl03"><div>Alcohol.</div></td>
-<td class="tac btb prl03"><div>Calories.</div></td>
-<td class="tac bld btb prl03"><div>Nitrogen<br />of Urine.</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="fs75">
-<td class="tac blm"></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>grams</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl prl03"><div>grams</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>grams</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>grams</div></td>
-<td class="tar"></td>
-<td class="tac bld"><div>grams</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm bld"><div>grams</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tac blm"><div>1</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr1"><div>35.2</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>6.1</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>507</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>26.6</div></td>
-<td class="tac"><div>2465.9</div></td>
-<td class="tac bld"><div>12.16</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm bld"><div>76.0</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tac blm"><div>2</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr1"><div>28.7</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>4.7</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>787</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>26.6</div></td>
-<td class="tac"><div>3574.3</div></td>
-<td class="tac bld"><div>8.37</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm bld"><div>52.3</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tac blm"><div>3</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr1"><div>28.8</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>4.7</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>841</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>26.6</div></td>
-<td class="tac"><div>3796.1</div></td>
-<td class="tac bld"><div>5.02</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm bld"><div>31.3</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tac blm"><div>4</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr1"><div>28.3</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>4.9</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>839</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>13.3</div></td>
-<td class="tac"><div>3690.5</div></td>
-<td class="tac bld"><div>4.50</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm bld"><div>28.1</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tac blm"><div>5</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr1"><div>5.4</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>. .</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>898</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>. . . .</div></td>
-<td class="tac"><div>3703.9</div></td>
-<td class="tac bld"><div>4.01</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm bld"><div>25.0</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tac blm"><div>6</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr1"><div>6.0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>. .</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>931</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>. . . .</div></td>
-<td class="tac"><div>3841.7</div></td>
-<td class="tac bld"><div>3.36</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm bld"><div>21.0</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tac blm bbm"><div>7</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl bbm pr1"><div>5.6</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>. .</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>908</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>. . . .</div></td>
-<td class="tac bbm"><div>3745.8</div></td>
-<td class="tac bld bbm"><div>3.34</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm bld bbm"><div>20.8</div></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<p>It is evident from what has been said that both of these
-non-nitrogenous foods, fat and carbohydrate, play a very important
-part in nutrition, because of their ability to maintain
-in a measure the integrity of tissue proteid. When we recall
-that a diet of pure proteid, such as meat or eggs, must be
-excessive in quantity in order to meet the energy requirements
-of the body, and that the stimulating action of proteid
-food serves to whip up body metabolism, we can appreciate
-at full measure the great physiological economy which results
-from the addition of carbohydrate and fat to the daily diet.
-The establishment of nitrogenous equilibrium is made possible
-at a much lower level by the judicious addition of these
-two non-nitrogenous foodstuffs. The same principle may be
-illustrated in another way, viz., by noting the effect on tissue<span class="pagenum" id="Page_97">97</span>
-proteid of withdrawal of a portion of the fat or carbohydrate
-of the intake, in the case of a person nearly or quite in nitrogen
-balance. The following <span class="nowrap">experiment<a id="FNanchor_30" href="#Footnote_30" class="fnanchor">30</a></span> affords a good example
-of what will occur under such treatment:</p>
-
-<div class="center">
-<table class="mtb1em" cellpadding="1" summary="">
-<tr>
-<th class="tac blm bb" rowspan="2"></th>
-<th class="tac bl" colspan="4"><div>Income.</div></th>
-<th class="tac bld bb prl03" rowspan="2"><div>Output of<br />Nitrogen.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brm bld bb prl03" rowspan="2"><div>Balance of<br />Nitrogen<br />in Body.</div></th>
-</tr>
-<tr class="fs80">
-<td class="tac ball prl03"><div>Nitrogen.</div></td>
-<td class="tac ball"><div>Fat.</div></td>
-<td class="tac ball prl03"><div>Carbo-<br />hydrate.</div></td>
-<td class="tac btb prl03"><div>Calories.</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="fs75">
-<td class="tac blm"></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>grams</div></td>
-<td class="tac"><div>grams</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>grams</div></td>
-<td class="tac"></td>
-<td class="tac bld"><div>grams</div></td>
-<td class="tac bld brm"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tac blm prl03"><div>Av. of 3 days</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>15.782</div></td>
-<td class="tac prl03"><div>40.47</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>289.6</div></td>
-<td class="tac"><div>1955</div></td>
-<td class="tac bld"><div>14.927</div></td>
-<td class="tac bld brm"><div>+0.862</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar blm pr13"><div>Nov. 30</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>15.782</div></td>
-<td class="tac"><div>40.34</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>177.3</div></td>
-<td class="tac"><div>1493</div></td>
-<td class="tac bld"><div>14.959</div></td>
-<td class="tac bld brm"><div>+0.830</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar blm pr13"><div>Dec.&ensp;1</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>15.782</div></td>
-<td class="tac"><div>40.34</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>177.3</div></td>
-<td class="tac"><div>1493</div></td>
-<td class="tac bld"><div>17.546</div></td>
-<td class="tac bld brm"><div>–1.757</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar blm pr13"><div>&nbsp;2</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>15.782</div></td>
-<td class="tac"><div>40.34</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>177.3</div></td>
-<td class="tac"><div>1493</div></td>
-<td class="tac bld"><div>18.452</div></td>
-<td class="tac bld brm"><div>–2.663</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar blm bbm brm bt pr05 ptb03" colspan="7"><div>Average of the last two days . . . . . . . . . -2.210</div></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<p>Starting with the body in a condition of plus nitrogen
-balance, <i>i. e.</i>, with a mixed diet more than sufficient to maintain
-the tissue proteid intact, the reduction of the fuel value
-of the food from 1955 to 1493 calories by cutting off 112
-grams of carbohydrate per day was followed by a gradual,
-but marked, increase in the output of nitrogen; indicating
-thereby the extent to which the body proteid was then drawn
-upon to make good the loss of energy-containing income.
-The body showed at the close of the experiment a minus
-nitrogen balance averaging 2.2 grams per day, or a loss of
-13.8 grams of tissue proteid, which would obviously have
-continued, under the above conditions, until the body was
-exhausted. In other words, the 112 grams of carbohydrate,
-if added to the diet on December 3 and the following days,
-would have quickly saved the daily loss of 2.4 grams of
-nitrogen, and thus changed the drain of tissue proteid to an<span class="pagenum" id="Page_98">98</span>
-actual gain, with consequent establishment of a growing plus
-balance.</p>
-
-<p>It is obvious from what has been stated, that in man the
-body can accomplish a storing of proteid only when the
-intake is reinforced by substantial additions of fat or carbohydrate.
-It is plainly a matter of great physiological importance
-that the body should be able to increase at times its
-reserve of proteid. This, however, cannot apparently be
-accomplished on a large scale under ordinary conditions.
-Any storing up of nutritive material in excess, whether it
-be proteid or fat, necessarily involves overfeeding, <i>i. e.</i>, the
-taking of an amount of food beyond the capacity of the body
-to metabolize at the time. Fat, as we know, may be stored
-in large quantities, and it is in cases of overfeeding with
-non-nitrogenous foods that we find accumulation of fat most
-marked. Overfeeding with proteid, however, does not lead
-to corresponding results, owing primarily to the peculiar
-physiological properties of proteid; its general stimulating
-effect on metabolism, the tendency of the body to establish
-nitrogenous equilibrium at different levels, and the fact emphasized
-by von Noorden that flesh deposition is primarily a
-function of the specific energy of developing cells. In other
-words, the protoplasmic cells of the body are more important
-factors in the storing or holding on to proteid than an excess
-of proteid-containing food.</p>
-
-<p>It is generally considered as a settled fact, that in man
-it is impossible to accomplish any large permanent storing
-or deposition of flesh by overfeeding. Similarly, it is understood
-that the muscular strength of man cannot be greatly
-increased by an excessive intake of food. The only conditions
-under which there is ordinarily any marked and
-permanent flesh deposition are such as are connected with
-the regenerative energy of living cells. Thus, as von
-Noorden has stated, an accumulation or storing of tissue<span class="pagenum" id="Page_99">99</span>
-proteid is seen especially in the growing body, where new
-cells are being rapidly constructed; also in the adult where
-growth may have ceased, but where increased muscular
-work has resulted in an hypertrophy or enlargement of the
-muscular tissue; and lastly in those cases where, owing
-to previous insufficient food or to the wasting away of the
-body incidental to disease, the proteid content of the tissues
-has been more or less diminished, and consequently an abundance
-of proteid food is called for and duly utilized to make
-good the loss. In some oft-quoted experiments by Krug,
-conducted on himself, it was observed that with an abundant
-food intake, sufficient to furnish 2590 calories per day (44
-calories per kilo of body-weight), a condition approaching
-nitrogenous equilibrium was easily maintained. On then
-increasing the fuel value of the food to 4300 calories (71 calories
-per kilo of body-weight) by addition of fat and carbohydrate,
-there was during a period of fifteen days a sparing
-of 49.5 grams of nitrogen or 309 grams of proteid, which
-would correspond to about 1450 grams, or three pounds, of
-fresh muscle. It is to be noted, however, that of this excess
-of calories added to the intake only 5 per cent was made
-use of for flesh deposit, the remaining 95 per cent going to
-make fat.</p>
-
-<p>Again, we may call attention to the well-known fact that
-in feeding animals for food, while fat may be laid on in large
-amounts, flesh cannot be so increased by overfeeding. In this
-matter, however, race and individuality count for considerable.
-Thus, there is on record a more recent series of experiments
-conducted by <span class="nowrap">Dapper<a id="FNanchor_31" href="#Footnote_31" class="fnanchor">31</a></span> on himself which shows some remarkable
-results. Starting with a daily diet not excessive in
-amount, he was able by an addition of only 80 grams of
-starch to accomplish a laying up of 3.32 grams of nitrogen<span class="pagenum" id="Page_100">100</span>
-per day for a period of twelve days, or a total gain of 39.8
-grams of nitrogen, equal to 248 grams of proteid. It may be
-said that the gain of proteid or flesh here for the twelve days
-was no greater than in the preceding case (fifteen days), but
-the difference lies in the fact that Krug accomplished his
-gain by increasing the daily intake from 2590 to 4300 calories,
-an amount which he found too large to be eaten with
-comfort, while the later investigator raised the fuel value
-of his daily food from 2930 to only 3250 calories. As the
-experiments by Dapper contain other points of interest bearing
-on the question before us, we may advantageously consider
-them somewhat in detail. The following table gives
-the more important results:</p>
-
-<div class="center">
-<table class="mtb1em" cellpadding="2" summary="">
-<tr>
-<th class="tac blm bb prl03" rowspan="2"><div>No.<br />of<br />Exp.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brl bb prl03" rowspan="2"><div>Duration.</div></th>
-<th class="tac bb" rowspan="2"><div>Character of Food.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brl" colspan="2"><div>Food Composition.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brl bb prl03" rowspan="2"><div>Nitrogen<br />Balance.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brm bb prl03" rowspan="2"><div>Maxima and Minima<br />of Nitrogen-gain.</div></th>
-</tr>
-<tr class="fs80">
-<td class="tac ball prl03">Nitrogen.</td>
-<td class="tac ball prl03"><div>Calories.</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="fs75">
-<td class="tac blm"></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>days</div></td>
-<td class="tac"></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>grams</div></td>
-<td class="tac"></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>grams</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>grams</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tac blm vat"><div>1</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl vat pr15"><div>6</div></td>
-<td class="tal vat prlhi">Ordinary mixed<br />diet</td>
-<td class="tac brl vat"><div>20.25</div></td>
-<td class="tac vat"><div>2930</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl vat"><div>+2.18</div></td>
-<td class="tal brm vat pb06">+3.2 on 4th day.<br />+1.5 on 6th day.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tac blm vat"><div>2</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl vat pr15"><div>12</div></td>
-<td class="tal vat prlhi">Ditto + 80 grams<br />starch</td>
-<td class="tac brl vat"><div>20.09</div></td>
-<td class="tac vat"><div>3250</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl vat"><div>+3.32</div></td>
-<td class="tal brm pb06">+4.75 on 2d day.<br />+4.65 on 12th day.<br />+2.30 on 8th day.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tac blm bbm vat"><div>3</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl bbm vat pr15"><div>9</div></td>
-<td class="tal bbm vat prlhi">Ditto + 80 grams<br />starch, + 40<br />grams plasmon</td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm vat"><div>24.58</div></td>
-<td class="tac bbm vat"><div>3400</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm vat"><div>+2.55</div></td>
-<td class="tal brm bbm">+5.98 on 1st day.<br />+4.73 on 2d day.<br />+0.50 on 6th day.<br />+1.60 on 9th day.</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<p>As we look at these results, the nitrogen gain for the first
-and second days of the third experiment and the first day of
-the second experiment may well attract our attention, since
-they show an astonishing laying by of proteid, or gain of flesh,
-under the influence of a comparatively small increase in the
-fuel value of the food. A gain of 5.98 grams of nitrogen
-means 37.3 grams of proteid, or more than an ounce; by no
-means an inconsiderable addition for one day to the store of
-tissue proteid. In the third experiment, where plasmon (dried,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_101">101</span>
-milk proteid) was added to the diet, there is to be noted a
-gradual falling off in the proteid-sparing power, which may
-perhaps be interpreted as implying that the body was practically
-saturated with proteid, and that owing to this fact the
-body was unable to continue its laying hold of nitrogen. In
-the entire period of 21 days, however, the body had succeeded
-in accumulating a store of 62.8 grams of nitrogen, or
-392 grams of proteid, and this without adding very largely
-to the intake of non-nitrogenous matter. This experiment
-affords a striking illustration of the ability of the body to
-“fatten on nitrogen,” but it is very doubtful if such results
-can generally be obtained. Lüthje<span class="nowrap">,<a id="FNanchor_32" href="#Footnote_32" class="fnanchor">32</a></span> however, has reported a
-large retention of nitrogen on a diet containing 50 grams of
-nitrogen daily, with a fuel value of 4000 calories. It is
-more than probable that there existed in these particular
-cases some personal peculiarity or idiosyncrasy which favored
-the proteid-sparing power. The personal coefficient of nutrition
-is not to be ignored; it shows itself in many ways, and
-the above results are to be counted among those that are exceptional
-and not the rule. In the words of Magnus-Levy,
-“a given diet with Cassius may lead to different results than
-with Anthony.”</p>
-
-<p>For the study of many questions in nutrition, it becomes
-necessary to determine accurately the transformations of
-energy within the body as contrasted with the transformation
-of matter; the total income and outgo of energy, measured
-in terms of heat, are to be compared one with the other and
-a balance struck. Further, in studying the metabolism of
-carbohydrate and fat it is necessary to determine the output
-of gaseous products through the lungs and skin; to estimate
-the excretion of carbon dioxide and water, and the intake of
-oxygen. For these purposes, a special form of apparatus
-known as a respiration calorimeter is employed. The double<span class="pagenum" id="Page_102">102</span>
-name is indicative of the twofold character of the apparatus,
-viz., a suitably constructed chamber so arranged as to permit
-of measuring at the same time the respiratory products and the
-energy given off from the body. The form of apparatus best
-known to-day, and with which exceedingly satisfactory work
-has been done, is the Atwater-Rosa apparatus, as modified by
-Benedict. It consists essentially of a respiration chamber, in
-reality an air-tight, constant-temperature room (with walls
-of sheet metal, outside of which are two concentric coverings
-of wood completely surrounding it, with generous air spaces
-between), sufficiently large to admit of a man living in it for
-a week or more at a time. Connected with the chamber is
-a great variety of complex apparatus for maintaining and
-analyzing the supply of oxygen, determining the amount of
-carbon dioxide and of water, etc., etc. As an apparatus for
-measuring heat, the chamber may be described as “a constant-temperature,
-continuous-flow water calorimeter, so devised
-and manipulated that gain or loss of heat through the walls
-of the chamber is prevented, and the heat generated within
-the chamber cannot escape in any other way than that provided
-for carrying it away and measuring it.<span class="nowrap">”<a id="FNanchor_33" href="#Footnote_33" class="fnanchor">33</a></span></p>
-
-<p>In illustration of the efficiency of an apparatus of this description,
-and of the close agreement obtainable by direct calorimetric
-measurement with the estimated energy, as figured from
-the materials oxidized in the body, we may quote the following
-data from Dr. Benedict’s report, referred to in the footnote.
-The subject was a young man who had been fasting for five
-days. The experiment deals with the metabolism on the first
-day after the fast, when a diet composed mainly of milk was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_103">103</span>
-made use of, containing 53.31 grams of proteid, 211.87 grams
-of fat, and 75.41 grams of carbohydrate. The following table
-shows the results of the experiment:</p>
-
-<div class="center">
-<table class="mtb1em" cellpadding="2" summary="">
-<tr>
-<th class="tac blm bb" colspan="3"><div>Heat of Combustion of<br />Food and Excreta as<br />Determined by Bomb<br />Calorimeter.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brl bb prl03" rowspan="2"><div>(d)<br />Available<br /> Energy<br />from Food.<br />a-(b+c)</div></th>
-<th class="tac brl bb prl03" rowspan="2"><div>(e)<br />Total<br />Energy<br />from Body<br />Material<br />Gained or<br /><span class="nowrap">Lost.<a id="FNanchor_34" href="#Footnote_34" class="fnanchor">34</a></span></div></th>
-<th class="tac brl bb prl03" rowspan="2"><div>(f)<br />Estimated<br />Energy<br />from<br />Material<br />Oxidized<br />in the<br />Body.<br />d-e.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brl bb prl03" rowspan="2"><div>Heat<br />Measured by<br />Respiration<br />Calorimeter.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brm bb" colspan="2"><div>Heat Measured<br />Greater or Less<br />than Estimated.</div></th>
-</tr>
-<tr class="fs80">
-<td class="tac blm btb"><div>(a)<br />Food.</div></td>
-<td class="tac ball"><div>(b)<br />Excre-<br />ment.</div></td>
-<td class="tac ball"><div>(c)<br />Urine.</div></td>
-<td class="tac ball prl03"><div>Amount.</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm btb prl03"><div>Propor-<br />tion.</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="fs75">
-<td class="tac blm prl03"><div>calories</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl prl03"><div>calories</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl prl03"><div>calories</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>calories</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>calories</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>calories</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>calories</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>calories</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>per cent</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tac blm bbm"><div>2569</div></td>
-<td class="tac bbm brl"><div>149</div></td>
-<td class="tac bbm brl"><div>103</div></td>
-<td class="tac bbm brl"><div>2317</div></td>
-<td class="tac bbm brl"><div>+229</div></td>
-<td class="tac bbm brl"><div>2088</div></td>
-<td class="tac bbm brl"><div>2113</div></td>
-<td class="tac bbm brl"><div>+25</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm bbm"><div>+1.2</div></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<p>As is seen from the above figures, the total fuel value of
-the food was 2569 calories. The fuel value of the unoxidized
-portion of the food contained in the excreta was 149 + 103
-calories, leaving as the available energy of the food 2317
-calories. This must be further corrected by the fact, mentioned
-in the footnote, that a portion of the food was stored
-as fat and glycogen, while the body lost at the same time a
-small amount of proteid. Making the necessary correction
-for these causes, we find 2088 calories as the energy from
-material oxidized in the body. The actual output of energy
-as measured by the calorimeter was 2113 calories, only 1.2
-per cent greater than the estimated amount.</p>
-
-<p>By aid of the respiration calorimeter, many important questions
-in nutrition can be more or less accurately answered,
-especially such as relate to the total energy requirements of
-the body. The law of the conservation of energy obtains in
-the human body as elsewhere, and if we can measure with
-accuracy the total heat output, with any energy liberated in
-the form of work, and at the same time determine the total
-excretion of carbon dioxide, water, nitrogen, etc., together<span class="pagenum" id="Page_104">104</span>
-with the intake of oxygen, it becomes not only possible to
-ascertain the energy requirements of the body under different
-conditions, but, aided by data obtainable through study of the
-exchange of matter, we can draw important conclusions concerning
-the sources of the energy, <i>i. e.</i>, whether from proteid,
-fat, or carbohydrate.</p>
-
-<p>It is obvious that a man asleep, or lying quietly at rest, in
-the calorimeter, especially when he has been without food for
-some hours, furnishes suitable conditions for ascertaining the
-minimal energy requirements of the body. Under such conditions,
-bodily activity and heat output are at their lowest,
-and we are thus afforded the means of determining what is
-frequently called the basal energy exchange of the body.
-The following table taken from Magnus-Levy, and embodying
-results from many sources, shows the heat production
-during sleep, calculated for 24 hours, of various individuals of
-different body-weight and of different body surface.</p>
-
-<p>I venture to present these individual results, rather than
-make a general statement simply, because it is important to
-recognize the fact that the basal energy exchange differs according
-to body-weight, extent of body surface, and the condition
-of the body. In the table, the results are arranged in
-the order of body-weight, and it is plain to see that the absolute
-energy exchange is greater with heavy persons than with
-light, yet the energy exchange does not increase in proportion
-to increase of body-weight. With a man of 83 kilos
-body-weight, the basal exchange is only 30–40 per cent
-higher than in a man of 43 kilos body-weight. In other
-words, the man of small body-weight has, per kilo, a much
-higher basal exchange than the heavier man. The energy
-exchange is more closely proportional to the extent of body
-surface than to weight.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_105">105</span></p>
-
-<div class="center">
-<table class="mtb1em" cellpadding="2" summary="">
-<tr>
-<th class="tac blm bb prl03"><div>Body-weight<br />of the<br />Individual.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brl bb prl03"><div>Total Calories<br />for 24 Hours.</div></th>
-<th class="tac bb prl03"><div>Calories per<br />Kilo of<br />Body-weight.</div></th>
-<th class="tac bld bb prl03"><div>Body-weight<br />of the<br />Individual.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brl bb prl03"><div>Total Calories<br />for 24 Hours.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brm bb prl03"><div>Calories per<br />Kilo of<br />Body-weight.</div></th>
-</tr>
-<tr class="fs75">
-<td class="tac blm"><div>kilos</div></td>
-<td class="brl"></td>
-<td></td>
-<td class="tac bld"><div>kilos</div></td>
-<td class="brl"></td>
-<td class="brm"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tac blm"><div>43.2</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>1333</div></td>
-<td class="tac"><div>30.9</div></td>
-<td class="tac bld"><div>67.5</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>1608</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>23.8</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tac blm"><div>48.0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>1214</div></td>
-<td class="tac"><div>25.3</div></td>
-<td class="tac bld"><div>67.5</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>1621</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>24.0</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tac blm"><div>50.0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>1315</div></td>
-<td class="tac"><div>25.9</div></td>
-<td class="tac bld"><div>70.0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>1661</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>23.7</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tac blm"><div>53.0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>1527</div></td>
-<td class="tac"><div>28.8</div></td>
-<td class="tac bld"><div>70.0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>1620</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>23.1</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tac blm"><div>55.0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>1590</div></td>
-<td class="tac"><div>28.9</div></td>
-<td class="tac bld"><div>71.2</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>1787</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>25.1</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tac blm"><div>56.5</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>1519</div></td>
-<td class="tac"><div>26.8</div></td>
-<td class="tac bld"><div>72.6</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>1550</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>21.3</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tac blm"><div>57.2</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>1560</div></td>
-<td class="tac"><div>27.3</div></td>
-<td class="tac bld"><div>72.7</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>1657</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>22.8</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tac blm"><div>58.0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>1510</div></td>
-<td class="tac"><div>26.0</div></td>
-<td class="tac bld"><div>73.0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>1584</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>21.7</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tac blm"><div>62.5</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>1431</div></td>
-<td class="tac"><div>22.9</div></td>
-<td class="tac bld"><div>73.0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>1630</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>22.4</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tac blm"><div>63.0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>1418</div></td>
-<td class="tac"><div>22.5</div></td>
-<td class="tac bld"><div>75.6</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>1670</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>22.1</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tac blm"><div>63.0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>1492</div></td>
-<td class="tac"><div>23.7</div></td>
-<td class="tac bld"><div>82.0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>1556</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>19.0</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tac blm"><div>64.0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl pl06"><div>1656?</div></td>
-<td class="tac"><div>25.8</div></td>
-<td class="tac bld"><div>82.7</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl pl06"><div>2030?</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>24.5</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tac blm"><div>64.9</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>1475</div></td>
-<td class="tac"><div>22.7</div></td>
-<td class="tac bld"><div>83.5</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>1670</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>20.0</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tac blm"><div>65.0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>1498</div></td>
-<td class="tac"><div>23.0</div></td>
-<td class="tac bld"><div>88.3</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl pl06"><div>2019?</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>22.9</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tac blm bbm"><div>65.0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>1445</div></td>
-<td class="tac bbm"><div>22.2</div></td>
-<td class="tac bld bbm"><div>90.4</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>1773</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm bbm"><div>19.6</div></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<p>As Richet has expressed it, the basal energy exchange is
-inversely proportional to the body-weight and directly proportional
-to the body surface. This is in harmony with the view
-advanced by v. Hösslin, “that all the important physiological
-activities of the body, including of course its internal work
-and the consequent heat production, are substantially proportional
-to the two-thirds power of its volume, and that since
-the external surface bears the same ratio to the volume, a proportionality
-necessarily exists between heat production and
-surface.<span class="nowrap">”<a id="FNanchor_35" href="#Footnote_35" class="fnanchor">35</a></span></p>
-
-<p>There are, however, many circumstances that modify, or
-influence, energy exchange. Thus, the taking of food, with
-all the attendant processes of digestion, assimilation, etc., involves<span class="pagenum" id="Page_106">106</span>
-an expenditure of energy not inconsiderable. This
-has been experimentally demonstrated on man by several investigators.
-With fatty food, Magnus-Levy found that his
-subject lying upon a couch, as completely at rest as possible,
-produced in the 24 hours 1547 calories when 94 grams of fat
-were eaten, and 1582 calories when 195 grams of fat were
-consumed. The increase of heat production over the basal
-energy exchange was 10 and 58 calories respectively. With
-a mixed diet, where proteid food is a conspicuous element, the
-increase in heat production is much more marked. Thus, in
-some experiments reported from Sweden the following data
-were obtained<span class="nowrap">:<a id="FNanchor_36" href="#Footnote_36" class="fnanchor">36</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="center">
-<table class="mtb1em" cellpadding="2" summary="">
-<tr>
-<th class="tal blm bb prl2">Day.</th>
-<th class="tac brl bb prl03"><div>Energy of the Food.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brm bb prl03"><div>Heat Production.</div></th>
-</tr>
-<tr class="fs75">
-<td class="tal blm"></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>calories</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>calories</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl1">First</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>4141</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>. . . .</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl1">Second</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>4277</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>2705</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl1">Third</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>2220</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl1">Fourth</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>2102</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl1">Fifth</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>2024</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl1">Sixth</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>1992</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl1">Seventh</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>1970</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl1">Eighth</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>4355</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>2436</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm bbm pl1">Ninth</td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>3946</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm bbm"><div>2410</div></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<p>We see here an increase of 495 calories per day in heat production,
-due to metabolism of the food ingested. In other
-words, with a basal energy exchange of 2022 calories, the
-average of the five fasting days, energy equivalent to 495
-calories was expended in taking care of the ingested food.
-It should be added, however, that the daily ration here was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_107">107</span>
-somewhat excessive, 4193 calories being considerably in excess
-of the requirements of the body. Finally, it should be
-stated that of the several classes of foods, proteids cause the
-greatest increase in metabolism and fats the least.</p>
-
-<p>In studying heat production in the body under varying
-conditions, one of the important aids in drawing conclusions
-as to the character of the body material burned up is the
-respiratory quotient. This is the relationship, or ratio, of
-the oxygen absorbed to the oxygen of the carbon dioxide
-eliminated, viz., <span class="nowrap"><span class="fraction2"><span class="fnum">CO<sub>2</sub></span><span class="bar">/</span><span class="fden2">O<sub>2</sub></span></span></span>. Carbohydrates (C<sub>6</sub>H<sub>12</sub>O<sub>6</sub>, C<sub>12</sub>H<sub>22</sub>O<sub>11</sub>)
-all contain hydrogen and oxygen in the proportion to form
-water, H<sub>2</sub>O, and in their oxidation they need of oxygen only
-such quantity as will suffice to oxidize the carbon (C) of the
-sugar to carbon dioxide (CO<sub>2</sub>). Carbohydrates, starch and
-sugars, have a respiratory quotient of 1.00. Fat, on the
-other hand, has a respiratory quotient of 0.7, and proteid, 0.8.
-Hence, it is easy to see that the respiratory quotient will
-approach nearer to unity as the quantity of carbohydrate
-burned in the body is increased. Similarly, the respiratory
-quotient will grow smaller the larger the amount of fat
-burned up. Practically, we never find a respiratory quotient
-of 1.0 or 0.7, because there is always some oxidation of proteid
-in the body. If, by way of illustration, we assume that
-the energy of the body under given conditions comes from
-proteid to the extent of 15 per cent, while the remaining 85
-per cent is derived from the oxidation of carbohydrate, the
-respiratory quotient will be 0.971. If, however, the 85 per
-cent of energy comes from fat, the respiratory quotient will
-change to 0.722. In the resting body, as in the early morning
-hours, after a night’s sleep and before food is taken, the
-respiratory quotient is generally in the neighborhood of 0.8.
-When, however, as sometimes happens, the quotient at this
-time of day approaches 0.9, it must be assumed that sugar is<span class="pagenum" id="Page_108">108</span>
-being burned in the body, presumably from carbohydrate still
-circulating from the previous day’s intake.</p>
-
-<p>As can easily be seen, any special drain upon either fat or
-carbohydrate in the processes of the body will be indicated at
-once by a corresponding change in the respiratory quotient.
-This we shall have occasion to notice later on, in considering
-the source of the energy of muscle contraction. Further, the
-respiratory quotient will naturally change in harmony with
-transformations in the body which involve alterations in
-oxygen-content, without the oxygen of the inspired air being
-necessarily involved; as in the formation of a substance poor
-in oxygen, such as fat, from a substance rich in oxygen, such
-as carbohydrate. Moreover, the reversal of this reaction, as in
-the formation of sugar from proteid with a taking on of oxygen,
-will produce a corresponding effect upon the respiratory
-quotient. As Magnus-Levy has clearly pointed out, in the
-formation of fat from carbohydrate, carbon dioxide is produced
-in large amount without the oxygen of the inspired air
-being involved at all. In such a change, 100 grams of starch
-will yield about 42 grams of fat, while at the same time 45
-grams of carbon dioxide will be produced. This might cause
-the respiratory quotient to rise as high as 1.38. Again, in
-the formation of sugar from proteid, the respiratory quotient
-may sink very decidedly, the changes involved being accompanied
-by a taking on of oxygen from the air, without,
-however, any corresponding increase of carbon dioxide
-in the expired air. Assuming a manufacture of 60 grams
-of dextrose from 100 grams of proteid, <i>i. e.</i>, from the non-nitrogenous
-moiety of the proteid molecule, a respiratory quotient
-of 0.613 would be possible. Thus, a diabetic patient,
-living upon a carbohydrate-free diet, consuming only proteid
-and fat, may show a respiratory quotient of 0.613–0.707.
-These illustrations will suffice to show how chemical alterations
-taking place in the body, involving transformations of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_109">109</span>
-proteid, fat, and carbohydrate of the tissues and of the food,
-may produce alterations in the respiratory quotient without
-necessarily being directly connected with intake of oxygen or
-output of carbon dioxide through the lungs; and how, conversely,
-the respiratory quotient becomes a factor of great
-significance in throwing light upon the character of the
-nutritive changes taking place in the body.</p>
-
-<p>Among the various conditions that influence the energy
-exchange of the body, muscle work stands out as the most
-conspicuous. It needs no argument to convince one that all
-forms of muscular activity involve liberation of the energy
-stored up in the tissues of the body; and consequently that
-all work accomplished means chemical decomposition, in
-which complex molecules are broken down into simple ones
-with liberation of the contained energy, the energy exchange
-being proportional to the amount of work done. As we have
-seen, the basal energy exchange of the normal individual is
-ascertained by studying his heat production while at rest&mdash;best
-during sleep&mdash;without food, when involuntary muscle
-activity and heat production are at their lowest. The
-maximum energy exchange is seen in the individual at hard
-muscular work. Heat production is then at its highest, as
-can be ascertained by direct calorimetric observation; or, by
-studying the output of excretory products, which measure
-the extent of the oxidative processes from which comes the
-energy for the accomplishment of the work. As an illustration
-of the general effect of muscular work on the energy exchange
-of the body, we may cite a summary of some results
-reported by Atwater and Benedict<span class="nowrap">,<a id="FNanchor_37" href="#Footnote_37" class="fnanchor">37</a></span> the figures given being
-average results, from several individuals, and covering different
-periods of time. Though not strictly comparable in all
-details, they are sufficiently so to illustrate the main principle.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_110">110</span></p>
-
-<div>
-<p class="tabtitle">HEAT GIVEN OFF BY BODY, INCLUDING FOR WORK EXPERIMENTS
-THE HEAT EQUIVALENT OF THE EXTERNAL MUSCULAR WORK.</p>
-
-<div class="center">
-<table class="mb1em" cellpadding="2" summary="">
-<tr>
-<th class="tac blm bb" rowspan="3"><div> Kind of Experiment.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brl bb prl03" rowspan="3" colspan="2"><div> Total<br />Amount<br />of Heat<br />in 24<br />Hours.</div></th>
-<th class="tac" colspan="4"><div> Rates per Hour.</div></th>
-<th class="tac bl brm bb prl03" rowspan="3"><div> Average<br />for<br />24 Hours.</div></th>
-</tr>
-<tr class="fs80">
-<td class="tac ball" colspan="2"><div> Day Periods.</div></td>
-<td class="tac ball" colspan="2"><div> Night Periods.</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="fs80">
-<td class="tac prl03"><div>7&nbsp;<span class="lowercase smcap">A.&nbsp;M.</span> to<br />1&nbsp;<span class="lowercase smcap">P.&nbsp;M.</span></div></td>
-<td class="tac brl prl03"><div>1&nbsp;<span class="lowercase smcap">P.&nbsp;M.</span> to<br />7&nbsp;<span class="lowercase smcap">P.&nbsp;M.</span></div></td>
-<td class="tac brl prl03"><div>7&nbsp;<span class="lowercase smcap">P.&nbsp;M.</span> to<br /> 1&nbsp;<span class="lowercase smcap">A.&nbsp;M.</span></div></td>
-<td class="tac prl03"><div>1&nbsp;<span class="lowercase smcap">A.&nbsp;M.</span> to<br /> 7&nbsp;<span class="lowercase smcap">A.&nbsp;M.</span></div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="fs75">
-<td class="tac blm"></td>
-<td class="tac brl" colspan="2"><div>calories</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bt"><div>calories</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bt"><div>calories</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bt"><div>calories</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bt"><div>calories</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>calories</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm bb prlhi"><div>Rest experiments</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl bb pr03" colspan="2"><div> 2262</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bb"><div> 106.3</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bb"><div> 104.4</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bb"><div> 98.3</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bb"><div> 67.9</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm bb"><div> 94.3</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm br prlhi"><div>Work experiments<br />Heat eliminated</div></td>
-<td class="tac vab"><div><img src="images/29x6br.png" width="6" height="29" alt="" /></div></td>
-<td class="tar pr03"><div>4225</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>231.7</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>235.6</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>118.1</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>78.4</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>166.6</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm br bb prlhi"><div>Heat equivalent of<br />external muscular<br />work</div></td>
-<td class="tac bb vab"><div><img src="images/43x6br.png" width="6" height="43" alt="" /></div></td>
-<td class="tar bb pr03"><div>451</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bb"><div> 58.5</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bb"><div> 56.8</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bb"><div>. . .</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bb"><div>. . .</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm bb"><div>. . .</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tac blm bbm"><div>Total</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl bbm pr03" colspan="2"><div>4676</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>290.2</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>292.4</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>118.1</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>78.4</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm bbm "><div>194.8</div></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The work done in these experiments was on a stationary
-bicycle in the calorimeter, and the heat equivalent was calculated
-from measurements made by an ergometer attached
-to the bicycle. We are not concerned here with details, but
-simply with the general question of the influence of muscular
-work upon the energy exchange of the body. We note that
-the work of the day periods, 7 <span class="lowercase smcap">A.&nbsp;M.</span> to 7 <span class="lowercase smcap">P.&nbsp;M.</span>, resulted, in
-the several cases brought together under the average figures,
-in an increased heat production amounting to more than 100
-per cent. Further, we observe that in the body, as in all
-machines, only a fraction of the energy liberated by the
-accelerated chemical decomposition, or oxidation, was manifested
-as mechanical work, the larger part by far being heat
-eliminated and lost. Thus, Zuntz has found that, in man,
-about 35 per cent of the extra energy of the food used in
-connection with external muscular work is available for that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_111">111</span>
-work. This, however, shows a noticeably higher degree of
-efficiency than is generally obtainable by the best steam or
-oil engines. Lastly, attention may be called to the fact that
-after the work of the day was finished at 7 <span class="lowercase smcap">P.&nbsp;M.</span>, the next
-period of six hours still showed an accelerated metabolism, as
-contrasted with what took place during absolute rest.</p>
-
-<p>As bearing upon the exchange of matter in the body in connection
-with muscular work, and as showing the relationship
-which exists here between energy exchange and exchange of
-matter, we may quote a few data relating to the elimination
-of carbon dioxide; remembering that this substance represents
-particularly the final oxidation product in the body of
-carbonaceous materials, such as fat and carbohydrate. The
-following data, taken from Atwater and Benedict<span class="nowrap">,<a id="FNanchor_38" href="#Footnote_38" class="fnanchor">38</a></span> being
-results of experiments upon the subject “J.&nbsp;C.&nbsp;W.,” are of
-value as showing the variations in output of carbon dioxide
-that may be expected under the conditions described:</p>
-
-<div class="center">
-<table class="mtb1em" cellpadding="2" summary="">
-<tr>
-<th class="tac blm"><div>Period.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brl prl03"><div>Rest<br />Experiments<br />without<br />Food.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brl prl03"><div>Rest<br />Experiments<br />with<br />Food.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brl prl03"><div>Work<br /> Experiments<br />with<br />Diet.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brl prl03"><div>Work<br />Experiments<br />with<br />Fat Diet.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brm prl03"><div>Extra Se-<br />vere Work<br />Experiment<br />with<br />Fat Diet.</div></th>
-</tr>
-<tr class="fs75">
-<td class="tal blm bt"></td>
-<td class="tac brl bt"><div>grams</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bt"><div>grams</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bt"><div>grams</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bt"><div>grams</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm bt"><div>grams</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm prl03">7 <span class="lowercase smcap">A.&nbsp;M.</span> to 1 <span class="lowercase smcap">P.&nbsp;M.</span></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>189.6</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>230.4</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div> 694.0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div> 642.3</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div> 907.0</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm prl03">1 <span class="lowercase smcap">P.&nbsp;M.</span> to 7 <span class="lowercase smcap">P.&nbsp;M.</span></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>172.6</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>232.0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div> 705.6</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div> 634.8</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div> 821.3</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm prl03">7 <span class="lowercase smcap">P.&nbsp;M.</span> to 1 <span class="lowercase smcap">A.&nbsp;M.</span></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>167.2</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>196.6</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div> 260.1</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div> 230.3</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div> 842.7</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm prl03">1 <span class="lowercase smcap">A.&nbsp;M.</span> to 7 <span class="lowercase smcap">A.&nbsp;M.</span></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>146.7</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>153.1</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div> 161.1</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div> 157.6</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div> 502.6</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tac blm bbm bt prl03 ptb03">Total for 24 hours</td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm bt"><div>676.1</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm bt"><div>812.1</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm bt"><div>1820.8</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm bt"><div>1665.0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm bbm bt"><div>3073.6</div></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<p>In considering these figures bearing on the output of carbon
-dioxide under the conditions specified, we note at once
-a correspondence with the total energy exchange, as indicated<span class="pagenum" id="Page_112">112</span>
-in the preceding table. As previously stated, we are at
-present dealing simply with generalities, and the important
-point to be observed here is that muscular work&mdash;7 <span class="lowercase smcap">A.&nbsp;M.</span>
-to 7 <span class="lowercase smcap">P.&nbsp;M.</span>&mdash;in the work experiments, increases enormously
-the output of carbon dioxide. We see clearly emphasized
-a connection between the total energy exchange of the body,
-as expressed in calories or heat units, and the oxidation of
-carbonaceous material, of which carbon dioxide is the natural
-oxidation product. We note that on the cessation of work&mdash;7
-<span class="lowercase smcap">P.&nbsp;M.</span> to 7 <span class="lowercase smcap">A.&nbsp;M.</span>&mdash;the output of carbon dioxide tends
-to drop back to the level characteristic of the corresponding
-period in rest, with or without food. In the experiment
-with “extra severe muscular work,” the results are different
-simply because here the subject worked sixteen hours,
-necessitating a portion of the work being done at night-time.
-Finally, it should be mentioned that the differences in output
-of carbon dioxide in these experiments are somewhat
-greater than in many experiments of this type, although all
-show the same general characteristics. This may be explained,
-as stated by the authors from whom the data are
-taken, “by the fact that J.&nbsp;C.&nbsp;W. was a larger and heavier
-man than any of the others; that the differences in diet were
-wider, and that the amounts of external muscular work were
-larger in these experiments than in those with the other
-subjects.”</p>
-
-<p>If we pass from experiments of this type, conducted in
-a calorimeter, to those cases where competitive trials of endurance
-are held by trained athletes, <i>i. e.</i>, where external
-muscular activity is pushed to the extreme limit, we then see
-even more strikingly displayed the effect of work in increasing
-the energy exchange of the body. One of the best illustrations
-of this type of experiment is to be found in the observations
-made in connection with the six-day bicycle race
-held in New York City, at the Madison Square Garden, in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_113">113</span>
-December, 1898<span class="nowrap">.<a id="FNanchor_39" href="#Footnote_39" class="fnanchor">39</a></span> The observations in question were made
-upon three of the athletes, one of whom withdrew early in
-the fourth day, while the others continued until the close of
-the race&mdash;142 consecutive hours&mdash;winning the first and
-fourth places, respectively. The following table gives the
-computation of energy of the material metabolized, exclusive
-of body-fat lost:</p>
-
-<div class="center">
-<table class="mtb1em" cellpadding="2" summary="">
-<tr>
-<th class="tac blm bb"><div>Subject.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brl bb prl03"><div>Duration of<br />Experiment.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brl bb prl03"><div>Total Energy<br />Metabolized.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brm bb prl03"><div>Average per<br />Day.</div></th>
-</tr>
-<tr class="fs75">
-<td class="tal blm"></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>days</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>calories</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>calories</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl03">Miller</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>6</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>28917</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>4820</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl03">Albert</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>6</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>36441</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>6074</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm bbm prl03">Pilkington</td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>3</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>13301</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm bbm"><div>4464</div></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<p>Miller, the winner of the race, who averaged a daily energy
-exchange of 4820 calories, rode 2007 miles during the week,
-and finished the race without physical or mental weakness
-resulting from the fatigue and strain. During the first five
-days, he rode about 21 hours a day and slept only 1 hour.
-Albert, who weighed a few pounds less than Miller, covered
-1822 miles in 109 hours, with an average daily exchange of
-6074 calories. We may add a table (on the following page)
-showing the balance of income and outgo of nitrogen in these
-three subjects, as being of general interest in this connection.
-The figures given are averages per day.</p>
-
-<div class="center">
-<table class="mtb1em" cellpadding="2" summary="">
-<tr>
-<th class="tac blm bb" rowspan="2"><div>Subject.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brl prl03" rowspan="2"><div>Duration<br />of Exp.</div></th>
-<th class="tac" colspan="4"><div>Income in Food.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brm bl" colspan="4"><div>Nitrogen.</div></th>
-</tr>
-<tr class="fs80">
-<td class="tac ball prl03"><div>Proteid.</div></td>
-<td class="tac ball prl03"><div>Fat.</div></td>
-<td class="tac ball prl03"><div>Carbo-<br />hydrate.</div></td>
-<td class="tac ball prl03"><div>Fuel<br />Value.</div></td>
-<td class="tac ball prl03"><div>In<br />Food.</div></td>
-<td class="tac ball prl03"><div>In<br />Urine.</div></td>
-<td class="tac ball prl03"><div>In<br />Excre-<br />ment.</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm btb"><div>Loss.</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="fs75">
-<td class="tal blm"></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>days</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl prl03"><div>grams</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl prl03"><div>grams</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl prl03"><div>grams</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl prl03"><div>calories</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl prl03"><div>grams</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl prl03"><div>grams</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl prl03"><div>grams</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm prl03"><div>grams</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl03">Miller</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>6</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>169</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>181</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>585</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>4770</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>29.4</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>36.2</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>1.8</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>8.6</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl03">Albert</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>6</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>179</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>198</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>559</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>6095</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>29.1</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>33.7</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>2.5</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>7.1</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm bbm prl03">Pilkington</td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>3</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>211</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>178</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>509</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>4610</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>36.0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>38.9</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>2.2</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm bbm"><div>5.1</div></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<p>The special significance of these data, as bearing upon
-the topic under discussion, is that apparently all three of the
-subjects were drawing in a measure upon their body material.
-As stated by Atwater and Sherman, Pilkington lost per day
-5.1 grams of nitrogen; that is to say, the total nitrogen excreted<span class="pagenum" id="Page_114">114</span>
-exceeded the total nitrogen of the food by 5.1 grams
-per day, corresponding to 33 grams of proteid, which must
-have been drawn from the supply in the body. If we assume
-that lean flesh contains 25 per cent of proteid, this would
-mean about <span class="nowrap">4 <span class="fraction"><span class="fnum">3</span><span class="bar">/</span><span class="fden">4</span></span></span> ounces per day. The other two subjects,
-Miller and Albert, lost from the body per day 8.6 grams and
-7.1 grams respectively of nitrogen, which would imply a loss
-of about 54 grams and 44 grams of body proteid respectively,
-or 8 ounces and <span class="nowrap">6 <span class="fraction"><span class="fnum">1</span><span class="bar">/</span><span class="fden">4</span></span></span> ounces of lean flesh per day. It is evident,
-therefore, that none of the three subjects consumed
-sufficient food to avoid loss of body proteid, under the existing
-conditions of muscular activity. Indeed, it may be noted
-in Miller’s case that the average fuel value of the food per
-day was 4770 calories, while the average expenditure of
-energy per day was 4820 calories. We should naturally
-expect, however, that any small deficiency in fuel value
-would be made good by a call upon body fat. “Why the
-body should use its own substance under such circumstances
-is a question which at present cannot be satisfactorily answered.
-The fact that such was the case, each of the contestants
-who finished the race consuming during the period
-body protein equivalent to 2 or 3 pounds of lean flesh, and
-that no injury resulted therefrom, would seem to indicate
-that these men had stores of protein which could be metabolized<span class="pagenum" id="Page_115">115</span>
-to aid in meeting the demands put upon the body by
-the severe exertion, without robbing any of the working
-parts, and at the same time relieving the system of a part of
-the labor of digestion. Possibly, the ability to carry such
-a store of available protein is one of the factors which make
-for physical endurance.<span class="nowrap">”<a id="FNanchor_40" href="#Footnote_40" class="fnanchor">40</a></span> This possibility we shall have
-occasion to discuss in another connection. At present, the
-facts presented are to be accepted as accentuating the general
-law that the energy exchange of the body, everything else
-being equal, is increased proportionally to increase in the
-extent of external muscular activity. It may be noted that
-Albert, who did considerably less work than Miller, showed
-a much larger exchange of energy than the latter athlete.
-This, however, is to be connected with the fact that his fuel
-intake was 1300 calories larger per day than Miller’s; in other
-words, the conditions were not equal. This fact also calls to
-mind the observations of Schnyder<span class="nowrap">,<a id="FNanchor_41" href="#Footnote_41" class="fnanchor">41</a></span> who, studying the relationship
-between muscular activity and the production of
-carbon dioxide, maintained that the quantity of this excretory
-product formed depends less upon the amount of work accomplished
-than upon the intensity of the exertion; efficiency in
-muscular work varying greatly with the condition of the subject,
-and his familiarity with the particular task involved.</p>
-
-<p>From what has been said, it is obvious that oxygen consumption,
-as well as output of carbon dioxide, must vary
-enormously with variations in the muscular activity of the
-body. The one important factor influencing the quantities
-of oxygen and carbon dioxide exchanged in the lungs, <i>i. e.</i>,
-the extent of the respiratory interchange, is muscular activity;
-and since, as we have seen, carbonaceous material is the substance
-mainly oxidized in muscle work, it follows, as carbon<span class="pagenum" id="Page_116">116</span>
-dioxide is excreted principally through the lungs, that the
-respiratory interchange becomes in good measure an indicator
-of the extent of chemical decomposition incidental to external
-work. If we recall that man, on an average, at each inspiration
-draws in about 500 cubic centimeters of air (30 cubic
-inches), and that for the 24 hours he averages 15 breaths a
-minute, it is easy to see that in one minute the average man
-will inspire 7.5 litres of air, or 450 litres an hour, with a
-total of 10,800 litres for the entire day, which is equivalent
-to about 380 cubic feet. This would be a volume of air just
-filling a room <span class="nowrap">7 <span class="fraction"><span class="fnum">1</span><span class="bar">/</span><span class="fden">3</span></span></span> feet in length, width, and height. Inspired
-air loses to the body 4.78 volumes per cent of oxygen, while
-expired air contains an excess of 4.34 volumes per cent of
-carbon dioxide. In muscular work, respiration is increased
-in frequency and in depth. The volume of air exchanged
-in the lungs during severe labor may be increased sevenfold,
-while oxygen consumption and carbon dioxide excretion are
-frequently increased 7–10 times. The following figures,
-being values for one minute, show the effect on oxygen consumption
-of walking on a level and climbing, the subject
-being a man of 55.5 kilos body-weight<span class="nowrap">:<a id="FNanchor_42" href="#Footnote_42" class="fnanchor">42</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="center">
-<table class="mtb1em" cellpadding="2" summary="">
-<tr>
-<th class="tac blm bb" rowspan="3">Form of Work.</th>
-<th class="tac brl prl03" colspan="3"><div>Oxygen Consumption in Cubic Centimeters.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brm bb prl03" rowspan="3"><div>Respiratory<br />Quotient.</div></th>
-</tr>
-<tr class="fs80">
-<td class="tac ball" rowspan="2"><div>Total.</div></td>
-<td class="tac ball" colspan="2"><div>After Deducting Value<br />for Rest.</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="fs80">
-<td class="tac ball"><div>Total.</div></td>
-<td class="tac ball"><div>For Each Kilo<br />of Moving<br />Weight.</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl03">Standing at rest</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div> 263.75</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>. . . .</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>. . . .</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>0.801</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm prl03">Walking on a level</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div> 763.00</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>499.25</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div> 8.990</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>0.805</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm bbm pl03">Climbing</td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>1253.20</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>989.45</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>17.819</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm bbm"><div>0.801</div></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_117">117</span>
-</div>
-
-<p>Remembering that these figures represent the oxygen consumption
-for only one minute of time, it is easy to see the
-striking effect of moderate and vigorous exercise on respiratory
-interchange. Simply walking along a level suffices to
-increase the consumption of oxygen threefold over what
-occurs when the body stands at rest. When the more vigorous
-exercise attendant on lifting the body up a steep incline
-is attempted, most striking is the great increase in the
-amount of oxygen consumed. We thus see another forcible
-illustration of the influence of muscular activity upon the
-exchange of matter in the body, and a further confirmation
-of the statement, so many times made, that oxidation&mdash;especially
-the oxidation of fats and carbohydrates by which
-large quantities of heat are set free, easily convertible into
-mechanical energy&mdash;is a primary factor in the metabolic
-processes, by which the machinery of the living man is able
-to work so efficiently.</p>
-
-<p>Finally, we cannot avoid the conclusion that the outgoings
-of the body, in the form of matter and energy, are subject to
-great variation, incidental to the degree of activity of the
-day or hour. The ordinary vicissitudes of life, bringing
-days of physical inaction, followed perhaps by periods of
-unusual activity; changes in climatic conditions, with their
-influence upon heat production in the body; alterations in the
-character and amount of the daily dietary, etc.,&mdash;all seemingly
-combine as natural obstacles to the maintenance of a
-true nutritive balance. Outgo, however, must be met by
-adequate amounts of proper intake if there is to be an approach
-toward a balance of nutrition. In some way the
-normal, healthy man does maintain, approximately at least,
-a condition of balance; not necessarily for every hour or for
-every day, but the intake and outgo if measured for a definite
-period, not too short, say for a week or two, will be found to
-approach each other very closely. Body equilibrium and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_118">118</span>
-approximate nitrogen balance may be reasonably looked for,
-as well as a balance of total energy, in the case of a healthy
-man leading a life which conforms to ordinary physiological
-requirements. The man who, on the other hand, consciously
-or unconsciously, continues an intake way beyond the outgo,
-whose daily income of nitrogen and total fuel value far exceeds
-the requirements of his body, obviously lives with an
-accumulating plus balance, which ordinarily shows itself in
-increasing body-weight and with a storing away of fat.</p>
-
-<p>Equally conspicuous is the effect of an inadequate income
-of proper nutriment; a food supply which persistently fails to
-furnish the available nitrogen and total energy value called for
-by the body under the conditions prevailing, will inevitably
-result in a minus balance, which, if continued too long, must
-of necessity tax the body’s store to the danger limit. At the
-same time, the well-nourished individual, without being unduly
-burdened by a bulky store of energy-containing material,
-is always supplied with a sufficient surplus to meet all
-rational demands, when from any cause the intake fails, for
-brief periods of time, to be commensurate with the needs of the
-body. It is reasonable to believe, however, that in the maintenance
-of good health, and the preservation of a high degree
-of efficiency, the body should be kept in a condition approaching
-a true nutritive balance.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_119">119</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_IV">CHAPTER IV</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="chaptitle">SOURCE OF THE ENERGY OF MUSCLE WORK, WITH
-SOME THEORIES OF PROTEID METABOLISM</p>
-
-<p class="chaptopics"><span class="smcap">Topics</span>: Relation of muscle work to energy exchange. Views of
-Liebig. Experimental evidence. Relation of nitrogen excretion to
-muscle work. Significance of the respiratory quotient in determining
-nature of the material oxidized. Fats and carbohydrates as source
-of energy by muscles. Utilization of proteid as a source of energy.
-Formation of carbohydrate from proteid. Significance of proteid
-metabolism. Theories of Carl Voit. Morphotic proteid. Circulating
-proteid. General conception of proteid metabolism on the basis of
-Voit’s theories. Pflüger’s views of proteid metabolism. Rapidity of
-elimination of food nitrogen. Methods by which nitrogen is split
-off from proteid. Theories of Folin. Significance of creatinin and
-of the percentage distribution of excreted nitrogen. Endogenous or
-tissue metabolism. Exogenous or intermediate metabolism. Needs
-of the body for proteid food possibly satisfied by quantity sufficient to
-meet the demands of tissue or endogenous metabolism. Bearings of
-Folin’s views on current theories and general facts of proteid metabolism.
-Large proteid reserve and voluminous exogenous metabolism
-probably not needed. Importance of feeding experiments in determining
-the true value of different views.</p>
-
-<p>As we have already seen, every form of muscular activity
-begets an increase in the energy exchange of the body.
-Between the two extremes of absolute rest and excessive
-muscular exertion, we find differences of 2000 calories
-or more per day as representing the degree of chemical decomposition
-corresponding to the particular state of muscular
-activity. The work of the involuntary muscles, such as
-have to do with peristalsis, respiration, rhythmical beat of the
-heart, etc., is a relatively constant factor, though naturally
-subject to some variation, as has been pointed out in other<span class="pagenum" id="Page_120">120</span>
-connections. External muscular activity, however, is the one
-factor above all others that modifies the rate of energy exchange.
-A little longer walk, a heavier load to carry, a steeper
-hill to climb, any increase great or small in the activity of
-the muscles of the body, means a corresponding increase in
-chemical decomposition, with increased output of the ordinary
-products of tissue oxidation. The material so consumed, or
-oxidized, must be made good to hold the body in equilibrium;
-the supplies drawn upon are to be replaced, if the tissues of
-the body are to be kept in a proper state of efficiency.</p>
-
-<p>What is the nature of the material used up in connection
-with muscle work? As can readily be seen, this is an important
-question, for on its answer depends, in some measure at least,
-the character of the proper intake, or food, to be supplied in
-order to make good the loss. If the energy of mechanical
-work, the energy of muscle contraction, comes from the
-breaking down of proteid matter alone, then obviously excessive
-muscular work would need to be accompanied, or followed,
-by a generous supply of proteid food. If, on the other
-hand, external work means liberation of energy solely from
-non-nitrogenous materials, then it is equally clear that fats
-and carbohydrates are the proper foods to offset the drain
-incidental to vigorous muscular action.</p>
-
-<p>The views of Liebig, briefly referred to in a previous chapter,
-held sway over physiologists for many years. His
-dictum that proteid foods were true plastic foods, entering
-into the structure of the tissues of the body, and that they
-alone were the real sources of muscular energy, met for a
-time with no opposition. It was not until the advent of
-a more critical spirit, accompanied by a fuller appreciation
-of the necessity of experimental evidence, that physiologists
-began to test with scientific accuracy the validity of the current
-views. It is worthy of note that long prior to this time,
-even before oxygen was discovered, the far-sighted and resourceful<span class="pagenum" id="Page_121">121</span>
-John Mayow, in his work with the various “spirits”
-of the body and their relation to respiration, etc., evolved the
-view that muscular power has its origin in the combustion of
-fat brought to the muscles by the blood and burned there by
-aid of a gas or “spirit” taken from the air by the lungs, and
-likewise carried to the muscles by the circulating blood. Considering
-the time when Mayow lived and the dearth of true
-scientific knowledge as we measure it to-day, his hypothesis
-was a wonderful forestalling of present views.</p>
-
-<p>It is quite obvious that the views of Liebig, if true, admit
-of easy proof; since, if the energy of muscular power comes
-from the breaking down of proteid, there should be a certain
-parallelism between the output of nitrogen from the body and
-the amount of muscular work accomplished, everything else
-being equal. As stated in a previous chapter, such study of
-this question as was made soon disclosed the fact that the one
-element above all others that seemed to influence the output
-of nitrogen was the intake of proteid food. Thus, the English
-investigators, Lawes and Gilbert, found by experimenting
-with animals that when the latter were kept under
-uniform conditions of muscular work, the amount of nitrogen
-excreted ran parallel with the intake of nitrogen. Further,
-in the early experiments of Voit, the results obtained
-clearly showed that variations in the amount of work performed
-were practically without influence on the excretion
-of nitrogenous waste products.</p>
-
-<p>The experiment, however, that came as a death blow to
-the theories of Liebig was that of Fick and Wislicenus<span class="nowrap">,<a id="FNanchor_43" href="#Footnote_43" class="fnanchor">43</a></span>
-who in 1865 made an ascent of the Faulhorn, 6500 feet
-high, using a diet wholly non-nitrogenous. From the
-nitrogen excreted they were able, of course, to calculate
-the amount of proteid oxidized in the body during the period<span class="pagenum" id="Page_122">122</span>
-of work, and found that the proteid consumed could not
-have furnished, at the most, more than one-half the energy
-required to lift the weights of their bodies to the top of
-the high peak. Further, they observed that neither during
-the work period, nor immediately after, was there any
-noticeable increase in the excretion of nitrogen. Obviously,
-as they state, the oxidation of proteid matter in the body
-cannot be the exclusive source of the energy of muscular
-contraction, since the measurable amount of external work
-performed in the ascent of the mountain was far greater than
-the equivalent of the energy capable of being furnished by
-the proteid actually burned. To which may be added the
-fact that considerable energy, not measurable in their experiment,
-must have been employed in the work of the
-involuntary muscles of the body; thus increasing by so much
-the difference between the muscular work actually accomplished
-and the available energy from proteid consumed. It
-is true that minor criticisms regarding certain details of the experiment
-can be offered to-day, such as the fact that the men
-were, in a measure, in a state of “nitrogen starvation,” etc.,
-but these criticisms do not in any degree militate against the
-main thesis that the energy of muscular contraction does not
-come exclusively from the consumption or breaking down of
-proteid, either of food or tissue. Vigorous and even severe
-muscular work does not necessarily increase the decomposition
-of proteid material. Dogs made to run in large treadmills,
-with the same diet as on resting days, were found to
-excrete practically no more nitrogen than during the days of
-rest. Occasionally, however, in some one experiment the
-output of nitrogen would show an increase over the output
-on resting days. Further, experiments made with horses led
-to essentially the same result, except that greater increase
-in the excretion of nitrogen was observed than with dogs.
-This increase in nitrogen output, however, as a concomitant<span class="pagenum" id="Page_123">123</span>
-of increased muscular activity, could be prevented by adding
-to the amount of carbohydrate food.</p>
-
-<p>While experiments of this nature, on man and animals, all
-tended to show little or no increase in the excretion of nitrogen,
-as a result of muscle work; and likewise no increase in
-the output of sulphur and phosphorus, thus strengthening
-the view that muscular energy is not the result of proteid
-disintegration, there was observed marked increase in the
-consumption of oxygen, and in the excretion of carbon dioxide.
-Non-nitrogenous matter was thus at once suggested as the
-material with which muscle chiefly does its work. There is
-to-day no question of the general truth of this statement, yet
-there are other aspects of the problem to be considered before
-we can lay it aside. Pflüger, working with dogs, and Argutinsky,
-experimenting on himself by arduous mountain climbing,
-reached conclusions seemingly quite opposed to what has
-just been said. Their results, however, admit of quite a
-different interpretation from what they were disposed to attach
-to them. Thus, <span class="nowrap">Pflüger<a id="FNanchor_44" href="#Footnote_44" class="fnanchor">44</a></span> would go back to the old view that
-all muscle work is at the expense of proteid material, because
-lean dogs fed mainly, or entirely, on meat and made to do an
-excessive amount of work were found by him to excrete nitrogen
-somewhat in proportion to the amount of work done.
-Argutinsky<span class="nowrap">,<a id="FNanchor_45" href="#Footnote_45" class="fnanchor">45</a></span> likewise, in his mountain climbing carried to the
-point of fatigue, and with a high proteid intake likewise, saw
-in the increased output of nitrogen a suggestion of the same
-idea. In reality, however, their results merely prove that,
-under some circumstances, proteid may serve as the chief
-source of muscular energy; as when the body is poor in fat
-and carbohydrate, or when the intake consists solely of proteid
-matter. In other words, muscular work may result in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_124">124</span>
-an increased excretion of nitrogen when the work is very
-severe, and there is not a corresponding increase in the fats
-or carbohydrates (fuel ingredients) of the food. In the
-words of Bunge<span class="nowrap">,<a id="FNanchor_46" href="#Footnote_46" class="fnanchor">46</a></span> “we might assume <i>à priori</i>, on teleological
-grounds, that in the performance of its most important functions
-the organism is to a certain extent independent of the
-quality of its food. As long as non-nitrogenous food is supplied
-in adequate quantity or is stored up in the tissues,
-muscular work is chiefly maintained from this store. When
-it is gone the proteids are attacked.”</p>
-
-<p>There is no question that the energy of muscular contraction
-can come from all three classes of organic foodstuffs.
-Voluntary muscular movement is under the control of the nervous
-system, and when the stimulus is applied the muscle is
-bound to contract, provided of course there is sufficient
-energy-containing material present to furnish the means.
-Muscle tissue, like other tissues and organs, has a certain
-power of adaptability, by which it is able to do its work,
-even though it is not adequately supplied with its preferred
-nutrient. While proteid is plainly not the material from
-which the energy of muscular contraction is ordinarily derived,
-it is equally evident that in emergency, as when the
-usual store of carbohydrate and fat is wanting, proteid can
-be drawn upon, and in such cases vigorous work may be
-attended with increased nitrogen output. In harmony with
-this statement, we find on record in recent years many experiments,
-both with man and animals, where severe muscular
-labor is accompanied by an excretion of nitrogen beyond
-what occurs on days of rest; but by simply adding to the
-intake of non-nitrogenous food this increased outgo of nitrogen
-is at once checked. With moderate work, the nitrogen
-outgo is rarely influenced; it is only when the work becomes<span class="pagenum" id="Page_125">125</span>
-excessive, or the store of non-nitrogenous reserve is small
-and the intake of the latter food is limited, that proteid
-matter is drawn upon to supply the required energy.</p>
-
-<p>Recalling what has been said regarding the significance
-of the respiratory quotient, it is obvious that we have here
-a means of acquiring information as to the character of the
-material that is burned up in the body during muscular work.
-Increased metabolism of carbohydrate will necessarily result
-in raising the respiratory quotient, and if the latter food
-material alone is involved the respiratory quotient must
-naturally approach 1.0. Zuntz, however, has clearly shown
-that vigorous muscular activity does not materially change
-the respiratory quotient; except in cases of very severe work,
-where the oxygen-supply of the muscles is interfered with.
-Indeed, the muscles may be made to do work sufficient to
-increase the consumption of oxygen threefold or more, without
-any change in the respiratory quotient being observed.
-And as there is frequently no change whatever in the output of
-nitrogen under these conditions, it follows that the energy
-of the muscle work must have come from the decomposition
-of non-nitrogenous material. If carbohydrates alone were
-involved, the respiratory quotient would obviously undergo
-change. Since, however, this remains practically stationary,
-we are led to the conclusion that fat must be involved in
-large degree, in addition to carbohydrate.</p>
-
-<p>In this connection, it is a significant fact that with <i>fasting</i>
-animals, where the store of carbohydrate material is more or
-less used up, severe muscle work may be accomplished without
-any appreciable increase in nitrogen output, thus showing
-that proteid material is not involved and clearly pointing to
-fat as the source of the muscular energy. Thus, in an experiment
-referred to by Leathes, a dog on the sixth and seventh
-day of starvation was made to do work in a treadmill equivalent
-to climbing to a height of 1400 meters, yet the output of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_126">126</span>
-nitrogen was increased from six to only six and a half grams.
-Obviously, not much of the energy of this muscle work could
-have come from the breaking down of proteid, but it must
-have been derived mainly from the oxidation of fat. There is
-abundant evidence that fat can be used as a source of energy
-by muscles, as well as carbohydrates and proteids, and there
-is every reason for believing that the yield of work for a given
-amount of chemical energy in the form of fat is as good as in
-the case of either of the other two substances. In fact, the
-observations of Zuntz show that fat can be used just as
-economically by the body for muscle work as either carbohydrates
-or proteid. Thus, in one experiment<span class="nowrap">,<a id="FNanchor_47" href="#Footnote_47" class="fnanchor">47</a></span> he determined
-the oxygen-consumption and respiratory quotient in a man
-resting and working on three different diets&mdash;one principally
-fat, one principally carbohydrate, and the other principally
-proteid&mdash;and found that slightly less oxygen and energy
-were required to do work on the fat diet than on the others.
-This is clearly shown in the following table:</p>
-
-<div class="center">
-<table class="mtb1em" cellpadding="2" summary="">
-<tr>
-<th class="tac blm bb" rowspan="2">Diet<br />Principally.</th>
-<th class="tac brl" colspan="2"><div>Resting.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brl" colspan="2"><div>Working.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brl bb prl03" rowspan="2"><div>Kilo-<br />gram-<br />meters<br />of Work<br />Done.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brm prl03" colspan="2"><div>Per Kilogram-meter<br />of Work.</div></th>
-</tr>
-<tr class="fs80">
-<td class="tal ball prl03">Oxygen<br />Used per<br />Minute.</td>
-<td class="tac ball prl03"><div>Respira-<br />tory<br />Quotient.</div></td>
-<td class="tac ball prl03"><div>Oxygen<br />Used per<br />Minute.</div></td>
-<td class="tac ball prl03"><div>Respira-<br />tory<br />Quotient.</div></td>
-<td class="tac ball prl03"><div>Oxygen<br />Used.</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm btb"><div>Calories.</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="fs75">
-<td class="tal blm"></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>c.c.</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>c.c.</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"></td>
-<td class="tac brl"></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>c.c.</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl03">Fat</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>319</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.72</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>1029</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.72</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>354</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>2.01</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div> 9.39</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm prl03">Carbohydrate</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>277</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.90</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>1029</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.90</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>346</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>2.17</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>10.41</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm bbm pl03">Proteid</td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>306</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>0.80</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>1127</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>0.80</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>345</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>2.38</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm bbm"><div>11.35</div></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<p>From these data, we see that per kilogram-meter of work
-less energy was required and less oxygen consumed with fat
-than with either of the other two foodstuffs; but practically,
-fat and carbohydrate as sources of muscle energy have about
-the same value.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_127">127</span></p>
-
-<p>Much stress is ordinarily laid upon the importance of a
-large intake of proteid food whenever the body is called
-upon to perform severe, or long-continued, muscular work;
-but in view of what has been stated it may be questioned
-whether there is any real physiological justification
-for such custom. The pedestrian Weston<span class="nowrap">,<a id="FNanchor_48" href="#Footnote_48" class="fnanchor">48</a></span> who in 1884
-walked 50 miles a day for 100 consecutive days, was found
-by Blyth during a period of five days to consume in his food
-37.2 grams of nitrogen a day, while he excreted only 35.3
-grams, leaving a balance of 1.9 grams of nitrogen per day
-apparently stored in the body. His daily food during this
-period was composed of 262 grams of proteid, 64.6 grams of
-fat, and 799 grams of carbohydrate, with an estimated fuel
-value of 4850 calories. Yet he performed this large amount
-of work daily, and still laid by a certain amount of proteid on
-a ration, the energy value of which would not ordinarily be
-considered high for the muscular work to be done. Fourteen
-years prior to this, Weston, while in New York, was carefully
-studied by Dr. Flint during a period of 15 days, on
-5 of which he walked a total of 317 miles. His diet was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_128">128</span>
-essentially a proteid diet, consisting principally of beef extract,
-oatmeal gruel, and raw eggs. Nitrogen intake and
-output were carefully compared during the days of rest and
-during the days of work, with the results tabulated.</p>
-
-<div class="center">
-<table class="mtb1em" cellpadding="2" summary="">
-<tr>
-<th class="tac blm bb" rowspan="2"><div>Period.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brl bb" rowspan="2"><div>Occupation.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brl bb" rowspan="2" colspan="2"><div>Duration<br />of Test.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brm" colspan="4"><div>Nitrogen.</div></th>
-</tr>
-<tr class="fs80">
-<td class="tac ball prl03"><div>In<br />Food.</div></td>
-<td class="tac ball prl03"><div>In<br />Urine.</div></td>
-<td class="tac ball prl03"><div>In<br />Excre-<br />ment.</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm btb prl03"><div>Gain +<br />or<br />Loss -</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="fs75">
-<td class="tac blm"></td>
-<td class="tac brl"></td>
-<td class="tac brl" colspan="2"><div>days</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl prl03"><div>grams</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl prl03"><div>grams</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl prl03"><div>grams</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>grams</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl03">Fore period</td>
-<td class="tal brl pl03">Comparative rest</td>
-<td class="tac brl" colspan="2"><div>5</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>22.0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>18.7</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>1.4</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>+1.9</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm prl03 vat">Working period</td>
-<td class="tal brl prlhi">Walking 62 miles<br />per day</td>
-<td class="tal"><img src="images/29x6bl.png" width="6" height="29" alt="" /></td>
-<td class="tal vat">5&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="tac vat brl"><div>13.2</div></td>
-<td class="tac vat brl"><div>21.6</div></td>
-<td class="tac vat brl"><div>1.6</div></td>
-<td class="tac vat brm"><div>–10.0</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm bbm pl03">After period</td>
-<td class="tal brl bbm pl03">Rest</td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm" colspan="2"><div>5</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>28.6</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>22.0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>2.2</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm bbm"><div>+4.4</div></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<p>In this case it will be noted that the daily ration was comparatively
-small, and, further, that during the working period
-the subject consumed much less proteid than on the resting
-days. Moreover, when we remember that the total energy
-value of his diet must have been quite small, it is not at all
-strange that in the laborious task of walking 62 miles a day
-he should have temporarily drawn upon his store of body
-proteid to the extent of 62.5 grams, or 10 grams of nitrogen
-a day. Such experiences, however, do not by any means
-constitute proof that in excessive muscular work there is
-need for the consumption of correspondingly increased quantities
-of proteid food, or that the energy of muscular work
-comes preferably from the breaking down of proteid material.
-Carbohydrate and fat unquestionably take precedence over
-proteid in this respect, and we may accept as settled the
-view that in all practical ways carbohydrate and fat stand
-on an equal footing as sources of muscular energy. Less
-clear, perhaps, is the question as to how these two radically
-different types of organic material are utilized by the muscle.
-It has been a favorite belief among some physiologists that
-the contracting muscle makes use of only one substance as
-the direct source of its energy, and that this substance is the
-sugar dextrose. This view would seemingly imply that fat
-and proteid must undergo alteration prior to their utilization
-by the muscle; that, possibly, the carbon of the fat and proteid
-is transformed into sugar before the muscle can make use of
-it. So far as fat is concerned, this view is not supported by
-the facts available, since experiments show that the heat and
-energy liberated in the utilization of a given amount of fat
-in muscle work are in harmony with the energy value of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_129">129</span>
-fat; in other words, the fat is apparently burned, or oxidized,
-directly, without undergoing previous transformation into any
-form of carbohydrate; or, if transformation does occur, under
-some conditions, it must take place within the muscle and
-without loss of energy. The practical significance of these
-facts is at once apparent, for if fat, in order to be available as
-a source of muscle energy, must first undergo conversion into
-sugar, it would be far more economical from a physiological
-standpoint to replace the fat of the diet with carbohydrate in
-any attempt to provide suitable nourishment for the working
-muscle. We may safely conclude, however, that fat and
-carbohydrate, as previously suggested, are in reality both
-capable of direct metabolism by the muscular tissue, and that
-each is of value as a source of muscular energy in proportion to
-its heat of combustion, yielding substantially the same proportion
-of its potential energy in the form of mechanical work.</p>
-
-<p>Regarding the utilization of proteid as a source of energy
-by the muscle, there are many grounds for believing that
-here the body has to deal with certain alterations, before the
-proteid can be made available. We may indeed conjecture
-the transformation of a non-nitrogenous portion of the proteid
-molecule into carbohydrate, as a necessary step in its
-utilization for muscle work. It is certainly true that in the
-ordinary katabolic processes, through which proteid passes,
-there is a tendency for the nitrogen-containing portion to be
-quickly split off and eliminated, leaving a carbonaceous residue
-which may represent as much as 80 per cent of the total
-energy of the original proteid. This so-called carbon moiety
-of the proteid molecule is apparently much less rapidly oxidized
-than the nitrogenous portion, and may indeed be temporarily
-stored in the body, in the form of fat or carbohydrate<span class="nowrap">.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_130">130</span><a id="FNanchor_49" href="#Footnote_49" class="fnanchor">49</a></span>
-We have very convincing proof that the carbohydrate
-glycogen can be formed from proteid. Thus, the feeding
-of proteid to warm-blooded animals may be accompanied
-by an accumulation of glycogen in the liver. This is interpreted
-as meaning that in the cleavage of proteid by digestion
-the various nitrogenous products formed are somewhere,
-probably in the liver, still further acted upon; the contained
-nitrogen with some of the carbon being converted into urea,
-while the non-nitrogenous residue is transformed into glycogen,
-or sugar. That some such change takes place, or, more
-specifically, that carbohydrate does result from proteid is
-more strikingly shown in human beings suffering with diabetes.
-In severe forms of this disease, all carbohydrate food
-consumed is rapidly eliminated through the kidneys in the
-form of sugar, the body having lost the power of burning
-sugar. If such a person is placed upon a diet composed exclusively
-of proteid, sugar still continues to be excreted, and
-there is observed a certain definite relationship between the
-nitrogen output and the excretion of sugar, thus implying
-that they have a common origin.</p>
-
-<p>Further, there are certain drugs, such as phloridzin,
-which, when introduced into the circulation, set up a severe
-diabetes and glycosuria. Dogs treated in this way, fed
-solely on proteid or even starved for some time, will continue
-to excrete sugar, and as in the previous instance,
-there is observed a certain definite ratio between the
-nitrogen output and the elimination of sugar; thus leading
-to the conclusion that both arise from the destruction of
-the proteid molecule. Careful study of this ratio of dextrose
-to nitrogen has led Lusk to the conclusion that full 58
-per cent of the proteid may undergo conversion into sugar
-in the body. Hence, it is easy to see how in muscle work,
-when proteid is the sole source of the energy of muscular
-contraction, the work accomplished may still result from the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_131">131</span>
-direct oxidation of carbohydrate material, indirectly derived
-from the proteid molecule. It requires no argument, however,
-to convince one that such a procedure for the normal
-individual is less economical physiologically than a direct
-utilization of carbohydrate and fat, introduced as such and
-duly incorporated with the muscle substance. Consequently,
-in the nourishment of the body for vigorous muscular work,
-there is reason in a diet which shall provide an abundance of
-carbohydrate and fat; proteid being added thereto only in
-amounts sufficient to meet the ordinary requirements of
-the body for nitrogen and to furnish, it may be, proper
-pabulum for the development of fresh muscle fibres, where,
-as in training, effort is being made to strengthen the muscle
-tissue and so enable it to do more work. Increase in proteid
-food may help to make new tissue, but the source of
-the energy of muscle work is to be found mainly in the
-breaking down of the non-nitrogenous materials, carbohydrate
-and fat.</p>
-
-<p>In view of these facts, we may advantageously consider
-next the real significance of the proteid metabolism of the
-body. As we have seen, a meal rich in proteid leads at once&mdash;within
-a few hours&mdash;to an excretion of urea equivalent
-to full 50 per cent of the nitrogen of the ingested proteid,
-while a few hours later finds practically all of the nitrogen
-of the intake eliminated from the body. Further, it is to be
-remembered that in a general way this occurs no matter what
-the condition of the body may be at the time and no matter
-how large or small the amount of proteid consumed. In
-other words, there is practically no appreciable storing of
-nitrogen or proteid for future needs,&mdash;at least none that is
-proportional to the increase in nitrogen intake, even though
-the body be in a condition approximating to nitrogen starvation.
-Moreover, it is to be recalled that the increased proteid
-metabolism attendant on increased intake of proteid food<span class="pagenum" id="Page_132">132</span>
-is accompanied by an acceleration of the metabolism of non-nitrogenous
-matter; thus resulting in a stirring up of tissue
-change, with consequent oxidation and loss of a certain proportion
-of accumulated fat and carbohydrate. Coincident
-with this increased excretion of nitrogen, the output of
-carbon dioxide is likewise increased somewhat, due as is believed
-mainly to increased metabolism of the involuntary
-muscle fibres of the gastro-intestinal tract, by action of which
-the accelerated peristalsis so characteristic of food intake is
-accomplished. Further, the increased output of carbon
-dioxide, under these conditions, is to be attributed also to
-the greater activity of the digestive and excretory organs,
-naturally stimulated to greater functional power by the
-presence of proteid foods and their decomposition products.
-Still, as stated by Leathes, “the two main end-products of
-proteid metabolism, urea and carbonic acid, are, to a great
-extent, produced independently of each other, and the reactions
-which result in the discharge of the nitrogen are not
-those in which energy is set free, work done, and carbonic
-acid produced.” In other words, there is suggested what
-we have already referred to, viz., that in proteid metabolism
-a nitrogenous portion of the proteid molecule is quickly split
-off and gotten rid of, while the non-nitrogenous part may be
-reserved for future oxidation, serving as a source of muscle
-energy or for other purposes. This being so, it is plain that
-“proteid metabolism in so far as it is concerned with the
-evolution of energy, proteid metabolism in its exothermic
-stages, may be almost entirely non-nitrogenous metabolism”
-(Leathes).</p>
-
-<p>Is there any advantage to the body, however, in this
-carbonaceous residue of the proteid molecule over simple
-carbohydrate and fat? Can the processes of the body be accomplished
-more economically, or more advantageously, with
-a daily diet so constructed that the tissues and organs must<span class="pagenum" id="Page_133">133</span>
-depend mainly upon this carbon moiety of the proteid molecule
-for their energy-yielding material? It has been one of
-the physiological dogmas of the past, that the tissues and
-organs of the body, or rather their constituent cells, preferred
-to use proteid for all their needs whenever it was available.
-If proteid were wanting, either because of insufficient intake,
-or because of excessive activity, then the tissue cells would
-draw upon their store of non-nitrogenous material. Food
-proteid and tissue proteid, however, were the materials preferred
-by the organism, so ran the argument, and the large and
-incessant output of nitrogen which accompanied the intake of
-proteid was accepted as proof of the general truth of this idea.
-We might well question wherein lies the great advantage
-to the body in this continual excretion of nitrogen; whether
-the loss of energy in handling and removing the nitrogenous
-portion of the necessarily large proteid intake, in order to
-render available the non-nitrogenous part of the molecule,
-might not more than compensate for the supposed gain? But
-the truly astonishing fact that the output of nitrogen runs
-parallel with the intake of proteid, that the body cannot store
-up nitrogen to any large extent, has been taken as conclusive
-evidence that the organism prefers to use proteid for all of its
-requirements. Truly, we might just as well argue that this
-significant rise in the excretion of nitrogen after partaking of
-a proteid meal is an indication that the body has no need of
-this excess of nitrogen; that it is indeed a possible source
-of danger, since the system strives vigorously to rid itself of
-the surplus, and that the energy-needs of the body can be
-much more advantageously and economically met from fat
-and carbohydrate than from the carbonaceous residue resulting
-from the disruption of the proteid molecule.</p>
-
-<p>In discussing these questions, we shall need to refer to
-several of the current theories concerning proteid metabolism,
-notably, the theories of Voit, Pflüger, and Folin. In 1867<span class="pagenum" id="Page_134">134</span>
-Carl Voit<span class="nowrap">,<a id="FNanchor_50" href="#Footnote_50" class="fnanchor">50</a></span> of Munich, advanced the view that the proteid
-material of the body exists in two distinct forms, viz., as
-“morphotic” or “organized” proteid, representing proteid
-which has actually become a part of the living units of the
-body, <i>i. e.</i>, an integral part of the living tissues; and “circulating”
-proteid, or that which exists in the internal meshes
-of the tissue, or in the surrounding lymph and circulating
-blood. The real point of distinction here is that while one
-portion of the body proteid is raised to the higher plane of
-living matter, <i>i. e.</i>, becomes a component part of the living
-protoplasm, another and perhaps larger portion is outside of
-the morphological framework of the tissue, constituting a
-sort of internal medium which bathes the living cells, and
-acts as middleman between the blood and lymph on the one
-side and the living cells on the other. According to Voit’s
-view, it is this circulating proteid that undergoes metabolism;
-the proteid of the food after digestion and absorption being
-carried to the different tissues and organs, and then, without
-becoming an integral part of the living protoplasm of the
-cells, it is broken down under the influence of the latter.
-Obviously, small numbers of tissue cells are constantly
-dying, their proteid matter passing into solution, where it
-likewise undergoes metabolism. In other words, according
-to Voit, the great bulk of the proteid undergoing katabolism
-is the circulating proteid, derived more or less directly from
-the food, and which at no time has been a part of the tissue
-framework; while a smaller, but more constant amount,
-represents the breaking down of tissue cells. This conception
-of proteid metabolism is akin to our conception of morphological
-and physiological destruction. In the words of
-Foster: “We know that an epithelial cell, as notably in the
-case of the skin, may be bodily cast off and its place filled<span class="pagenum" id="Page_135">135</span>
-by a new cell; and probably a similar disappearance of and
-renewal of histological units takes place in all the tissues of
-the body to a variable extent. But in the adult body these
-histological transformations are, in the cases of most of the
-tissues, slow and infrequent. A muscle, for instance, may
-suffer very considerable wasting and recover from that wasting
-without any loss or renewal of its elementary fibres.
-And it is obvious that the metabolism of which we are now
-speaking does not involve any such shifting of histological
-units. On the other hand, we find these histological units,
-the muscle fibre or the gland cell, for instance, living on
-their internal medium, the blood, or rather on the lymph,
-which is the middleman between themselves and the actual
-blood flowing in the vascular channels.”</p>
-
-<p>Voit claims that the proteid dissolved in the fluids of the
-body is more easily decomposable than that which exists combined
-in organized form, or as more or less insoluble tissue
-proteid; and it is this soluble and circulating form which,
-under the influence of the living cells, undergoes destruction
-or metabolism. We know, as has been previously stated,
-that oxidation does not take place to any extent in the
-circulating blood, and similarly there is every reason for
-believing that proteid metabolism does not occur in this
-menstrum. Metabolism is limited mainly to the active
-tissues of the body, but according to the present conception
-of the matter it does not occur at the expense of
-the proteid of the living cells, but involves material contained
-in the fluids bathing the cells; <i>i. e.</i>, it is not the
-organized proteid that undergoes metabolism, but the proteid
-circulating in and about the internal meshes of the cells and
-tissues, the living cell being the active agent in controlling
-the process. Further, this view lessens the difficulty of
-understanding the elimination of nitrogen after a meal rich
-in proteid. If it was necessary to assume that all the proteid<span class="pagenum" id="Page_136">136</span>
-of our daily food is built up into living protoplasm before
-katabolism occurs, it would be exceedingly difficult to explain
-the sudden and rapid elimination of nitrogen which
-follows the ingestion of proteid. For example, we can
-hardly imagine that merely eating an excess of proteid food
-will lead to an actual breaking down of the living framework
-of the tissues, equivalent to the amount of nitrogen which the
-body at once eliminates. Voit’s theory, on the other hand,
-supposes a twofold origin of the nitrogen excreted; one part,
-the larger and variable portion, comes from the direct metabolism
-of the circulating proteid, being the immediate result of
-the ingested food and varying in amount with the quantity
-of proteid food consumed; the other, smaller and less variable
-in amount, has its origin in the metabolism of the
-true tissue proteid, or the actual living framework of the
-body.</p>
-
-<p>In a fasting animal, the tissues and organs of the body still
-contain a large proportion of proteid matter, yet only a small
-fraction of this proteid is eliminated each day, hardly 1 per
-cent. If, however, proteid is absorbed from the intestine,
-proteid metabolism is at once increased, and the excretion of
-nitrogen may be fifteen times greater than during hunger.
-In other words, the extent of proteid metabolism is not at
-all proportional to the total amount of proteid contained in
-the body as a whole, but runs parallel in a general way with
-the quantity of proteid absorbed from the intestine. Obviously,
-the newly absorbed proteid is quite different in
-nature from the proteid which in much larger amounts is
-deposited throughout the body, since it is not organized and
-is so much more easily decomposable (Voit). This is the
-circulating proteid of the body; it exists in solution, and it is
-a significant fact that, according to Voit, the chemical transformations
-that characterize proteid katabolism occur only in
-solution. The organized proteid, on the other hand, is in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_137">137</span>
-a state of suspension, and its katabolism, which is relatively
-very small, is preceded by solution of the proteid in the
-fluids of the tissue, after which its further breaking down is
-assumed to be the same as that of the circulating proteid.
-This latter view is a fundamental part of the Voit theory; in
-long-continued fasting, for example, the living protoplasm
-of the various tissues and organs is of necessity drawn upon
-for the nourishment of the more vital parts of the body, such
-as the brain, spinal cord, etc., consequently the organized proteid
-is gradually dissolved and then decomposed, after it has
-become liquefied and has thus lost its organized structure.</p>
-
-<p>In this conception of proteid metabolism, we picture the
-different organs and tissues of the body as being permeated
-by a fluid which carries variable amounts of nutritive material,
-the quantity of the latter determining in a way the extent
-of the proteid katabolism which shall take place. As
-the proteid of the food passes into the blood and lymph, the
-fluids bathing the cells are correspondingly enriched, and as
-a result, proteid katabolism is accelerated in parallel degree.
-During hunger, on the other hand, the organized proteid of
-the tissue cells is gradually liquefied and passes out into the
-current of the circulating fluids. As before stated, the organized
-proteid as such is never decomposed; it must first
-enter into solution, and then under the influence of the living
-cells it undergoes disruption in the same manner as the circulating
-proteid. It is thus evident that the tissue cells and
-the circulating fluids permeating them bear an ever changing
-relationship to each other. Excess of circulating proteid will
-be attended by increased katabolism, while at the same time
-there may be some accumulation of proteid in the cells, and
-indeed some conversion into organized proteid. During fasting,
-hunger, or with an insufficient intake of proteid food,
-the current will naturally be in the opposite direction, and
-organized proteid will slowly, but surely, be drawn upon.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_138">138</span></p>
-
-<p>Again, we may ask in view of these facts, of what real use
-to the body is this large katabolism of circulating proteid?
-We can easily understand the need of proteid to supply the
-loss incidental to the breaking down of organized or true
-tissue proteid, but this we are led to believe is very small
-in amount. Is there any real need for proteid beyond this
-requirement? The physiological fuel value of proteid is no
-greater than that of carbohydrate and considerably less than
-half that of fat, consequently there is on the surface no
-apparent reason why proteid should be used for its energy
-value in preference to the non-nitrogenous foodstuffs. Further,
-as we have seen, the energy of muscle work comes
-mainly, at least, from the breaking down of fat and carbohydrate;
-proteid, in the case of the well-nourished individual,
-ordinarily playing no part in this important line of energy
-exchange. Lastly, in the katabolism of proteid there is
-the large proportion of nitrogenous matter to be split off and
-disposed of before the carbon moiety of the molecule can be
-rendered available. Here, we have involved not only a loss
-of energy, but in addition a certain amount of what appears
-to be useless labor thrown upon the liver, kidneys, and other
-organs. Is there any wonder that the thoughtful physiologist,
-looking at the facts and theories presented by the Voit
-conception of proteid katabolism, should ask wherein lies the
-value to the body of this high rate of metabolism of circulating
-proteid, a rate of metabolism which is seemingly governed
-primarily by the amount of proteid food ingested?</p>
-
-<p>Turning next to Pflüger’<span class="nowrap">s<a id="FNanchor_51" href="#Footnote_51" class="fnanchor">51</a></span> views regarding proteid katabolism,
-we find a totally different outlook. Here, the supposition
-prevails that the plasma of the blood and lymph, with
-its contained proteid, is the food of the organs or their cells,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_139">139</span>
-but that before this food material can undergo katabolism it
-must first be absorbed by the cell and built up into the living
-protoplasm of the tissue. In other words, according to the
-views expressed by Pflüger, katabolism must be preceded by
-organization of the proteid. Expressed in still different
-language, the proteid material circulating in blood and
-lymph must be eaten up by the hungry cells and, by appropriate
-anabolic processes, made an integral part of the living
-protoplasm before disassimilation can occur. Further, according
-to Pflüger’s conception of these processes, there is a
-radical difference in the chemical nature of living protoplasm
-as compared with that of the so-called circulating proteid.
-The latter is looked upon as being comparatively stable, resisting
-oxidation in high degree, and hence not prone to
-undergo metabolism. Living protoplasm, on the other hand,
-is characterized by instability, suffering oxidation with the
-greatest ease, and hence readily broken down in the ordinary
-processes of katabolism. Assuming for the moment the correctness
-of this theory, we see at a glance that all disruption
-of proteid matter in the body must be preceded by the upbuilding
-of the proteid into living protoplasm. There can
-be no destruction of proteid until the latter has been raised
-to the high plane of living matter. The dead, inert circulating
-proteid can serve simply as food for the living cells, and
-cannot undergo katabolism until it has been built up into the
-organized structure of the tissue or organ. Even though we
-grant that a small proportion of proteid may suffer katabolism
-without previous organization, it does not materially modify
-the general trend of the argument that, according to Pflüger’s
-hypothesis, proteid katabolism is essentially a process involving
-the disruption of living protoplasm.</p>
-
-<p>Consider what this means in the light of facts already
-presented. Remembering that the one factor above all others
-influencing the rate of proteid katabolism is the amount of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_140">140</span>
-proteid food taken in, and that the output of nitrogen, no
-matter what the previous condition of the body or the
-amount of proteid food ingested, runs more or less parallel
-with the consumption of proteid, we are forced to the conclusion,
-in accepting this hypothesis, that there must be
-superhuman activity in the building up of living protoplasm,
-only to be followed, however, by its immediate and more or
-less complete breaking down. Further, think of the daily
-or periodical fluctuation in the construction of bioplasm,
-coincident with variations in the amount of proteid food
-consumed, and the corresponding destruction of bioplasm
-as indicated by the daily output of nitrogen. Imagine,
-if you will, the concrete case of a man of 70 kilos body-weight
-eating a daily ration containing 125 grams of proteid,
-the nitrogen equivalent of which is practically excreted
-within twenty-four hours, and are we not wise in hesitating
-to believe that all of that proteid has been so quickly
-built up into living or organized tissue only to be immediately
-broken down and thrown out of the body? Think
-of the enormous activity implied in the manufacture of this
-bioplasm in the time allotted, and for what? Apparently,
-so that it can be broken down again. But such energy as
-is liberated in the breaking-down process might be derived
-far more economically by simple destruction of the proteid,
-as contained in the meshes of the tissue elements, without
-assuming a preliminary conversion into living protoplasm.
-Obviously, we have here a theory which does not help us in
-arriving at any very satisfactory conception of proteid metabolism.
-The facts which Pflüger and his followers bring
-forward in support of the theory are not very convincing, or
-at least not sufficiently so to carry conviction in the face of
-a natural disinclination to believe in the necessity of such a
-profound anabolic process, merely as a prelude to the speedy
-destruction of the finished product. Finally, we may add<span class="pagenum" id="Page_141">141</span>
-that if all proteid katabolized in the body must first be raised
-to the high level of living protoplasm before the final disruption
-can occur, it may be prudent to keep the daily intake
-of this foodstuff down to a level somewhat commensurate
-with the real needs of the body.</p>
-
-<p>As has been stated many times in the course of this presentation,
-the most striking feature of proteid metabolism is
-the rapidity with which large quantities of proteid consumed
-as food are broken down, and the contained nitrogen eliminated
-from the body as urea. A few hours will suffice to
-accomplish the more or less complete destruction of food
-proteid; and any theory of proteid metabolism, to be at all
-satisfactory, must explain this peculiar phenomenon. According
-to recent investigations, it seems probable that some, at
-least, of the cleavage products of proteid formed during intestinal
-digestion are not built up into new proteid, but are at
-once eliminated mainly in the form of urea, without becoming
-a part of either the so-called circulating proteid, or the living
-protoplasm of the body. It will be recalled that under the
-influence of the digestive enzymes, trypsin and erepsin, proteid
-foodstuffs may be broken down while undergoing intestinal
-digestion into monamino- and diamino-acids, such
-as leucin, tyrosin, arginin, lysin, etc. A certain proportion
-of these comparatively simple substances may be directly
-absorbed by the portal circulation and carried to the liver,
-where they may undergo conversion into urea. In this way,
-some portion of the nitrogen of the ingested food may be
-quickly eliminated from the system. As has been stated in
-another connection, we are not sure at present how far proteid
-decomposition of the kind indicated takes place normally
-in the body. We merely know that there are present in the
-intestine, enzymes capable of splitting up proteid into these
-small fragments, and that substances of this type when made
-to circulate through the liver are transformed into urea. These<span class="pagenum" id="Page_142">142</span>
-facts, coupled with the well-known tendency of the nitrogen
-of proteid food to appear in the excretions a few hours after
-the food in question has been consumed, naturally suggests
-a direct breaking down of proteid along the lines indicated,
-with a possible retention of a carbonaceous residue (nitrogen-free)
-for subsequent oxidation, as a source of energy for heat
-or work. Obviously, all of the proteid food cannot behave
-in this manner, for if such were the case there would be no
-proteid available for making good the normal waste incidental
-to tissue changes. Either a certain amount of proteid escapes
-this profound alteration produced by the proteolytic
-enzymes in question, or else a certain proportion of these
-simple decomposition products is synthesized in the intestine,
-or in the tissues of the body, to form new proteid for the
-regeneration of cell protoplasm. However this may be, we
-have presented in this view a plausible explanation of the
-prompt appearance of food nitrogen in the excretions, and
-without compelling belief in a theory, such as Pflüger’s,
-which taxes one’s credulity to the utmost. To be sure, as a
-prominent writer on physiology has recently said, such a view
-stands opposed to our conceptions of the importance of proteid
-food; but it seems possible, in the light of accumulating
-knowledge, that our conceptions of the part played by proteid
-foods in the nutrition of man have not been strictly logical,
-or quite in accord with true physiological reasoning.</p>
-
-<p>Again, in this connection, we may ask the question, why is
-it that the body provides such an effective method for the
-speedy breaking down of proteid food and the prompt elimination
-of the contained nitrogen? Whatever the means made
-use of by the organism in accomplishing this, the result is the
-same; the nitrogen of the ingested food is, in large measure,
-quickly gotten rid of. We clearly recognize the all-important
-position of proteid foods in the nutrition of the body, but
-there appears a certain inconsistency in this prompt removal<span class="pagenum" id="Page_143">143</span>
-of the nitrogen-containing portion of the proteid molecule.
-The nitrogenous part of the proteid food is, physiologically
-considered, the all-important part. It is the only source of
-nitrogen available to the system, and yet apparently the larger
-proportion of this nitrogenous material is not utilized in any
-recognizable way, but is eliminated as quickly as possible. Is
-it not within the limits of possibility that these methods,
-whatever may be the exact mechanism involved, are merely
-a means of getting rid of a surplus of proteid for which the
-body has no real need? This question I shall try to answer
-later on in another connection, but we may advantageously
-keep this possibility in mind while we are discussing these
-theories of proteid metabolism.</p>
-
-<p>It is obvious, in the light of present knowledge, that there
-must be a certain amount of true tissue proteid broken down
-each day, independent of that larger metabolism coincident
-with the intake of proteid food. However much this more
-voluminous proteid katabolism may fluctuate, owing to variations
-in the intake of proteid, and whatever the significance of
-this latter phase of metabolism, it is self-evident that there
-must be a steady, constant metabolism, upon which the life
-of the various tissues and organs of the body depends, and by
-which the proteid integrity of the tissue cells is maintained.
-This implies a certain degree of true tissue change, in which
-definite amounts of proteid material are broken down and
-the resultant loss made good from the proteid intake. No
-matter what specific name be applied to this form of proteid
-katabolism, its existence is clearly recognized. It is obviously
-a form of metabolism distinct, and probably quite
-different, from that form, more variable in extent, which is
-associated with the intake of proteid food. Plainly, if there
-is truth in these statements, there should be some data available
-by means of which these two lines of proteid katabolism
-can be more or less sharply differentiated.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_144">144</span></p>
-
-<p>Thanks especially to the work of Folin<span class="nowrap">,<a id="FNanchor_52" href="#Footnote_52" class="fnanchor">52</a></span> these data are now
-apparently at hand, and the facts which he has accumulated
-with painstaking care seem destined to throw additional
-light upon our conception of proteid metabolism. It will
-be remembered that in the breaking down of proteid, the
-great bulk of its contained nitrogen is eliminated in the
-form of urea. In addition, a certain smaller amount of nitrogen
-is excreted in the forms of creatinin and uric acid.
-As we have seen, the total output of nitrogen, which measures
-the extent to which proteid is decomposed in the body,
-varies with the intake of proteid food; but it is found that
-the proportion of nitrogen excreted in the forms of urea and
-uric acid varies with the extent of the metabolism. In other
-words, quantitative changes in the daily proteid katabolism
-are accompanied by pronounced changes in the distribution
-of the excreted nitrogen. Let us take a single illustration
-from Folin’s results; the case of a healthy man who on one
-day&mdash;July 13&mdash;consumed a proteid-rich diet, and on the
-other day&mdash;July 20&mdash;was living on a diet containing only
-about 1 gram of nitrogen. The composition of the excretion
-through the kidneys on these two days is shown in the
-following table:</p>
-
-<div class="center">
-<table class="mtb1em" cellpadding="2" summary="">
-<tr>
-<th class="tal blm"></th>
-<th class="tac brl"><div><div>July 13.</div></div></th>
-<th class="tac brm"><div><div>July 20.</div></div></th>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm prl03">Volume of urine</td>
-<td class="tal brl prl03">1170&nbsp;c.c.</td>
-<td class="tal brm prl03">385&nbsp;c.c.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm prl03">Total nitrogen</td>
-<td class="tal brl prl03">16.80 grams</td>
-<td class="tal brm prl03">3.60 grams</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm prl03">Urea-nitrogen</td>
-<td class="tal brl prl03">14.70&emsp;&ensp;"&emsp;&ensp;= 87.5%</td>
-<td class="tal brm prl03">2.20&emsp;&ensp;"&emsp;&ensp;= 61.7%</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm prl03">Uric acid-nitrogen</td>
-<td class="tal brl prl03"> 0.18&emsp;&ensp;"&emsp;&ensp;= 1.1%</td>
-<td class="tal brm prl03">0.09&emsp;&ensp;"&emsp;&ensp;= 2.5%</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm bbm prl03">Creatinin-nitrogen</td>
-<td class="tal brl bbm prl03"> 0.58&emsp;&ensp;"&emsp;&ensp;= 3.6%</td>
-<td class="tal brm bbm prl03">0.60&emsp;&ensp;"&emsp;&ensp;=17.2%</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_145">145</span>
-</div>
-
-<p>Here we see, as would be expected, that on the high proteid
-diet, there was a large excretion of total nitrogen and of
-urea; while on the low proteid diet, nitrogen and urea were
-correspondingly diminished. The point to attract our attention,
-however, is the marked difference in the percentage of
-urea-nitrogen in the two cases; a difference which amounts
-to about 26 per cent. A similar difference is to be noted in
-the percentage of uric acid-nitrogen. Lastly, it is to be observed
-that in spite of the great difference in the extent of
-metabolism on the two days&mdash;an excretion of 16.8 grams
-of nitrogen, as contrasted with 3.6 grams&mdash;the <i>amount</i> of
-creatinin-nitrogen is essentially the same. Folin finds that
-these peculiarities in the percentage distribution of excreted
-nitrogen hold good in all cases where there is this wide
-divergence in the amount of proteid katabolized, and, further,
-that there is a gradual and regular transition from the
-one extreme to the other. He sees in these results evidence
-that there are in the body two forms of proteid katabolism,
-essentially independent and quite different. One kind is
-extremely variable in quantity, while the other tends to remain
-constant. The variable form has its own particular
-kind of waste products, of which urea is the chief. The
-constant katabolism, on the other hand, is largely represented
-by creatinin and to a lesser degree by uric acid. The
-more the total katabolism is reduced, the more prominent
-become creatinin and uric acid, products of the constant
-katabolism; while urea, as chief representative of the variable
-katabolism, becomes less conspicuous. Folin suggests the
-term <i>endogenous</i> or <i>tissue</i> metabolism for the constant variety,
-while the variable form he would name <i>exogenous</i> or <i>intermediate</i>
-metabolism.</p>
-
-<p>In these suggestions we have not theory only, but a
-number of very important facts which plainly must have
-some significance. Take, for example, the excretion of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_146">146</span>
-creatinin. It is a characteristic nitrogenous waste product,
-but its elimination from the body is wholly independent
-of quantitative changes in the total amount of nitrogen
-excreted. In other words, the amount of creatinin eliminated
-is a constant quantity for a given individual under
-ordinary conditions, no matter how great the variation in the
-amount of proteid food, provided no meat is eaten. Meat
-must be avoided in testing this point, since meat contains a
-certain amount of creatin, or other components, which would
-be excreted as creatinin. Further, it is found that every individual
-has his own specific creatinin excretion, which fact
-again emphasizes the idea that this substance is a product of
-true tissue katabolism, having no connection with that variable
-metabolism, of which urea is the striking representative.
-These are facts which cannot be ignored. They are well
-established by the careful observations of Folin, and they are
-confirmed by a large number of observations made in our
-own laboratory. Turn now to that other, more conspicuous,
-product of proteid katabolism, urea. With a so-called average
-proteid intake, about 88–90 per cent of the excreted
-nitrogen will be in the form of urea, but, as Folin states,
-“with every decided diminution in the quantity of total
-nitrogen eliminated, there is a pronounced reduction in the
-per cent of that nitrogen represented by urea. When the
-daily total nitrogen elimination has been reduced to 3 grams
-or 4 grams, about 60 per cent of it only is in the form of
-urea.” Here, we have the chief product of exogenous metabolism,
-a substance quite distinct from creatinin, just as the
-process by which it originates is likewise quite distinct.</p>
-
-<p>Exogenous metabolism is plainly a process of quite a different
-order from that of endogenous, or tissue metabolism.
-The latter involves oxidation, while the former consists essentially
-of a series of hydrolytic cleavages which result in a
-rapid elimination of the proteid-nitrogen as urea. In this<span class="pagenum" id="Page_147">147</span>
-conception of exogenous katabolism, we have essentially the
-same viewpoint as was previously taken in attempting to
-explain how excess of proteid food can be so quickly decomposed,
-and its nitrogen removed from the body. Whether
-the hydrolytic cleavage is accomplished solely by trypsin and
-erepsin, whether it takes place only in the intestine and in the
-liver, or whether other glands and tissues are involved, is at
-present immaterial; the essential point is that we have in the
-body a variety of proteid katabolism, quite different from true
-tissue katabolism, the extent of which is dependent primarily
-upon the amount of proteid food consumed. The process involved
-is one which aims at the rapid removal of the proteid-nitrogen
-as urea; without incorporation of the absorbed
-proteid, or its decomposition products, either as an integral
-or adherent part of the tissue proteid. Hydrolytic cleavage
-is eminently fitted to accomplish this with the least expenditure
-of energy, while the carbonaceous residue of the proteid
-thus freed from nitrogen can be transformed into carbohydrate,
-or directly oxidized as the needs of the body demand.</p>
-
-<p>As one considers these views so admirably worked out by
-Folin, the question naturally arises, if the real demands of
-the body for proteid food will not be adequately met by the
-quantity necessary to satisfy the true tissue metabolism?
-We may well believe, with Folin, that “only a small amount
-of proteid, namely, that necessary for the endogenous metabolism,
-is needed. The greater part of the proteid furnished
-with so-called standard diets, like Voit’s, <i>i. e.</i>, that part representing
-the exogenous metabolism, is not needed; or, to
-be more specific, its nitrogen is not needed. The organism
-has developed special facilities for getting rid of such excess of
-nitrogen, so as to get the use of the carbonaceous part of the
-proteid containing it.” In endogenous metabolism, we have
-a steady, constant process quite independent of the amount
-of proteid food, and absolutely indispensable for the maintenance<span class="pagenum" id="Page_148">148</span>
-of life. So far as we know at present, its representative
-creatinin is, for a given individual, the same in amount
-during fasting as when a rich, meat-free, proteid diet is taken.
-The one factor that seemingly determines the amount of
-creatinin eliminated is the weight of the individual, or more
-exactly the weight of the true tissue elements of the body, as
-distinct from fat or adipose tissue. Endogenous or tissue
-katabolism obviously calls for a certain quantity of proteid
-to maintain equilibrium, but this is small in amount as compared
-with the usual intake of proteid foods. The average
-man, with his ordinary dietetic habits, consumes more nitrogen
-than the body can possibly make use of. The excess is
-not stored up, “because the actual need of nitrogen is so small
-that an excess is always furnished with the food, except, of
-course, in carefully planned experiments” (Folin).</p>
-
-<p>We have seen at what low levels of proteid intake, nitrogen
-equilibrium can be established, and we may well have faith
-in the conception of an endogenous proteid katabolism which
-involves only minimal quantities of proteid. Further, we
-have observed the constant tendency of the body to maintain
-a condition of nitrogenous equilibrium, even with varying
-income, and how slow the body is to lay by nitrogen on a
-rich proteid diet, even when long deprived of proteid food;
-a fact difficult of explanation except on the assumption that
-the real need of the body for nitrogen is small, and that the
-tissues habitually carry a relatively large reserve of nitrogenous
-material. We may assume with Folin that “all the living
-protoplasm in the animal organism is suspended in a fluid
-very rich in proteid, and on account of the habitual use of
-more nitrogenous food than the tissues can use as proteid the
-organism is ordinarily in possession of approximately the
-maximum amount of reserved proteid in solution that it can
-advantageously retain. When the supply of food proteid is
-stopped, the excess of reserve proteid inside the organism is<span class="pagenum" id="Page_149">149</span>
-still sufficient to cause a rather large destruction of proteid
-during the first day or two of proteid starvation, and after that
-the proteid katabolism is very small, provided sufficient non-nitrogenous
-food is available. But even then, and for many
-days thereafter, the protoplasm of the tissues has still an
-abundant supply of dissolved proteid, and the normal activity
-of such tissues as the muscles is not at all impaired or
-diminished. When 30 grams or 40 grams of nitrogen have
-been lost by an average-sized man during a week or more of
-abstinence from nitrogenous food the living muscle tissues
-are still well supplied with all the proteid they can use.
-That this is so, is indicated on the one hand by the unchanged
-creatinin elimination, and on the other by the fact
-that one experiences no feeling of unusual fatigue or of inability
-to do one’s customary work. Because the organism
-at the end of such an experiment still has an abundance of
-available proteid in the nutritive fluids, it is at once seemingly
-wasteful with nitrogen when a return is made to nitrogenous
-food. This is why it only gradually, and only under
-the prolonged pressure of an excessive supply of food-proteid
-again acquires its original maximum store of this reserve
-material.”</p>
-
-<p>We may reasonably suppose that the reserve of proteid
-present in the body is contained in the fluid media, and not
-as a part of the living protoplasm. Further, we are apparently
-justified in the belief that the sole form of proteid
-katabolism which is vitally important for the welfare of the
-body is the endogenous katabolism. This must be provided
-for adequately and indeed liberally, and in addition there
-should be sufficient intake to keep up an abundant supply of
-reserve proteid, but beyond these necessities there would
-seem to be no legitimate demand for additional proteid. The
-voluminous exogenous proteid katabolism so conspicuous in
-most individuals would seem to have no justification in fact,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_150">150</span>
-or in physiological reasoning. What good, for example, can
-be accomplished by this constant splitting off of nitrogen,
-with its subsequent speedy removal from the body? The
-organism can neither use it nor store it up, and why therefore
-should this daily burden of an excessive and accelerated
-proteid katabolism be borne? As we have seen, the energy
-of muscle work is derived mainly, and can come wholly, from
-the breaking down of non-nitrogenous materials, fats and
-carbohydrates. The very fact that an intake of say 120
-grams of proteid is followed at once by the removal of the
-larger part of the contained nitrogen, as a result of the exogenous
-katabolism of the body, would seemingly warrant
-the view that the proteid so decomposed might advantageously
-be replaced by a corresponding amount of carbohydrate. In
-muscle work, as in heat production, carbohydrate and fat are
-the materials burned up, or oxidized. Proteid, on the other
-hand, is not so oxidized, at least not the nitrogen-containing
-portion of the molecule.</p>
-
-<p>There are apparent only two possible reasons for assuming
-a need on the part of the body for the high exogenous
-katabolism of proteid so commonly observed. The one is
-that the carbonaceous residue left after the cleavage of nitrogen
-from the proteid molecule is better adapted for the
-needs of the body than either carbohydrate or fat. Although
-this does not seem very probable, it is of course a possibility
-and merits consideration. Feeding experiments, with a comparatively
-small proteid intake, continued over a sufficient
-length of time, would show conclusively how much weight
-should be attached to this hypothesis. The other possibility
-is that the body may derive some advantage from the presence,
-in the tissues and fluids, of the varied nitrogenous
-cleavage products split off from proteid so abundantly in
-exogenous katabolism. These substances are mainly amino-acids
-on their way to urea, and there is no apparent reason<span class="pagenum" id="Page_151">151</span>
-why they should be of service to the organism. Still, the
-processes going on in the tissues and organs of the body are
-intricate and not wholly understood, and we can conceive of
-some useful function of which as yet we have no knowledge.
-In the construction of tissue proteid, for example, as in a
-possible synthesis out of the fragments formed by hydrolytic
-cleavage, it is not impossible that certain corner-stones are
-needed, and that in order to obtain these there must be
-a more or less wasteful breaking down of food-proteid.
-However improbable this may seem, it, like the preceding
-hypothesis, can be tested in a way by adequate feeding experiments,
-which shall determine the effect on the body
-of a low proteid intake continued over a long period of time.
-On the other hand, it is equally plausible, and for some
-reasons more probable, to assume that this excessive exogenous
-katabolism may be in a measure prejudicial to the
-best interests of the body; that the many nitrogenous fragments
-formed in the efforts of the organism to prevent
-undue accumulation of reserve proteid may in the long run
-do as much harm as good.</p>
-
-<p>Further, there is reason in the question whether the continual
-carrying of excessive amounts of nitrogen reserves in
-the shape of soluble proteid in the blood and lymph, and in
-the meshes of tissue and cell protoplasm, is advantageous for
-the maintenance of the highest degree of efficiency? We all
-recognize that an excessive accumulation of fat is distinctly
-disadvantageous to the welfare of the body, and there is,
-physiologically speaking, equally good ground for considering
-that the storage of unorganized proteid in amounts beyond
-all possible requirements of the body may be equally undesirable.
-Because less tangible to the eye, the accumulation
-of unnecessary proteid is not so easily recognizable, but
-this fact does not diminish the possible danger which such
-accumulation may constitute. It must be granted, however,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_152">152</span>
-that we are dealing here with hypotheses and not facts, but
-though hypothetical the suggestions made are of sufficient
-moment to merit attention and experimental study. In a
-later chapter, we shall have occasion to present some facts
-bearing on these questions.</p>
-
-<p>In the meantime, we may lay due stress upon the significance
-of these views regarding proteid katabolism. We
-must accept as settled the general idea that there are two
-distinct forms of proteid katabolism within the body; one
-form representing the decay of tissue or cell protoplasm,
-small in amount, with its own particular decomposition products,
-and absolutely essential for the continuance of life.
-The other form, the so-called exogenous katabolism, runs a
-totally different course with distinctive side-products and
-end-products; it is variable in extent, in harmony with
-variations in proteid intake, and subject to the suspicion
-that at the level ordinarily maintained it constitutes a menace
-to the preservation of that high degree of efficiency which
-is an attribute of good health.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_153">153</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_V">CHAPTER V</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="chaptitle">DIETARY HABITS AND TRUE FOOD REQUIREMENTS</p>
-
-<p class="chaptopics"><span class="smcap">Topics</span>: Dietetic customs of mankind. Origin of dietary standards.
-True food requirements. Arguments based on custom and habit.
-Relationship between food consumption and prosperity. Erroneous
-ideas regarding nutrition. Commercial success and national wealth
-not the result of liberal dietary habits. Instinct and craving not wise
-guides to follow in choice and quantity of food. Physiological requirements
-and dietary standards not to be based on habits and cravings.
-Old-time views regarding temperate use of food. The sayings
-of Thomas Cogan. The teachings of Cornaro. Experimental results
-obtained by various physiologists. Work of the writer on true proteid
-requirements. Studies with professional men. Nitrogen equilibrium
-with small amounts of food. Sample dietaries. Simplicity in diet.
-Nitrogen requirement per kilogram of body-weight. Fuel value of
-the daily food. Experiments with university athletes. Nitrogen
-balance and food consumption. Sample dietaries. Adequacy of a
-simple diet.</p>
-
-<p>Having acquired information regarding the principles
-of metabolism and the general laws governing the
-nutrition of the body, we may next consider briefly the
-dietetic habits of mankind, with a view to learning how
-far such habits coincide with actual nutritive requirements.
-Eventually, we shall need to ask the questions: What are the
-<i>true</i> nutritive requirements of the body? How much food
-and what kinds of food does the ordinary individual doing
-an average amount of work need each day in order to preserve
-body equilibrium, and to maintain health, strength, and
-vigor under the varying conditions of life? What amount
-of nitrogen or proteid, and what the total calorific value<span class="pagenum" id="Page_154">154</span>
-required to supply the physiological needs of the body?
-How closely do the so-called “normal diets” and “standard
-diets,” which have met with such general acceptance, conform
-to a rational conception of true physiological needs?
-These are vital questions of great physiological and economic
-importance, and they are not easily answered; but theoretical
-considerations based on scientific data, and experimental
-evidence combined with practical experience, should point
-the way to some very definite conclusions.</p>
-
-<p>Observations made in many countries regarding the dietetic
-customs and habits of the people have resulted in the establishment
-of certain dietary standards, which have been more
-or less generally adopted as representing the requirements of
-the body. As a prelude to the discussion of this question,
-let us consider briefly some of the results of these dietary
-studies. In Sweden, laborers doing hard work were found
-by Hultgren and Landergren to consume daily, on an average,
-189 grams of proteid, 714 grams of carbohydrate, and
-110 grams of fat, with a total fuel value for the day’s ration
-of 4726 large calories. In Russia, workmen at moderately
-hard labor, having perfect freedom of choice in their food,
-were found by Erisman to take daily 132 grams of proteid,
-584 grams of carbohydrate, and 79 grams of fat, this ration
-having a fuel value of 3675 calories. In Germany, soldiers
-in active service consumed daily, according to Voit, 145
-grams of proteid, 500 grams of carbohydrate, and 100 grams
-of fat, with a fuel value of 3574 calories. In Italy, laborers
-doing a moderate amount of work were found by Lichtenfelt
-to consume daily 115 grams of proteid, 696 grams of carbohydrate,
-and 26 grams of fat, with a fuel value of 3655 calories.
-In France, Gautier states that the ordinary laborer working
-eight hours a day must have 135 grams of proteid, 700 grams
-of carbohydrate, and 90 grams of fat daily, with a fuel value
-of 4260 calories. In England, weavers were found to take<span class="pagenum" id="Page_155">155</span>
-daily 151 grams of proteid, with carbohydrates and fats sufficient
-to make the total fuel value of the day’s ration equal
-to 3475 calories. In Austria, farm laborers consumed daily
-159 grams of proteid, with carbohydrates and fats sufficient
-to raise the fuel value of the food to 5096 calories.</p>
-
-<div class="center">
-<table class="mtb1em" cellpadding="2" summary="">
-<tr>
-<th class="tac blm bb"><div>Subjects.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brl bb prl03"><div>Proteid consumed<br />Daily.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brm bb prl03"><div>Total Fuel Value<br />of Daily Food.</div></th>
-</tr>
-<tr class="fs75">
-<td class="tal blm"></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>grams</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>calories</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl03">Swedish laborers, at hard work</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>189</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>4726</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl03">Russian workmen, moderate work</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>132</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>3675</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl03">German soldiers, active service</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>145</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>3574</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl03">Italian laborers, moderate work</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>115</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>3655</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl03">French laborers, eight hours’ work</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>135</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>4260</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl03">English weavers</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>151</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>3475</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl03">Austrian farm laborers</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>159</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>5096</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="fs80">
-<td class="tac blm ptb03">American Subjects.</td>
-<td class="brl"></td>
-<td class="brm"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl03">Man with very hard muscular work</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>175</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>5500</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm prl03">Man with hard muscular work</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>150</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>4150</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm prlhi">Man with moderately active muscular<br />work</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>125</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>3400</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm prlhi">Man with light to moderate muscular<br />work</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>112</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>3050</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm bbm prlhi">Man at “sedentary” or woman with<br />moderately active work</td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>100</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm bbm"><div>2700</div></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<p>Observations of this order might be multiplied indefinitely,
-but the above will suffice to give a general idea of the average
-food consumption of European peoples doing a moderate
-amount of work. These data, however, must be supplemented
-by the observations made in our own country, which have been
-very extensive, through the “investigations on the nutrition
-of man in the United States,” carried on by the Office of Experiment
-Stations in the Department of Agriculture, under
-the efficient leadership of Atwater. As stated by Messrs.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_156">156</span>
-Langworthy and Milner, in an official bulletin issued in 1904,
-dietary studies of the actual food consumption of people of
-different classes in different parts of the United States have
-been made during the years 1894 to 1904 on about 15,000
-persons,&mdash;men, women, and children,&mdash;as a result of which
-it is indicated that “the actual food requirements of persons
-under different conditions of life and work” vary from 100
-to 175 grams of proteid per day, with a total fuel value ranging
-from 2700 to 5500 calories. For comparison, the various
-data may be tabulated as shown on page&nbsp;<a href="#Page_155">155</a>.</p>
-
-<p>These figures by no means represent maximum food consumption.
-Thus, studies have been made on fifty Maine
-lumbermen<span class="nowrap">,<a id="FNanchor_53" href="#Footnote_53" class="fnanchor">53</a></span> where the intake of proteid food averaged 185
-grams per day, with a total fuel value of 6400 calories.
-Further, dietary studies of university boat <span class="nowrap">crews<a id="FNanchor_54" href="#Footnote_54" class="fnanchor">54</a></span> have shown
-fairly high results. The Yale University crew, while at
-Gales Ferry, averaged per man during seven days 171 grams
-of proteid, 171 grams of fat, and 434 grams of carbohydrate,
-with a total fuel value of 4070 calories per day. The members
-of the Harvard University crew showed an average
-daily consumption of 160 grams of proteid, 170 grams of
-fat, and 448 grams of carbohydrate, with a total fuel value
-of 4074 calories. It is also reported that a football team of
-college students in the University of California consumed
-daily, per man, 270 grams of proteid, 416 grams of fat, and
-710 grams of carbohydrate, with a total fuel value of 7885
-calories. These figures may be contrasted, however, with the
-data obtained in a study of the dietary habits of fourteen professional
-men’s families, where the average amount of proteid
-consumed daily was 104 grams, fat 125 grams, and carbohydrate
-423 grams, with a total fuel value of 3325 calories.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_157">157</span></p>
-
-<p>Leaving out of consideration the extremes given, it is
-undoubtedly true that, within certain rather wide limits,
-there is an apparent tendency for people of different nations,
-having a free choice of food and not restricted by expense,
-to consume daily approximately the same amounts of nutrients;
-to use what may be called liberal rather than small
-amounts of food; and, lastly, to consume food somewhat in
-proportion to the amount of work done. It is perhaps, therefore,
-not strange that students of nutrition should have taken
-these results, obtained by the statistical method, as indicating
-the actual needs of the body for food, and that so-called
-“standard diets” and “normal diets” should have been constructed,
-based upon these and corresponding data. Thus,
-we have the widely adopted “Voit standard,” composed of
-proteid 118 grams, carbohydrate 500 grams, and fat 56
-grams, with a total fuel value of 3055 calories, as the amount
-of food required daily by a man of 70 kilos body-weight
-doing a moderate amount of work. These figures were obtained
-by Voit as an average of the food consumption of a
-large number of laboring men in Germany, and they carried
-additional weight because at that time Voit and others
-thought they had evidence that nitrogenous equilibrium
-could not be maintained for any length of time on smaller
-amounts of proteid.</p>
-
-<p>The figures given in the preceding table under the head
-of American subjects constitute the “Atwater standards,”
-and as already indicated, are based upon the dietetic habits
-of over 15,000 persons under different conditions of life and
-physical activity. In the words of the official Bulletin, these
-standards covering the quantities of food per day “are intended
-to show the actual food requirements of persons
-under different conditions of life and work.” Here, however,
-lies an assumption which seems to meet with wide
-acceptance, but for which it is difficult to conceive any<span class="pagenum" id="Page_158">158</span>
-logical reason. The thousands of dietary studies made on
-peoples all over the world, affording more or less accurate
-information regarding the average amounts of proteid, fat,
-and carbohydrate consumed under varying conditions, are indeed
-most interesting and important, as affording information
-regarding dietetic customs and habits; but, the writer
-fails to see any reason why such data need be assumed
-to throw any light on the actual food requirements of the
-body. In the words of another, “Food should be ingested in
-just the proper amount to repair the waste of the body; to
-furnish it with the energy it needs for work and warmth;
-to maintain it in vigor; and, in the case of immature animals,
-to provide the proper excess for normal growth, in order to
-be of the most advantage to the body” (Benedict).</p>
-
-<p>Any habitual excess of food, over and above what is really
-needed to meet the actual wants of the body, is not only
-uneconomical, but may be distinctly disadvantageous. Voit,
-among others, has clearly emphasized the general principle
-that the smallest amount of proteid, with non-nitrogenous
-food added, that will suffice to keep the body in a state of
-continual vigor is the ideal diet. My own conception of the
-true food requirements of the body has been expressed in the
-statement that man needs of proteids, fats, and carbohydrates
-sufficient to establish and maintain physiological and nitrogen
-equilibrium; sufficient to keep up that strength of body and
-mind that is essential to good health, to maintain the highest
-degree of physical and mental activity with the smallest
-amount of friction and the least expenditure of energy, and
-to preserve and heighten, if possible, the ordinary resistance
-of the body to disease germs. The smallest amount of food
-that will accomplish these ends is, I think, the ideal diet.
-There must truly be enough to supply the real needs of the
-body, but any great surplus over and above what is actually
-called for may in the long run prove an undesirable addition.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_159">159</span>
-With these thoughts in mind, may we not reasonably ask
-why it should be assumed that there is any tangible connection
-between the dietetic habits of a people and their true
-physiological needs?</p>
-
-<p>Arguments predicated on custom, habit, and usage have
-no physiological basis that appeals strongly to the impartial
-observer. Man is a creature of habits; he is quick to acquire
-new ones when his environment affords the opportunity, and
-he is prone to cling to old ones when they minister to his
-sense of taste. The argument that because the people of a
-country, constituting a given class, eat a certain amount of
-proteid food daily, the quantity so consumed must be an
-indication of the amount needed to meet the requirements
-of the body, is as faulty as the argument that because people
-of a given community are in the habit of consuming a certain
-amount of wine each day at dinner their bodies must necessarily
-be in need of the stimulant, and that consequently
-alcohol is a true physiological requirement. A large proportion
-of mankind is addicted to the tobacco habit, and to
-many persons the after-dinner cigar is as essential to comfort
-as the dinner itself; but would any one think of arguing that
-tobacco is one of the physiological needs of the body?</p>
-
-<p>It is said that dietary studies made all over the civilized
-world “show that a moderately liberal quantity of protein is
-demanded by communities occupying leading positions in the
-world.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. It certainly seems more than a remarkable coincidence
-that peoples varying so widely in regard to nationality,
-climatic and geographical conditions, and dietetic habits,
-should show such agreement in respect to consumption of
-protein and energy.” Again, we hear it said that “whatever
-may be true of a few individuals, with communities a
-generally low condition of mental and physical efficiency,
-thrift, and commercial success, is coincident with a low proportion
-of protein in the diet.” The writer, however, fails<span class="pagenum" id="Page_160">160</span>
-to find evidence in the results afforded by dietary studies
-that there is any causal relationship between the amount of
-proteid food consumed and the mental or physical supremacy
-of the people of a given nation or community. Cause and
-effect are liable to become reversed in arguments of this
-kind. It is certainly just as plausible to assume that increase
-in the consumption of proteid follows in the footsteps
-of commercial and other forms of prosperity, as to argue
-that prosperity or mental and physical development are the
-result of an increased intake of proteid food.</p>
-
-<p>Proteid foods are usually costly, and the ability of a community
-to indulge freely in this form of dietetic luxury
-depends in large measure upon its commercial prosperity.
-The palate is an extremely sensitive organ, and the average
-individual properly derives great satisfaction from the pleasurable
-effects of tasty articles of food. Furthermore, there
-are many curious and quite unphysiological notions abroad
-regarding foods, which tend to incite persons to unnecessary
-excess and extravagance whenever they acquire the means
-to do so. The latter point is well illustrated by the more
-or less prevalent opinion that a cut of tenderloin steak is
-more nutritious than a cut of round steak. It is true that
-the former is apt to be more tender, to have a little finer
-flavor; but the round steak, when properly prepared, is just
-as nutritious, and equally capable of meeting the needs of
-the body, as the more expensive tenderloin. With increasing
-prosperity, we turn at once, as a rule, to the more tasty
-and appetizing viands, partly to satisfy the craving of appetite
-and palate, and partly because there is an inherent belief
-that these varied delicacies, accessible to the prosperous community,
-count as an aid to health and strength. The poor
-laborer, with his small wage, is restricted to a certain low
-level of dietary variety, and must likewise be economical as
-to quantity, but on the first opportunity afforded by a fuller<span class="pagenum" id="Page_161">161</span>
-purse he is apt to pass from corned beef to a fresh roast with
-its more appetizing flavor; to eschew brown bread in favor of
-the white loaf, and in many other ways to evince his desire
-for a dietary which, though perhaps no more nutritious, appeals
-because of its finer flavor, more appetizing appearance,
-and greater variety. He is in the same position as the
-smoker who, limited by his purse to a five-cent cigar after
-dinner, quickly passes to a cigar of better flavor as soon as
-his finances warrant the indulgence. At the same time, if
-prosperity continues, our laborer will speedily pass to a
-higher level of proteid intake and greater fuel value, through
-increased consumption of meat and butter, together with
-other articles rich in proteid and fat.</p>
-
-<p>In this connection, we may emphasize a fact of some
-significance in its bearing on dietetic customs; viz., that
-ever since Liebig advanced his theory that proteid material
-is the sole source of muscular energy, there has been a deep-rooted
-belief that meat is the most efficient kind of food for
-keeping up the strength of the body, and hence especially
-demanded by all whose work is mainly physical. Although
-this view, as we have seen, has been thoroughly disproved,
-the idea is still more or less generally held that an abundance
-of meat is a necessary requisite for a good day’s work,
-a view which undoubtedly accounts in some measure for the
-tendency toward a high proteid intake, evinced by many of
-the laboring class whose means will permit the necessary
-outlay.</p>
-
-<p>Increased consumption of proteid food may be coincident
-with thrift and commercial success, but there is no justification
-for the belief that these are the result of changed dietary
-conditions. The dietary of our New England forefathers
-was, according to all accounts, exceedingly limited as compared
-with that of to-day, but it is doubtful if the present
-generation is any better developed, physically or mentally,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_162">162</span>
-than the stalwart and vigorous people who opened up this
-country to civilization. To-day, as a nation, we have
-greater wealth, and our commercial prosperity has become
-phenomenal; but would any one think for a moment that
-these characteristics are attributable to the large consumption
-of proteid food so common to this generation of the
-American people? No, increased wealth simply paves the
-way for greater freedom in the choice of food; increased commercial
-success and business prosperity throw open avenues
-which formerly were closed; greater variety of animal foods,
-and vegetable foods as well, rich in proteid, are made easily
-accessible, and appeal to eye and palate on all sides; appetite
-and craving for food are abnormally stimulated, and dietetic
-habits and customs change accordingly. In the words of
-another, “the one thing that primitive, barbarous, and civilized
-man alike long for is an abundance of the ‘flesh-pots of
-Egypt.’ The very first use the latter makes of his increased
-power and financial resources is to buy new, rare, and expensive
-kinds of meat.” With these facts before us, it is difficult
-to accept the assumption that dietetic customs afford any
-indication of the food requirements of the body. To the
-physiologist such a view does not appeal, since there is a
-lack of any scientific evidence that carries conviction.</p>
-
-<p>But it may be asked, is not appetite a safe guide to follow?
-Do not the cravings of the stomach and the so-called pangs
-of hunger merit consideration? Is it not the part of wisdom
-to follow inclination in the choice and quantity of our food?
-Can we not safely rely upon these factors as an index of
-the real needs of the body? If these questions are to be
-answered in the affirmative, then it is plain that a study of
-dietetic customs will tell us definitely how much food and
-what kinds of food are required daily to supply the true
-wants of the body. There are writers who claim that instinct
-is a perfectly safe guide to follow; that it is far superior to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_163">163</span>
-reason; but it is to be noticed that most of these writers, if
-they have any physiological knowledge to draw upon, are
-sooner or later prone to admit that the body has certain definite
-needs which it is the purpose of food to supply, with
-the added implication that any surplus of food over and
-above what is necessary to meet these demands is entirely
-uncalled for. Thus, one such writer states that “the man in
-the street follows his God-given instincts and plods peacefully
-along to his three square meals a day, consisting of
-anything he can find in the market, and just as much of it
-as he can afford, with special preference for rich meats, fats,
-and sugars.” Yet this same writer, a little later, emphasizes
-the fact that “every particle of the energy which sparkles
-in our eyes, which moves our muscles, which warms our imaginations,
-is sunlight cunningly woven into our food by the
-living cell, whether vegetable or animal. Every movement,
-every word, every thought, every aspiration represents the
-expenditure of precisely so much energy derived from food.”
-Why, then, would it not be wise to ascertain how much
-energy is so expended, on an average, during the day’s activity
-and govern the intake of food accordingly? Why not apply
-an intelligent supervision in place of following an instinct
-which, in the words of the author just quoted, leads one on
-to consume “anything he can find in the market and just as
-much of it as he can afford”? Truly, if dietetic customs
-and the habits of mankind are the results of instinct working
-in this fashion, there cannot be much value in the data
-obtained by observing the quantities of food mankind is in
-the habit of eating. Dietary standards based on such observations
-must be open to the suspicion of representing
-values far above the actual needs of the body.</p>
-
-<p>Habits and cravings are certainly very unreliable indices
-of true physiological requirements. Man is constantly acquiring
-new habits, and these in time become second nature,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_164">164</span>
-forcing him to practise that which he has become accustomed
-to, regardless of whether it is beneficial or otherwise. The
-celebrated philosopher, John Locke, in his essay on education,
-says: “I do not think all people’s appetites are alike&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-but this I think, that many are made gourmands and
-gluttons by custom, that were not so by nature; and I see
-in some countries, men as lusty and strong, that eat but two
-meals a day, as others that have set their stomachs by a constant
-usage, like Larums, to call on them for four or five.”
-Again, the so-called cravings of appetite are largely artificial
-and mainly the result of habit. A habit once acquired and
-persistently followed soon has us in its grasp, and then any
-deviation therefrom is very apt to disturb our physiological
-equilibrium. The system makes complaint, and we experience
-a craving, it may be, for that to which the body has become
-accustomed. There has thus come about a sentiment
-that the cravings of the appetite for food are to be fully
-satisfied, that this is merely obedience to nature’s laws. In
-reality, there is no foundation for such a belief; any one with
-a little persistence can change his or her habits of life,
-change the whole order of cravings, thereby indicating that
-the latter are essentially artificial, and that they have no
-necessary connection with the welfare or needs of the body.
-The man who for some reason deems it advisable to adopt
-two meals a day in place of three or four, at first experiences
-a certain amount of discomfort, but eventually the new
-habit becomes a part of the daily routine, and the man’s
-life moves forward as before, with perfect comfort and without
-a suggestion of craving, or a pang of hunger. Dietetic
-requirements, and standard dietaries, are not to be founded
-upon the so-called cravings of appetite and the instinctive
-demands for food, but upon reason and intelligence, reinforced
-by definite knowledge of the real necessities of the
-bodily machinery.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_165">165</span></p>
-
-<p>The standards which have been adopted more or less generally
-throughout the civilized world, based primarily on the
-assumption that man instinctively and independently selects
-a diet that is best adapted to his individual needs, are open
-to grave suspicion. The view that the average food consumption
-of large numbers of individuals and communities must
-represent the true nutritive requirements of the people is
-equally untenable. Naturally, there is general recognition of
-the principle that food requirements are necessarily modified
-by a variety of circumstances, such as age, sex, body-weight,
-bodily activity, etc. It is obvious that the man of 140 pounds
-body-weight needs less proteid than the man of 170 pounds,
-and that the man who does a large amount of physical work
-demands a larger calorific value in his daily diet, <i>i. e.</i>, more
-carbohydrate and fat, than the sedentary individual. The
-growing child, in proportion to his body-weight, plainly needs
-more proteid for the upbuilding of tissue, and there are many
-conditions of disease where special dietetic treatment is undoubtedly
-called for. Our contention, however, and one
-which we believe to be perfectly justifiable, is that the true
-food requirements of the body, under any conditions, cannot
-be ascertained with any degree of accuracy by observations of
-what people are in the habit of eating; that customs and
-habits are not a safe index of true physiological needs. On
-the contrary, we are inclined to the belief that direct physiological
-experimentation, covering a sufficient length of time
-and with an adequate number of individuals, will prove far
-more efficient in affording a true estimate of the quality and
-quantity of food best adapted for the maintenance of good
-health, strength, and vigor.</p>
-
-<p>Before considering these latter points, it is interesting to
-note, in passing, that during the last four centuries many
-thoughtful men have called attention to the apparent excessive
-use of food. There seems to have been in many quarters<span class="pagenum" id="Page_166">166</span>
-a more or less prevalent opinion that custom and habit were
-leading people on to methods of living, which were not in
-accord with the best interests of the community. It must be
-remembered, however, that arguments of this kind, even fifty
-years ago, could have been founded only on general observation
-and the application of common sense, since there were
-then no sound physiological data on which to predicate an
-opinion, or base a conclusion. Still, there were men of
-authority who attempted to lay before the people a proper
-conception of the temperate use of food. We have not the
-time here to consider many of these pleas, but I venture to
-call attention to the somewhat celebrated book published by
-the physician Thomas Cogan in 1596, under the title “The
-Haven of Health,” and dedicated “to the right honorable and
-my verie good lord, Sir Edward Seymour, Knight and Earl
-of Hertford.” Under the subject of diet, this old-time writer
-says: “The second thing that is to be considered of meates is
-the quantitie, which ought of all men greatly to be regarded,
-for therein lyeth no small occasion of health or sickness, of
-life or death. For as want of meate consumeth the very substance
-of our flesh, so doth excesse and surfet extinguish and
-suffocate naturall heat wherein life consisteth.” Again, “Use
-a measure in eating, that thou maist live long: and if thou
-wilst be in health, then hold thine hands. But the greatest
-occasion why men passe the measure in eating, is varitie of
-meats at one meale. Which fault is most common among
-us in England farre above all other nations. For such is our
-custome by reason of plentie (as I think) that they which be
-of abilitie, are served with sundry sortes of meate at one
-meale. Yea the more we would welcome our friends the
-more dishes we prepare. And when we are well satisfied
-with one dish or two, then come other more delicate and procureth
-us by that meanes, to eate more than nature doth require.
-Thus varietie bringeth us to excesse, and sometimes<span class="pagenum" id="Page_167">167</span>
-to surfet also. But Phisicke teacheth us to faede moderately
-upon one kinde of meate only at one meale, or at leastwise
-not upon many of contrarie natures.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. This disease, (I
-mean surfet) is verie common: for common is that saying
-and most true: That more die by surfet than by the sword.
-And as Georgius Pictorius saith, all surfet is ill, but of bread
-worst of all. And if nature be so strong in many, and they
-be not sicke upon a full gorge, yet they are drowsie and
-heavie, and more desirous to loyter than to labor, according
-to that old maeter, when the belly is full, the bones would
-be at rest. Yea the minde and wit is so oppressed and overwhelmed
-with excesse that it lyeth as it were drowned for
-a time, and unable to use his force.”</p>
-
-<p>Cogan likewise makes some interesting statements regarding
-the effects of custom on the consumption of proteid
-food, especially meats. Quoting further from this author:
-“The fourth thing that is to be considered in meats is
-custome. Which is of such force in man’s bodie both in
-sicknesse and in health, that it countervaileth nature itselfe,
-and is therefore called of Galen in sundry places, an other
-nature. Whereof he giveth a notable example, where he
-sheweth that an olde woman of Athens used a long time,
-to eate Hemlocke (which is a ranke poison) first a little
-quantitie, and afterwarde more, till at length she could eate
-so much without hurt as would presently poison another.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-So that custome in processe of time may alter nature.”
-Finally, we may quote one last saying of Cogan’s, because
-of the good sense and wisdom displayed in the sentiment,
-as true to-day as when it was written more than three
-hundred years ago: “Neither is it good for any man that is
-in perfect health, to observe any custome in dyet precisely,
-as Arnoldus teacheth upon the same verses in these wordes:
-Every man should so order himselfe, that he might be able
-to suffer heate and cold, and all motions, and meats necessary,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_168">168</span>
-so as he might change the houres of sleeping and waking,
-and his dwelling and lodging without harme: which
-thing may be done if we be not too precise in keeping custome,
-but otherwise use things unwonted. Which sentence
-of Arnoldus agraeth verie well to that of Cornelius Celsus:
-He that is sound and in good health, and at libertie, should
-bind himselfe to no rules of dyet. To need neither Phisition
-or Chirurgion, he must use a diverse order of life, and be
-sometimes in the countrie, sometime in the towne, sometimes
-hunt, and sometime hawke. But some man may demand of
-me how this may agree with that saying of the scholar of
-Salernus ‘if you would be free from physicians, let these
-three be your physician, a cheerful mind, rest, and a moderate
-diet.’ Whereunto I answer, that a moderate dyet is alwaies
-good, but not a precise dyet: for a moderate diet is, as Terence
-speaketh in Andria: To take nothing too much: which alwaies
-is to be observed. But if a man accustome himselfe to
-such meats and drinks as at length will breed some inconvenience
-in his bodie, or to sleepe or to watch, or any other
-thing concerning the order of his life, such custome must
-naedes be amended and changed, yet with good discretion,
-and not upon the sudden: because sudden changes bring
-harme and weaknesse, as Hippocrates teacheth. He therefore
-that will alter any custome in dyet rightly, must do it
-with three conditions, which are expressed by Hippocrates.
-Change is profitable, if it be rightly used, that is, if it be
-done in the time of health, and at leisure, and not upon the
-sudden.”</p>
-
-<p>This noteworthy book written by Cogan was preceded by
-the writings of Louis Cornaro, the Venetian, who forty years
-before had published the first edition of his celebrated book,
-“The Temperate Life,” and who was a most ardent advocate
-of the benefits to be derived by living temperately, especially
-in matters of diet. The simple diet which served for the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_169">169</span>
-nourishment of the oldest peoples of Syria, Greece, Egypt,
-and of the Romans when they were at the height of their
-prosperity and culture, was advocated by Cornaro as conducing
-to longevity, better health, and greater comfort of mind
-and body. Himself a striking example of the effects of a
-reasonable abstinence in diet (the last edition of his book
-having been written at the age of ninety-five), his teachings
-have continued to attract attention down to the present day;
-and although we have no values in grams or calories expressive
-of his average food consumption, it is quite evident that
-Cornaro lived a very abstemious life, eating little of the heavier
-articles of diet common to his time and country. It is perhaps
-not strictly physiological to refer to these cases, yet they have
-value as representing a sentiment, common to the centuries
-now passed, that benefit was to be derived by mankind from
-greater care in the taking of food; that prevalent customs
-and habits were leading the people into intemperate modes of
-life, and that these were surely tending toward the physical
-and mental deterioration of the nation. We may attach much
-or little weight to these conclusions, but there is a certain
-degree of significance in the views, current then as now, that
-dietetic customs and habits have no real connection with
-bodily requirements.</p>
-
-<p>Passing down to our own times, we find physiologists, by
-the aid of scientific methods, studying the effects of smaller
-amounts of food (smaller than custom prescribes) on the
-condition of the body, thereby evincing a certain degree of
-skepticism concerning the dietary standards based on habit
-and usage. This has been especially true regarding the
-nitrogen requirement, or the need for proteid food. As has
-been clearly pointed out in other connections, there are two
-distinct needs which the body has for food; one for proteid
-or nitrogen, the other for energy-yielding material. According
-to the Voit standard, a man of average body-weight doing<span class="pagenum" id="Page_170">170</span>
-a moderate amount of work requires daily 118 grams of proteid
-food, or about 16 grams of metabolizable nitrogen, with
-fat and carbohydrate sufficient to yield a total fuel value of over
-3000 large calories. As we have seen, the fuel value of the
-food must of necessity be a variable quantity because of variations
-in bodily activity. The more muscular work performed,
-the greater must be the intake of carbohydrate and fat, if the
-body is to be kept in equilibrium. With proteid or nitrogen,
-however, the case is quite different, since with adequate
-amounts of non-nitrogenous food, proteid is not drawn upon
-for the energy of muscular work. We can conceive of the
-nitrogen requirement, therefore, as being a constant factor
-in the well-nourished individual and dependent primarily
-upon body-weight, or more exactly, upon the weight of true
-proteid-containing tissue. Obviously, whatever else happens,
-there must be enough proteid food taken daily to maintain
-the body in nitrogen equilibrium. If this can be accomplished
-only by the ingestion of 16 grams of metabolizable nitrogen,
-then it is plain that the daily ration must contain at least 118
-grams of proteid food; <i>i.&nbsp;e.</i>, it must conform approximately
-at least to ordinary usage.</p>
-
-<p>This question has been studied by many investigators,
-with very interesting and suggestive results. Thus, in 1887,
-<span class="nowrap">Hirschfeld<a id="FNanchor_55" href="#Footnote_55" class="fnanchor">55</a></span> reported some experiments on himself, twenty-four
-years of age and weighing 73 kilos. His ordinary diet
-contained daily 100 to 130 grams of proteid, and the amount
-of nitrogen excreted varied from 16 to 20 grams per day,
-corresponding to a metabolism of proteid equal to the amount
-ingested. In other words, the body was essentially in nitrogen
-equilibrium. Then, for a period of fifteen days, during
-which he was unusually active, he lived on a diet in which
-the content of proteid corresponded to only 6 grams of nitrogen<span class="pagenum" id="Page_171">171</span>
-per day, and yet he remained in nitrogen equilibrium.
-The diet made use of was composed essentially of milk, eggs,
-rice, potatoes, bread, butter, sugar, and coffee, with some wine
-and beer, and on two days a little meat. It is to be observed
-that the nitrogen or proteid intake per day was only one-third
-of what he was accustomed to consume. In a second experiment,
-covering ten days, similar results were obtained. So
-that evidence was afforded that a young and vigorous man
-can maintain his body in nitrogen equilibrium, for fifteen consecutive
-days at least, on an amount of proteid food equal to
-only one-third of the minimal requirement called for by common
-usage. Plainly, the difference between a daily consumption
-of 118 grams of proteid food and 40 grams represents a
-large percentage saving, both of proteid and in the metabolism
-of proteid matter with all the attendant transformations. In
-these experiments, however, the subject consumed relatively
-large amounts of non-nitrogenous food, notably butter, of
-which on some days he took as much as 100 grams. The
-average fuel value of his food ranged from 3750 to 3916 calories
-per day; a fact of some importance, since it is to be
-remembered that both fat and carbohydrate tend to protect
-proteid metabolism.</p>
-
-<p>In an experiment reported in 1889 by Carl <span class="nowrap">Voit<a id="FNanchor_56" href="#Footnote_56" class="fnanchor">56</a></span>, on a
-vegetarian weighing about 57 kilos, it was found that with
-a purely vegetable diet the subject was able, for a few days
-at least, to maintain his body in essentially a condition of
-nitrogen equilibrium on a daily diet containing 8.4 grams
-of nitrogen, corresponding to 52.5 grams of proteid. In addition,
-there was a large consumption of starchy food with
-some fat. Klemperer<span class="nowrap">,<a id="FNanchor_57" href="#Footnote_57" class="fnanchor">57</a></span> experimenting with two young men,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_172">172</span>
-having a body-weight of 64 and 65.5 kilos, respectively, was
-able to keep them in a condition of nitrogenous equilibrium
-for a period of eight days on 4.38 grams and 3.58 grams of
-nitrogen per day. The diet, however, had a large fuel value,
-5020 calories per day, and contained in addition to the small
-amount of proteid, 264 grams of fat, 470 grams of carbohydrate,
-and 172 grams of alcohol. Breisacher<span class="nowrap">,<a id="FNanchor_58" href="#Footnote_58" class="fnanchor">58</a></span> in an experiment
-on himself, using a mixed diet composed of 67.8 grams
-of proteid, 494.2 grams of carbohydrate, and 60.5 grams of fat
-per day, with a total fuel value of 2866 calories, observed
-a daily excretion of nitrogen during thirty days of 8.23 grams.
-This corresponds to a metabolism of 51.4 grams of proteid,
-thus showing that the 67 grams of food-proteid taken was
-quite sufficient to maintain nitrogen equilibrium for the
-above length of time.</p>
-
-<p>Caspari and <span class="nowrap">Glässner<a id="FNanchor_59" href="#Footnote_59" class="fnanchor">59</a></span> have reported observations made on
-two vegetarians, a man and his wife, aged 49 and 48 years
-respectively, who had lived for some years exclusively on a
-vegetable diet. The man had a body-weight of 68.8 kilos,
-while the woman weighed 58 kilos. During five days, the
-man consumed per day, on an average, 7.83 grams of nitrogen
-and 4559 calories. This corresponds to 0.114 gram of nitrogen
-per kilo of body-weight, and 66 calories per kilo. On
-this diet, the man gained slightly in weight and showed a plus
-nitrogen balance of 5.2 grams for the five days. In other
-words, even this low nitrogen or proteid intake was more than
-sufficient to meet the wants of his body. The wife, during
-the same period of time, consumed per day 5.33 grams of
-nitrogen and 2715 calories, corresponding to 0.092 gram of
-nitrogen per kilo of body-weight and 47 calories per kilo.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_173">173</span>
-On this diet, the woman gained 0.9 kilo in weight during the
-five days, and like the man, she showed a plus nitrogen
-balance of 2.45 grams for the entire period. The somewhat
-noted experiments of Sivén have been referred to in another
-connection, and it will suffice to recall the fact that he was
-able, with a body-weight of 60 kilos, to establish nitrogen
-equilibrium on 6.26 grams of nitrogen, and for a day or two
-on 4.5 grams of nitrogen, with a total fuel value of only
-2444 calories in the day’s ration.</p>
-
-<p>These few illustrations will serve to indicate that, so far
-as the maintenance of nitrogen equilibrium is concerned during
-short periods of time, there is no necessity for the consumption
-of proteid food in such amounts as common usage
-dictates. The high proteid intake called for by the “standard
-dietaries,” and the ordinary practices of mankind, is not
-needed to establish a condition of nitrogen equilibrium. It
-would seem, however, as if results of this nature, presented
-from time to time by various investigators, have been considered
-more in the light of scientific curiosities than as data
-having an important bearing on physiological processes. So
-strong has been the hold upon the medical and physiological
-mind of the necessity of high proteid that such figures as the
-above have merely excited comment, without weakening in
-any measure the prevalent conviction that health, strength,
-and the power to work necessitate a high rate of proteid
-exchange.</p>
-
-<p>To one willing to accept the data as having possible significance
-there arises at once the question, How long can
-the body be maintained in nitrogen equilibrium on such relatively
-small quantities of proteid food? In other words, can
-experiments of this nature, extending over comparatively
-short periods of time, be safely accepted as a reliable means
-of measuring the proteid requirements of the body for indefinite
-periods? Suppose, says the critic, we grant that the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_174">174</span>
-body can maintain itself in nitrogen equilibrium for a week
-or two on a very small amount of proteid food, what proof
-have we that in the long run the body will be benefited thereby,
-or even able to exist in a condition of normal strength and
-vigor? In other words, is a low proteid diet, one that seems
-sufficient to maintain the body in nitrogen equilibrium, a
-wholly safe one to follow? May there not be other elements
-to be considered, aside from nitrogen equilibrium, which, if
-fully understood, would satisfactorily account for the customs
-of mankind, in which perhaps man’s instincts have been followed
-for the betterment of the race? It was with a view
-to learning more concerning these questions that five years
-ago the writer commenced systematic, experimental, work
-upon the nutrition of man, with special reference to his nitrogen
-requirements. The experiments and observations have
-been continued up to the present time, with many suggestive
-results, some of which will now be referred to<span class="nowrap">.<a id="FNanchor_60" href="#Footnote_60" class="fnanchor">60</a></span></p>
-
-<p>One group of subjects was composed of professional men,
-professors and instructors in the university, whose work was
-mainly mental rather than physical, though by no means
-excluding the latter. Of this group, two cases will be referred
-to with some regard for detail, since in no other way
-can so striking a picture be presented of the effects produced.
-The first subject weighed 65 kilos in the fall of 1902, and at
-that time was nearly 47 years of age. His dietetic habits
-were in accord with common practice, and his daily consumption
-of proteid food averaged close to 118 grams. With a
-clear recognition of the principle that the habits of a lifetime
-should not be too suddenly changed, a very gradual reduction
-in the total amount of food, and especially of proteid
-matter, was made. This finally resulted, with this particular<span class="pagenum" id="Page_175">175</span>
-subject, in the complete abolition of breakfast, with the exception
-of a small cup of coffee. A light lunch was taken
-at noontime, followed by a more substantial dinner at night.
-There was no change to a vegetable diet, but naturally any
-attempt to cut off largely the amount of proteid food necessarily
-results in a marked diminution in the quantity of
-animal food or meats. It is a somewhat singular though
-suggestive fact, that a change of this order gradually results
-in a stronger liking for simple foods, with their more delicate
-flavor, accompanied by a diminished desire for the heavier
-animal foods.</p>
-
-<p>As the day’s ration was gradually reduced in amount,
-the body-weight began to fall off, until after some months
-it became stationary at 57 kilos, at which point it has
-remained practically constant for over three years. The
-sixteen pounds of weight lost was composed, mainly at
-least, of superfluous fat. For a period of nine months, from
-October, 1903, to the end of June, 1904, the amount of proteid
-material broken down in the body was determined each
-day. The average daily metabolism of nitrogen for the entire
-period of nearly nine months amounted to 5.69 grams.
-For the last two months, it averaged 5.4 grams per day.
-Analyses made from time to time since these figures were
-obtained show that the subject is still living at the same low
-level of nitrogen metabolism. In fact, the data available
-afford satisfactory proof that for a period covering over three
-years this particular person has subsisted on an amount of
-proteid food equal to a metabolism of not more than 5.8
-grams of nitrogen per day. It may be asked why the subject
-should have continued such a low proteid diet after the nine
-months’ period was completed? In reply, it may be said
-that the new habit has taken a firm hold, and entirely supplanted
-the dietetic desires and cravings of the preceding
-years. Further, the improved condition of health, freedom<span class="pagenum" id="Page_176">176</span>
-from minor ailments that formerly caused inconvenience and
-discomfort, and the greater ability to work without fatigue,
-have all combined to place the new habit on a firm basis,
-from which there is no desire to change.</p>
-
-<p>Consider for a moment what this lowered consumption of
-proteid food really amounts to, as compared with ordinary
-usage and the so-called dietary standards. The latter call
-for at least 118 grams of proteid or albuminous food daily,
-of which 105 grams should be absorbable, in order to maintain
-the body in a condition of nitrogen equilibrium, and in
-a state of physical vigor and general tone. This would
-mean a daily metabolism and excretion of at least 16 grams
-of nitrogen. Our subject, however, excreted per day, during
-nine months, only 5.69 grams of nitrogen, which means a
-metabolism of 35.6 grams of proteid; <i>i. e.</i>, about one-third
-the amount ordinarily deemed necessary to meet man’s requirement
-for proteid food. But was our subject in nitrogen
-equilibrium on this small amount of proteid food? We
-answer yes, as the following balance period shows:</p>
-
-<div class="center htmlonly">
-<table class="mtb1em" cellpadding="2" summary="">
-<tr class="fs80">
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tac pr2" colspan="2"><div>Output.</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="fs80">
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tac pr1"><div>Nitrogen in<br />Food.</div></td>
-<td class="tac prl03"><div>Nitrogen through<br />Kidneys.</div></td>
-<td class="tac pr15"><div>Weight of Excre-<br />ment (dry).</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar pr2"><div>March 20</div></td>
-<td class="tal pr15"> 6.989 grams.</td>
-<td class="tal pr15"> 5.91 grams.</td>
-<td class="tal"> 3.6 grams.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar pr2"><div>21</div></td>
-<td class="tal"> 6.621</td>
-<td class="tal"> 5.52</td>
-<td class="tal"> . .</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar pr2"><div>22</div></td>
-<td class="tal"> 6.082</td>
-<td class="tal"> 5.94</td>
-<td class="tal">12.0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar pr2"><div>23</div></td>
-<td class="tal"> 6.793</td>
-<td class="tal"> 5.61</td>
-<td class="tal">18.5</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar pr2"><div>24</div></td>
-<td class="tal"> 5.057</td>
-<td class="tal"> 4.31</td>
-<td class="tal">23.0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar pr2"><div>25</div></td>
-<td class="tal"> 6.966</td>
-<td class="tal"> 5.39</td>
-<td class="tal">16.9</td>
-</tr>
-<tr style="line-height: 0.1em;">
-<td class="tar"></td>
-<td class="tal">&nbsp;────</td>
-<td class="tal">&ensp;───</td>
-<td class="tal">───</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar"></td>
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tal">74.0 grams contain<br />&emsp;&emsp;6.42% N.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar"></td>
-<td class="tal">38.508</td>
-<td class="tal">32.68&emsp;&ensp;+</td>
-<td class="tal"><span class="ilb">4.75 grams nitrogen.</span></td>
-</tr>
-<tr style="line-height: 0.1em;">
-<td class="tar"></td>
-<td class="tal">─────</td>
-<td class="tal prl0">──────────</td>
-<td class="tal prl0">───</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar"></td>
-<td class="tal" colspan="3">38.508 grams nitrogen.&emsp;37.43 grams nitrogen.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal pl4 pt1" colspan="4"><div>Nitrogen balance for six days&emsp;&emsp;=&emsp;&emsp;+1.078 grams.</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal pl4" colspan="4"><div>Nitrogen balance per day&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;&ensp;&nbsp;=&emsp;&emsp;+0.179 gram.</div></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_177">177</span>
-</div>
-
-<div class="epubonly">
-<div class="center">
-<table class="mtb1em" cellpadding="2" summary="">
-<tr class="fs80">
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tac pr2" colspan="2"><div>Output.</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="fs80">
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tac pr1"><div>Nitrogen in<br />Food.</div></td>
-<td class="tac prl03"><div>Nitrogen through<br />Kidneys.</div></td>
-<td class="tac pr15"><div>Weight of Excre-<br />ment (dry).</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar pr2"><div>March 20</div></td>
-<td class="tal pr15"> 6.989 grams.</td>
-<td class="tal"> 5.91 grams.</td>
-<td class="tal"> 3.6 grams.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar pr2"><div>21</div></td>
-<td class="tal"> 6.621</td>
-<td class="tal"> 5.52</td>
-<td class="tal"> . .</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar pr2"><div>22</div></td>
-<td class="tal"> 6.082</td>
-<td class="tal"> 5.94</td>
-<td class="tal">12.0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar pr2"><div>23</div></td>
-<td class="tal"> 6.793</td>
-<td class="tal"> 5.61</td>
-<td class="tal">18.5</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar pr2"><div>24</div></td>
-<td class="tal"> 5.057</td>
-<td class="tal"> 4.31</td>
-<td class="tal">23.0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar pr2"><div>25</div></td>
-<td class="tal"> 6.966</td>
-<td class="tal"> 5.39</td>
-<td class="tal">16.9</td>
-</tr>
-<tr style="line-height: 0.1em;">
-<td class="tar"></td>
-<td class="tal">&nbsp;<span class="ls-03em">―――</span></td>
-<td class="tal"> <span class="ls-03em">――</span></td>
-<td class="tal"><span class="ls-03em">――</span></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tal"><span class="ilb">74.0 grams contain</span><br />&emsp;&emsp;6.42% N.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tal">38.508</td>
-<td class="tal">32.68&emsp;&ensp;+</td>
-<td class="tal"><span class="ilb">4.75&nbsp;grams&nbsp;nitrogen‍.</span></td>
-</tr>
-<tr style="line-height: 0.1em;">
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tal"><span class="ls-03em">―――</span></td>
-<td class="tal prl0"><span class="ls-03em">―――――――</span></td>
-<td class="tal prl0"><span class="ls-03em">――</span></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar"></td>
-<td class="tal" colspan="3">38.508 grams nitrogen.&emsp;37.43 grams nitrogen.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal pl4 pt1" colspan="4"><div>Nitrogen balance for six days&emsp;&emsp;=&emsp;&emsp;+1.078 grams.</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal pl4" colspan="4"><div>Nitrogen balance per day&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;&ensp;&nbsp;=&emsp;&emsp;+0.179 gram.</div></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>In this particular period of six days, the body was really
-gaining a little nitrogen, <i>i. e.</i>, storing away a small amount
-of proteid for future use, although it may be granted that
-the amount was too small to have any special significance.
-During this period, the average daily intake of nitrogen was
-6.4 grams, equal to 40 grams of proteid food. The average
-daily output of nitrogen through kidneys and excrement was
-6.24 grams. The average daily output of metabolized nitrogen,
-through the kidneys, was 5.44 grams, corresponding to
-the breaking down of 34 grams of proteid material. Further,
-it should be stated that the total calorific value of the daily
-food during this period was less than 2000 calories. Let
-me add now a final balance period taken at the close of the
-nine months’ trial:</p>
-
-<div class="center htmlonly">
-<table class="mtb1em" cellpadding="2" summary="">
-<tr class="fs80">
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tac pr2" colspan="2"><div>Output.</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="fs80">
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tac pr1"><div>Nitrogen in<br />Food.</div></td>
-<td class="tac prl03"><div>Nitrogen through<br />Kidneys.</div></td>
-<td class="tac pr2"><div>Weight of Excre-<br />ment (dry).</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar pr2"><div>June 23</div></td>
-<td class="tal pr15"> 6.622 grams.</td>
-<td class="tal pr15"> 5.26 grams.</td>
-<td class="tal">10.6 grams.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar pr2"><div>24</div></td>
-<td class="tal"> 6.331</td>
-<td class="tal"> 5.30</td>
-<td class="tal">30.7</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar pr2"><div>25</div></td>
-<td class="tal"> 4.941</td>
-<td class="tal"> 4.43</td>
-<td class="tal">14.2</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar pr2"><div>26</div></td>
-<td class="tal"> 5.922</td>
-<td class="tal"> 4.66</td>
-<td class="tal">11.9</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar pr2"><div>27</div></td>
-<td class="tal"> 5.486</td>
-<td class="tal"> 4.98</td>
-<td class="tal">15.2</td>
-</tr>
-<tr style="line-height: 0.1em;">
-<td class="tar"></td>
-<td class="tal">&nbsp;────</td>
-<td class="tal">&ensp;───</td>
-<td class="tal">───</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar"></td>
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tal">82.6 grams contain<br />&emsp;&emsp;6.08% N.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar"></td>
-<td class="tal">29.302</td>
-<td class="tal">24.63&emsp;&ensp;+</td>
-<td class="tal">5.022 grams nitrogen.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr style="line-height: 0.1em;">
-<td class="tar"></td>
-<td class="tal">─────</td>
-<td class="tal prl0">──────────</td>
-<td class="tal prl0">────</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar"></td>
-<td class="tal" colspan="3">29.302 grams nitrogen.&emsp;29.562 grams nitrogen.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal pl4 pt1" colspan="4"><div>Nitrogen balance for five days&emsp;&emsp;=&emsp;&emsp;-0.350 gram.</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal pl4" colspan="4"><div>Nitrogen balance per day&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;&emsp; =&emsp;&emsp;-0.070 gram.</div></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-
-<div class="epubonly">
-<div class="center">
-<table class="mtb1em" cellpadding="2" summary="">
-<tr class="fs80">
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tac pr2" colspan="2"><div>Output.</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="fs80">
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tac pr1"><div>Nitrogen in<br />Food.</div></td>
-<td class="tac prl03"><div>Nitrogen through<br />Kidneys.</div></td>
-<td class="tac pr2"><div>Weight of Excre-<br />ment (dry).</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar pr2"><div>June 23</div></td>
-<td class="tal pr15"> 6.622 grams.</td>
-<td class="tal pr15"> 5.26 grams.</td>
-<td class="tal">10.6 grams.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar pr2"><div>24</div></td>
-<td class="tal"> 6.331</td>
-<td class="tal"> 5.30</td>
-<td class="tal">30.7</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar pr2"><div>25</div></td>
-<td class="tal"> 4.941</td>
-<td class="tal"> 4.43</td>
-<td class="tal">14.2</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar pr2"><div>26</div></td>
-<td class="tal"> 5.922</td>
-<td class="tal"> 4.66</td>
-<td class="tal">11.9</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar pr2"><div>27</div></td>
-<td class="tal"> 5.486</td>
-<td class="tal"> 4.98</td>
-<td class="tal">15.2</td>
-</tr>
-<tr style="line-height: 0.1em;">
-<td class="tar"></td>
-<td class="tal">&nbsp;<span class="ls-03em">―――</span></td>
-<td class="tal"> <span class="ls-03em">――</span></td>
-<td class="tal"><span class="ls-03em">――</span></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar"></td>
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tal"><span class="ilb">82.6 grams contain</span><br />&emsp;&emsp;6.08% N.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar"></td>
-<td class="tal">29.302</td>
-<td class="tal">24.63&emsp;&ensp;+</td>
-<td class="tal"><span class="ilb">5.022&nbsp;grams&nbsp;nitrogen‍.</span></td>
-</tr>
-<tr style="line-height: 0.1em;">
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tal"><span class="ls-03em">―――</span></td>
-<td class="tal prl0"><span class="ls-03em">―――――――</span></td>
-<td class="tal prl0"><span class="ls-03em">――</span></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar"></td>
-<td class="tal" colspan="3">29.302 grams nitrogen.&emsp;29.562 grams nitrogen.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal pl4 pt1" colspan="4"><div>Nitrogen balance for five days&emsp;&emsp;=&emsp;&emsp;-0.350 gram.</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal pl4" colspan="4"><div>Nitrogen balance per day&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;&emsp; =&emsp;&emsp;-0.070 gram.</div></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>In this period of five days, the average daily intake of
-nitrogen was 5.86 grams, corresponding to 36.6 grams of
-proteid food. The average daily output of metabolized nitrogen
-was 4.92 grams, implying the breaking down in the body<span class="pagenum" id="Page_178">178</span>
-of only 30.7 grams of proteid material per day. The fuel
-value of the daily food, calculated as closely as possible, was
-less than 2000 calories. The body was essentially in nitrogen
-equilibrium, the minus balance being too small to have
-any special significance.</p>
-
-<p>It will be instructive to consider next the actual character
-and amount of the diet made use of on several of these
-balance days:</p>
-
-
-<p class="tac"><i>March 21.</i></p>
-
-<div class="fs80">
-<p class="pl3hi3">Breakfast.&mdash;Coffee 119 grams, cream 30 grams, sugar 9 grams.</p>
-
-<p class="pl3hi3">Lunch.&mdash;One shredded wheat biscuit 31 grams, cream 116 grams, wheat gem
-33 grams, butter 7 grams, tea 185 grams, sugar 10 grams, cream cake
-53 grams.</p>
-
-<p class="pl3hi3">Dinner.&mdash;Pea soup 114 grams, lamb chop 24 grams, boiled sweet potato 47
-grams, wheat gems 76 grams, butter 13 grams, cream cake 52 grams,
-coffee 61 grams, sugar 10 grams, cheese crackers 16 grams.</p>
-
-<p class="tac">Total nitrogen content of the day’s food = 6.621 grams.</p>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="tac"><i>June 24.</i></p>
-
-<div class="fs80">
-<p class="pl3hi3">Breakfast.&mdash;Coffee 96 grams, cream 32 grams, sugar 8 grams.</p>
-
-<p class="pl3hi3">Lunch.&mdash;Creamed codfish 89 grams, baked potato 95 grams, butter 10 grams,
-hominy gems 58 grams, strawberries 86 grams, sugar 26 grams, ginger
-snaps 47 grams, water.</p>
-
-<p class="pl3hi3">Dinner.&mdash;Cold tongue 14 grams, fried potato 48 grams, peas 60 grams, wheat
-gems 30 grams, butter 11 grams, lettuce-orange salad with mayonnaise
-dressing 155 grams, crackers 22 grams, cream cheese 14 grams, ginger
-snaps 22 grams, coffee 58 grams, sugar 10 grams.</p>
-
-<p class="tac">Total nitrogen content of the day’s food = 6.331 grams.</p>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="tac"><i>June 25.</i></p>
-
-<div class="fs80">
-<p class="pl3hi3">Breakfast.&mdash;Coffee 101 grams, cream 36 grams, sugar 13 grams.</p>
-
-<p class="pl3hi3">Lunch.&mdash;Omelette 50 grams, bacon 9 grams, French fried potato 23 grams,
-biscuit 29 grams, butter 8 grams, ginger snaps 42 grams, cream cheese
-17 grams, iced tea 150 grams, sugar 15 grams.</p>
-
-<p class="pl3hi3">Dinner.&mdash;Wheat popovers 57 grams, butter 10 grams, lettuce-orange salad
-with mayonnaise dressing 147 grams, crackers 22 grams, cream cheese
-21 grams, cottage pudding 82 grams, coffee 48 grams, sugar 11 grams.</p>
-
-<p class="tac">Total nitrogen content of the day’s food = 4.941 grams.</p>
-</div>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_179">179</span></p>
-
-
-<p class="tac"><i>June 27.</i></p>
-
-<div class="fs80">
-<p class="pl3hi3">Breakfast.&mdash;Coffee 112 grams, cream 22 grams, sugar 10 grams.</p>
-
-<p class="pl3hi3">Lunch.&mdash;Roast lamb 9 grams, baked potato 90 grams, wheat gems 47 grams,
-butter 12 grams, iced tea 250 grams, sugar 25 grams, vanilla éclair 47
-grams.</p>
-
-<p class="pl3hi3">Dinner.&mdash;Lamb chop 32 grams, creamed potato 107 grams, asparagus 49
-grams, bread 35 grams, butter 17 grams, lettuce-orange salad with mayonnaise
-dressing 150 grams, crackers 21 grams, cream cheese 12 grams,
-coffee 63 grams, sugar 9 grams.</p>
-
-<p class="tac">Total nitrogen content of the day’s food = 5.486 grams.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>It can be seen that there was nothing especially peculiar
-in these dietaries, aside from their simplicity, except that the
-quantities were small. Meat was not excluded; there was
-no approach to a cereal diet; there were no fads involved,
-nothing but simple moderation in the amounts of nitrogen-containing
-foods. Further, there was perfect freedom of
-choice; full latitude to consider personal likes and dislikes in
-the selection of foods; anything that appealed to the appetite
-could be eaten, with the simple restriction that the amount
-taken must be small. During the balance days, naturally,
-every article of food had to be carefully weighed and analyzed,
-which fact undoubtedly tended to limit in some degree
-the variety of foods chosen, since increase in the number of
-articles meant increased labor in analysis. Quite noticeable,
-however, was the extreme constancy in the nitrogen-content
-of the daily diet, even on those days when the food was not
-weighed. In other words, there had been gradually acquired
-a new habit of food consumption, and the individual, unconsciously
-perhaps, rarely overstepped the limits fixed by the
-new level of proteid metabolism. This is a fact that has been
-conspicuous in nearly all of our experiments, where freedom
-of choice in the taking of food has been followed; and is in
-harmony with the view that after a lower level of proteid
-metabolism has once been established, and the body has
-become accustomed to the new conditions, there is little tendency<span class="pagenum" id="Page_180">180</span>
-for any marked deviation from the new standards of
-food consumption.</p>
-
-<p>With maintenance of body-weight, together with nitrogen
-equilibrium through all these months; and with health,
-strength, and mental and physical vigor unimpaired, there is
-certainly ground for the belief that the real needs of the body
-were as fully met by the lowered consumption of proteid food
-as by the quantities called for by the customary standards.
-Finally, it should be noted that this particular subject was
-small in weight, and hence did not need so much proteid as
-a man of heavier body-weight would require. In recognizing
-this principle, we may for future comparison calculate the
-nitrogen requirement of the body, on the basis of the present
-results, per kilo of body-weight. With the weight of the
-subject placed at 57 kilos, and with an average daily excretion
-of nitrogen amounting to practically 5.7 grams, it is
-plain that this individual was quite able to maintain a
-condition of equilibrium with a metabolism of 0.1 gram of
-nitrogen per kilo of body-weight. Translated into terms of
-proteid matter, this would mean a utilization by the body
-of 0.625 gram of proteid daily per kilo of body-weight. Regarding
-the fuel value of the daily food, we need not be
-more precise than to emphasize the fact that so far as could
-be determined, on the basis of chemical composition, the
-heat value of the food rarely exceeded 1900 calories per
-day. If we make a liberal allowance, for the sake of precaution,
-it would seem quite safe to say that this particular
-individual, under the conditions of life and bodily activity
-prevailing, did not apparently need of fuel value more than
-2000 calories per day, which would correspond to 35 calories
-per kilo of body-weight.</p>
-
-<p>Let us turn now to the second subject in this group, a
-man of 76 kilos body-weight, 32 years of age, and of strong
-physique. His active life in the laboratory called for greater<span class="pagenum" id="Page_181">181</span>
-physical exertion than the former subject, and consequently
-there was need for greater consumption of non-nitrogenous
-food, with the accompanying increase in fuel value of the
-day’s ration. As in the preceding case, there was no prescribing
-of food, but a gradual and voluntary diminution of
-proteid material. During the last seven months and a half
-of the experiment, the average daily excretion of nitrogen
-through the kidneys amounted to 6.53 grams, equivalent to
-a metabolism of 40.8 grams of proteid matter daily; a little
-more than one-third the minimal quantity called for by common
-usage. At first, the body-weight of the subject gradually
-fell until it reached 70 kilos, at which point it remained
-fairly constant during the last five months. That the quantity
-of food taken was quite sufficient to maintain the body
-in a condition of nitrogen equilibrium is apparent from the
-results of a comparison of income and outgo of nitrogen, as
-shown in the following table:</p>
-
-<div class="center htmlonly">
-<table class="mtb1em" cellpadding="2" summary="" border="0">
-<tr class="fs80">
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tac pr2" colspan="2"><div>Output.</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="fs80">
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tac pr1"><div>Nitrogen in<br />Food.</div></td>
-<td class="tac prl03"><div>Nitrogen through<br />Kidneys.</div></td>
-<td class="tal pl1" colspan="2"><div>Weight of Excre-<br />&emsp;ment (dry).</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar pr2"><div>May 18</div></td>
-<td class="tal pr15"> 8.668 grams.</td>
-<td class="tal pr15"> 6.06 grams.</td>
-<td class="tal pl03">14 grams.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar pr2"><div>19</div></td>
-<td class="tal"> 6.474</td>
-<td class="tal"> 7.17</td>
-<td class="tal pl03">39</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar pr2"><div>20</div></td>
-<td class="tal"> 6.691</td>
-<td class="tal"> 6.33</td>
-<td class="tal pl03">30</td>
-</tr>
-<tr style="line-height: 0.1em;">
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tal">──</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar pr2"><div>21</div></td>
-<td class="tal"> 8.345</td>
-<td class="tal"> 6.78</td>
-<td class="tal pl03" colspan="2">83 contain 6.06% N. = 5.03 grm. N.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar pr2"><div>22</div></td>
-<td class="tal"> 7.015</td>
-<td class="tal"> 5.70</td>
-<td class="tal pl03">. .</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar pr2"><div>23</div></td>
-<td class="tal"> 9.726</td>
-<td class="tal"> 5.75</td>
-<td class="tal pl03">38</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar pr2"><div>24</div></td>
-<td class="tal">10.424</td>
-<td class="tal"> 6.39</td>
-<td class="tal pl03">57</td>
-</tr>
-<tr style="line-height: 0.1em;">
-<td class="tar"></td>
-<td class="tal">&nbsp;────</td>
-<td class="tal">&nbsp;───</td>
-<td class="tal">──</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar"></td>
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tal pl03" colspan="2">95 contain 5.76% N.&ensp;= 5.47 grm. N.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr style="line-height: 0.1em;">
-<td></td>
-<td></td>
-<td></td>
-<td></td>
-<td class="tal">&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;&nbsp;───</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td></td>
-<td></td>
-<td></td>
-<td></td>
-<td class="tar">10.50 grm. N.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar"></td>
-<td class="tal">57.343</td>
-<td class="tal" colspan="3">44.18&emsp;&nbsp;+&emsp;&nbsp;10.50 grams nitrogen.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr style="line-height: 0.1em;">
-<td class="tar"></td>
-<td class="tal">────</td>
-<td class="tal prl0" colspan="2">────────────</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar"></td>
-<td class="tal" colspan="3">57.343 grams N.&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;54.68 grams nitrogen.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tac pt1" colspan="5"><div>Nitrogen balance for five days&emsp;&emsp;=&emsp;&emsp;+2.663 grams.</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tac" colspan="5"><div>Nitrogen balance per day&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;&emsp; =&emsp;&emsp;+0.380 gram.</div></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class="epubonly">
-<div class="center">
-<table class="mtb1em" cellpadding="2" summary="" border="0">
-<tr class="fs80">
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tac pr2" colspan="2"><div>Output.</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="fs80">
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tac pr1"><div>Nitrogen in<br />Food.</div></td>
-<td class="tac prl03"><div>Nitrogen&nbsp;through<br />Kidneys.</div></td>
-<td class="tal pl1"><div>Weight of Excre-<br />&emsp;ment (dry).</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar pr2"><div>May&nbsp;18</div></td>
-<td class="tal pr15"> 8.668&nbsp;grams.</td>
-<td class="tal pr15"> 6.06&nbsp;grams.</td>
-<td class="tal pl03">14 grams.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar pr2"><div>19</div></td>
-<td class="tal"> 6.474</td>
-<td class="tal"> 7.17</td>
-<td class="tal pl03">39</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar pr2"><div>20</div></td>
-<td class="tal"> 6.691</td>
-<td class="tal"> 6.33</td>
-<td class="tal pl03">30</td>
-</tr>
-<tr style="line-height: 0.1em;">
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tal pl03"><span class="ls-03em">―</span></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar pr2"><div>21</div></td>
-<td class="tal"> 8.345</td>
-<td class="tal"> 6.78</td>
-<td class="tal pl03" colspan="2">83 contain 6.06% N. = 5.03 grm. N.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar pr2"><div>22</div></td>
-<td class="tal"> 7.015</td>
-<td class="tal"> 5.70</td>
-<td class="tal pl03">. .</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar pr2"><div>23</div></td>
-<td class="tal"> 9.726</td>
-<td class="tal"> 5.75</td>
-<td class="tal pl03">38</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar pr2"><div>24</div></td>
-<td class="tal">10.424</td>
-<td class="tal"> 6.39</td>
-<td class="tal pl03">57</td>
-</tr>
-<tr style="line-height: 0.1em;">
-<td class="tar"></td>
-<td class="tal"><span class="ls-03em">―――</span></td>
-<td class="tal">&nbsp;<span class="ls-03em">――</span></td>
-<td class="tal pl03"><span class="ls-03em">―</span></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar"></td>
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tal pl03" colspan="2"><span class="ilb">95 contain 5.76% N. = 5.47 grm. N.</span></td>
-</tr>
-<tr style="line-height: 0.1em;">
-<td></td>
-<td></td>
-<td></td>
-<td></td>
-<td class="tal pl14"><span class="ls-03em">――</span></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td></td>
-<td></td>
-<td></td>
-<td></td>
-<td class="tar"><div>10.50&nbsp;grm.&nbsp;N.</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar"></td>
-<td class="tal">57.343</td>
-<td class="tal" colspan="3">44.18&emsp;&nbsp;+&emsp;&ensp;&nbsp;10.50 grams nitrogen.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr style="line-height: 0.1em;">
-<td class="tar"></td>
-<td class="tal"><span class="ls-03em">―――</span></td>
-<td class="tal prl0" colspan="2"><span class="ls-03em">―――――――――</span></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar"></td>
-<td class="tal" colspan="3">57.343 grams N.&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;54.68 grams nitrogen.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tac pt1" colspan="5"><div>Nitrogen balance for five days&emsp;&emsp;=&emsp;&emsp;+2.663 grams.</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tac" colspan="5"><div>Nitrogen balance per day&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;&emsp; =&emsp;&emsp;+0.380 gram.</div></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_182">182</span></p>
-
-<p>The average daily intake of nitrogen was 8.192 grams,
-equivalent to 51.2 grams of proteid food. The average
-amount of nitrogen excreted through the kidneys each day
-was 6.31 grams, corresponding to a metabolism of 39.43
-grams of proteid matter. The plus balance of 0.380 gram of
-nitrogen per day shows that not only was the amount of proteid
-food consumed quite adequate to meet the demands of the
-body, but the latter was able to store up 2.3 grams of proteid
-per day. Regarding the character of the food taken by this
-subject, it should be stated that there was gradually developed
-a tendency toward a pure vegetarian diet. During the last
-seven months of the experiment, meats were almost entirely
-excluded. The diet voluntarily selected thus differed decidedly
-from that of the preceding subject in that it was
-much more bulky, contained a larger proportion of undigestible
-vegetable matter, and was richer in fats and carbohydrates,
-with a corresponding increase in fuel value. The
-exact character of the daily dietary is indicated by the following
-data of food consumption, on four of the days of the
-above balance period:</p>
-
-<p class="tac"><i>May 19.</i></p>
-<div class="fs80">
-<p class="pl3hi3">Breakfast.&mdash;Banana 102 grams, wheat rolls 50 grams, coffee 150 grams, cream
-50 grams, sugar 21 grams.</p>
-
-<p class="pl3hi3">Lunch.&mdash;Omelette 20 grams, bread 57 grams, hominy 137 grams, syrup 68
-grams, potatoes 128 grams, coffee 100 grams, cream 50 grams, sugar
-21 grams.</p>
-
-<p class="pl3hi3">Dinner.&mdash;Tomato purée 200 grams, bread 24 grams, fried sweet potato 100
-grams, spinach 70 grams, Indian meal 100 grams, syrup 25 grams, coffee
-100 grams, cream 40 grams, sugar 21 grams.</p>
-
-<p class="tac">Total nitrogen content of the day’s food = 6.474 grams.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="tac"><i>May 20.</i></p>
-<div class="fs80">
-<p class="pl3hi3">Breakfast.&mdash;Sliced orange 140 grams, coffee 100 grams, cream 30 grams, sugar
-21 grams.</p>
-
-<p>Lunch.&mdash;Lima beans 40 grams, mashed potato 250 grams, bread 28 grams,
-fried hominy 115 grams, syrup 48 grams, coffee 100 grams, cream 30
-grams, sugar 21 grams.</p>
-
-<p class="pl3hi3"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_183">183</span></p>
-
-<p class="pl3hi3">Dinner.&mdash;Consommé 150 grams, string beans 140 grams, mashed potato 250
-grams, rice croquette 93 grams, syrup 25 grams, cranberry jam 95 grams,
-bread 19 grams, coffee 100 grams, cream 30 grams, sugar 21 grams.</p>
-
-<p class="tac">Total nitrogen content of the day’s food = 6.691 grams.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="tac"><i>May 21.</i></p>
-<div class="fs80">
-<p class="pl3hi3">Breakfast.&mdash;Banana 153 grams, coffee 150 grams, cream 30 grams, sugar 21
-grams.</p>
-
-<p class="pl3hi3">Lunch.&mdash;Potato croquette 229 grams, bread 25 grams, tomato 123 grams,
-Indian meal 109 grams, syrup 48 grams, coffee 100 grams, cream 20
-grams, sugar 14 grams.</p>
-
-<p class="pl3hi3">Dinner.&mdash;Bean soup 100 grams, bacon 5 grams, fried potato 200 grams, bread
-31 grams, lettuce-orange salad 47 grams, prunes 137 grams, coffee 100
-grams, cream 25 grams, sugar 21 grams, banana 255 grams.</p>
-
-<p class="tac">Total nitrogen content of the day’s food = 8.345 grams.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="tac"><i>May 23.</i></p>
-<div class="fs80">
-<p class="pl3hi3">Breakfast.&mdash;Banana 229 grams, coffee 125 grams, cream 25 grams, sugar 21
-grams.</p>
-
-<p class="pl3hi3">Lunch.&mdash;Consommé 75 grams, scrambled egg 15 grams, bread 58 grams, apple
-sauce 125 grams, fried potato 170 grams, rice croquette 197 grams, syrup
-68 grams, coffee 100 grams, cream 30 grams, sugar 21 grams.</p>
-
-<p class="pl3hi3">Dinner.&mdash;Vegetable soup 100 grams, potato croquette 198 grams, bread 73
-grams, bacon 7 grams, string beans 120 grams, water ice 77 grams,
-banana 270 grams, coffee 100 grams, cream 30 grams, sugar 14 grams.</p>
-
-<p class="tac">Total nitrogen content of the day’s food = 9.726 grams.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>While the critic might justly say that these dietaries lack
-variety and would not appeal to a fastidious taste, there is
-force in the illustration which they afford of a simple diet
-being quite adequate to meet the wants of the body. Further,
-it should be emphasized that there is no special virtue
-in any of these dietaries, aside from their simplicity and low
-content of nitrogen. They represent individual taste and
-selection. Any other form of diet would answer as well,
-provided there was not too large an intake of proteid, and
-provided further the fuel value of the day’s ration was sufficient
-to meet the requirements for heat and work. Again,
-it might be said that with this latter subject the daily consumption<span class="pagenum" id="Page_184">184</span>
-of proteid food was considerably larger than with
-the first subject. This is indeed true, but it must be remembered
-that the second subject had a body-weight of 70
-kilos during the last seven months, while the first subject
-weighed only 57 kilos. Obviously, with this marked difference
-in the weight of living tissue there must be a corresponding
-difference in the extent of proteid katabolism, and
-consequently a difference in the demand for proteid food.</p>
-
-<p>As we have seen, the smaller subject for a period of many
-months showed a proteid katabolism equal to 0.1 gram of
-nitrogen, per kilo of body-weight, daily. The second and
-larger subject, on a totally different diet, for seven months
-and a half, metabolized daily, on an average, 6.53 grams of
-nitrogen. Taking the weight of the body at 70 kilos, it is
-readily seen that the nitrogen metabolized daily per kilo of
-body-weight was 0.093 gram, almost identical with the rate
-of nitrogen exchange found with the first subject. It is certainly
-very suggestive that these two individuals with their
-marked difference in body-weight, under different degrees of
-physical activity, and living on different forms of diet, with
-only the one point in common of voluntary restriction in the
-amount of proteid food, until a new habit had been acquired
-and a new level of proteid metabolism attained, should have
-quite independently reached exactly the same level of nitrogen
-exchange per kilo of body-weight. And when it is remembered
-that this was attained by the daily consumption
-of not more than one-third to one-half the minimal amount
-of proteid food called for by the dietetic customs of mankind,
-and with maintenance of all the characteristics of good
-health through this comparatively long period of time, there
-certainly seems to be justification for the opinion that the
-consumption of proteid food, as practised by the people of the
-present generation, is far in excess of the needs of the body.
-Referring for a moment to the calorific value of the food<span class="pagenum" id="Page_185">185</span>
-used by the second subject, in the last balance period, it is
-to be noted that the heat value per day averaged 2448 calories,
-as estimated on the basis of the chemical composition
-of the food. This would amount to 34 calories per kilo.
-Whether this figure is strictly correct is immaterial; it is
-certainly sufficiently so to warrant the statement that the
-needs of the body were fully met by an intake of food below
-the standards set by usage, and that maintenance of nitrogen
-equilibrium on a greatly diminished consumption of proteid
-food is possible without increasing the intake of non-nitrogenous
-matter.</p>
-
-<p>Finally, as affording additional evidence, we may refer to
-a third subject in this group, a man of 65 kilos body-weight,
-26 years of age, who for a period of six consecutive months
-maintained body-weight, nitrogen equilibrium, and a general
-condition of good health, with a proteid metabolism equal to
-7.81 grams of nitrogen per day. During the last two months
-of the experiment, the average excretion of nitrogen per day
-amounted to 6.68 grams, corresponding to a metabolism of
-0.102 gram of nitrogen per kilo of body-weight. This figure,
-it will be noted, is practically identical with the values obtained
-with the preceding subjects, calculated to the same
-unit of weight. Further, this third subject did not reduce
-his nitrogen intake by an exclusion of meat, but made use of
-his ordinary diet gradually reduced in amount. His daily
-consumption of proteid food averaged 55 grams, or 8.83 grams
-of nitrogen, and on this amount of proteid, without increasing
-the intake of fats and carbohydrates, he was quite able to do
-his work with preservation of physiological equilibrium.</p>
-
-<p>Views so radically different from those commonly accepted
-can be made to carry weight, only by the accumulation of supporting
-evidence obtained under widely different conditions
-of life, and by methods which will defy criticism. It might
-be argued, and with perhaps some justification, that while<span class="pagenum" id="Page_186">186</span>
-professional men, with freedom from muscular work, may be
-able to live without detriment on a relatively small amount
-of proteid food, such a conclusion would not be warranted
-for the great majority of mankind with their necessarily
-greater muscular activity. We are confronted at once with
-the oft-heard statement that the laboring man requires more
-proteid food; he has a more vigorous appetite, and he must
-take an abundance of meat and other foods rich in proteid, if
-he is to maintain his ability as a worker. Note the statements
-already made in other connections regarding the food
-consumption of Maine lumbermen, of men on the football
-team, of trained athletes in general. These men consume
-large amounts of proteid daily, because their work demands
-it. If the demand did not really exist, they would
-not so agree in the use of high proteid standards, so runs
-the argument. The custom certainly does exist and is
-almost universally followed; men in training for athletic
-events deem it necessary to consume large amounts of proteid
-food. Custom and long experience sanction a high
-proteid diet, rich in nitrogen, for the development and maintenance
-of that strength and vigor that help to make the
-accomplished athlete. It is common knowledge to-day, however,
-that the energy of muscle work does not have its origin
-in the breaking down of proteid material, certainly not when
-there is an adequate amount of fat and carbohydrate in the
-diet. A high proteid intake must therefore be called for
-because of some subtle quality, not at present fully understood.
-It must not be subjected to criticism, however, because
-it is sanctioned by custom, habit, and common usage.</p>
-
-<p>Still, I have ventured to experiment somewhat with a
-group of eight university athletes, all trained men, and with
-some surprising results. We have not space for details, but
-it may be mentioned that the men were young, from 22 to 27
-years of age, and were experts in some field of athletic work.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_187">187</span>
-By a preliminary study of their ordinary dietetic habits, it
-was found that they were all large consumers of proteid food,
-with a corresponding high rate of proteid katabolism. One
-subject of 92 kilos body-weight, during ten days, showed an
-average daily excretion through the kidneys of 22.79 grams
-of nitrogen, implying a metabolism of 142 grams of proteid
-matter per day. On one of these days, the nitrogen excretion
-reached the high figure of 31.99 grams, corresponding to a
-metabolism of about 200 grams of proteid matter. Calculated
-per kilo of body-weight, this means a metabolism of
-0.35 gram of nitrogen, or three and a half times the amount
-needed by the three professional men for the maintenance
-of nitrogen equilibrium. These subjects, with an intelligent
-comprehension of the point at issue, and with full freedom
-in the choice of food, gradually diminished their daily consumption
-of proteid material, at the same time cutting down
-very markedly the total consumption of food. The experiment
-extended through five months, and during the last two
-months, the average daily excretion of metabolized nitrogen of
-the eight men amounted to 8.81 grams per man. This corresponds
-to a metabolism of 55 grams of proteid matter.</p>
-
-<p>Further, the average daily output of nitrogen through the
-kidneys during the preceding two months was in many cases
-nearly, if not quite, as low as during the last two months of
-the experiment. If we contrast this average daily exchange
-of 8.81 grams of nitrogen with the average output prior to
-the change in diet, it is easy to see that the men were living
-on about one-half the amount of proteid food they were
-formerly accustomed to take. Moreover, if the metabolized
-nitrogen for each individual, with one exception, is calculated
-per kilo of body-weight, it is seen to vary from 0.108
-gram to 0.134 gram; somewhat higher than was observed with
-the older professional men, but not conspicuously so. Again,
-it is to be emphasized that the lowered intake of proteid food<span class="pagenum" id="Page_188">188</span>
-with these men was quite adequate to maintain their bodies
-in nitrogen equilibrium. We may cite a single case by way
-of illustration:</p>
-
-<div class="center htmlonly">
-<table class="mtb1em" cellpadding="2" summary="">
-<tr class="fs80">
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tac pr2" colspan="2"><div>Output.</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="fs80">
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tac pr1"><div>Nitrogen in<br />Food.</div></td>
-<td class="tac prl03"><div>Nitrogen through<br />Kidneys.</div></td>
-<td class="tac pr2"><div>Weight of Excre-<br />ment (dry).</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar pr2"><div>May 18</div></td>
-<td class="tal pr15"> 8.119 grams.</td>
-<td class="tal pr15"> 5.75 grams.</td>
-<td class="tal"> . . grams.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar pr2"><div>19</div></td>
-<td class="tal pr15"> 9.482</td>
-<td class="tal pr15"> 6.64</td>
-<td class="tal"> 15</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar pr2"><div>20</div></td>
-<td class="tal pr15">10.560</td>
-<td class="tal pr15"> 8.45</td>
-<td class="tal"> . .</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar pr2"><div>21</div></td>
-<td class="tal"> 8.992</td>
-<td class="tal"> 8.64</td>
-<td class="tal"> . .</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar pr2"><div>22</div></td>
-<td class="tal"> 9.025</td>
-<td class="tal"> 8.53</td>
-<td class="tal"> . .</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar pr2"><div>23</div></td>
-<td class="tal"> 8.393</td>
-<td class="tal"> 7.69</td>
-<td class="tal"> 89</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar pr2"><div>24</div></td>
-<td class="tal"> 7.284</td>
-<td class="tal"> 7.34</td>
-<td class="tal"> 24</td>
-</tr>
-<tr style="line-height: 0.1em;">
-<td class="tar"></td>
-<td class="tal">&nbsp;────</td>
-<td class="tal">&ensp;───</td>
-<td class="tal">&nbsp;──</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar"></td>
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tal">128 grams contain<br />&emsp;&emsp;6.40% N.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar"></td>
-<td class="tal">61.855</td>
-<td class="tal">53.04&emsp;&emsp;+</td>
-<td class="tal">8.192 grams nitrogen.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr style="line-height: 0.1em;">
-<td class="tar"></td>
-<td class="tal">─────</td>
-<td class="tal prl0">──────────</td>
-<td class="tal prl0">────</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar"></td>
-<td class="tal" colspan="3">61.855 grams nitrogen.&emsp;61.232 grams nitrogen.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal pl4 pt1" colspan="4"><div>Nitrogen balance for seven days&emsp;=&emsp;&emsp;+0.623 gram.</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal pl4" colspan="4"><div>Nitrogen balance per day&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;=&emsp;&emsp;+0.089 gram.</div></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class="epubonly">
-<div class="center">
-<table class="mtb1em" cellpadding="2" summary="">
-<tr class="fs80">
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tac pr2" colspan="2"><div>Output.</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="fs80">
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tac pr1"><div>Nitrogen in<br />Food.</div></td>
-<td class="tac prl03"><div>Nitrogen through<br />Kidneys.</div></td>
-<td class="tac pr2"><div>Weight of Excre-<br />ment (dry).</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar pr2"><div>May 18</div></td>
-<td class="tal pr15"> 8.119 grams.</td>
-<td class="tal pr15"> 5.75 grams.</td>
-<td class="tal"> . . grams.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar pr2"><div>19</div></td>
-<td class="tal pr15"> 9.482</td>
-<td class="tal pr15"> 6.64</td>
-<td class="tal"> 15</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar pr2"><div>20</div></td>
-<td class="tal pr15">10.560</td>
-<td class="tal pr15"> 8.45</td>
-<td class="tal"> . .</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar pr2"><div>21</div></td>
-<td class="tal"> 8.992</td>
-<td class="tal"> 8.64</td>
-<td class="tal"> . .</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar pr2"><div>22</div></td>
-<td class="tal"> 9.025</td>
-<td class="tal"> 8.53</td>
-<td class="tal"> . .</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar pr2"><div>23</div></td>
-<td class="tal"> 8.393</td>
-<td class="tal"> 7.69</td>
-<td class="tal"> 89</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar pr2"><div>24</div></td>
-<td class="tal"> 7.284</td>
-<td class="tal"> 7.34</td>
-<td class="tal"> 24</td>
-</tr>
-<tr style="line-height: 0.1em;">
-<td class="tar"></td>
-<td class="tal">&nbsp;―――</td>
-<td class="tal">&ensp;――</td>
-<td class="tal">&ensp;―</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar"></td>
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tal">128 grams contain<br />&emsp;&emsp;6.40% N.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar"></td>
-<td class="tal">61.855</td>
-<td class="tal">53.04&emsp;&emsp;+</td>
-<td class="tal"><span class="ilb">8.192 grams nitrogen.</span></td>
-</tr>
-<tr style="line-height: 0.1em;">
-<td class="tar"></td>
-<td class="tal">―――</td>
-<td class="tal prl0">―――――――</td>
-<td class="tal prl0">―――</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tar"></td>
-<td class="tal" colspan="3">61.855 grams nitrogen.&emsp;61.232 grams nitrogen.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal pl4 pt1" colspan="4"><div>Nitrogen balance for seven days&emsp;=&emsp;&emsp;+0.623 gram.</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal pl4" colspan="4"><div>Nitrogen balance per day&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;=&emsp;&emsp;+0.089 gram.</div></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The daily intake of nitrogen during this balance period
-averaged 8.83 grams, corresponding to 55.1 grams of proteid
-food. The metabolized nitrogen eliminated through the kidneys
-averaged 7.58 grams per day, thus showing a daily average
-metabolism of 47.37 grams of proteid matter. With a
-body-weight of 63 kilos, this individual was maintaining
-equilibrium on a metabolism of 0.120 gram of nitrogen per
-kilo of body-weight. The fuel value of the day’s food as
-estimated did not exceed 2800 calories, thus substantiating
-the general statement that there is no need for increasing the
-fuel value of the food in any attempt to maintain a lower
-nitrogen level. This particular individual, in his choice of
-food, unconsciously drifted&mdash;as he expressed it&mdash;toward a
-simple vegetable diet, without, however, excluding meat entirely.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_189">189</span>
-The following four dietaries will serve to illustrate
-the character and amount of his daily food:</p>
-
-
-<p class="tac"><i>May 21.</i></p>
-<div class="fs80">
-<p class="pl3hi3">Breakfast.&mdash;Banana 106 grams, boiled Indian meal 150 grams, cream 50
-grams, sugar 21 grams, bread 59 grams, butter 16 grams.</p>
-
-<p class="pl3hi3">Lunch.&mdash;Lamb chop 37 grams, potato croquette 105 grams, tomato 216 grams,
-bread 55 grams, butter 13 grams, sugar 14 grams, water ice 143 grams.</p>
-
-<p class="pl3hi3">Dinner.&mdash;Bean soup 100 grams, bacon 10 grams, fried egg 22 grams, fried
-potato 100 grams, lettuce salad 63 grams, coffee 100 grams, cream 50
-grams, sugar 21 grams, stewed prunes 247 grams.</p>
-
-<p>Total nitrogen content of the day’s food = 8.992 grams.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="tac"><i>May 22.</i></p>
-<div class="fs80">
-<p class="pl3hi3">Breakfast.&mdash;Orange 60 grams, oatmeal 207 grams, roll 46 grams, butter 14
-grams, coffee 150 grams, cream 150 grams, sugar 35 grams.</p>
-
-<p class="pl3hi3">Lunch.&mdash;Boiled potato 150 grams, boiled onions 145 grams, macaroni 130
-grams, fried rice 138 grams, syrup 48 grams, ice cream 160 grams, cake
-26 grams.</p>
-
-<p class="pl3hi3">Dinner.&mdash;Celery soup 150 grams, spinach 100 grams, mashed potato 100
-grams, bread 19 grams, coffee 100 grams, cream 50 grams, sugar 7 grams,
-strawberry short-cake 169 grams.</p>
-
-<p class="tac">Total nitrogen content of the day’s food = 9.025 grams.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="tac"><i>May 23.</i></p>
-<div class="fs80">
-<p class="pl3hi3">Breakfast.&mdash;Sliced banana 201 grams, cream 100 grams, sugar 28 grams,
-griddle cakes 103 grams, syrup 48 grams.</p>
-
-<p class="pl3hi3">Lunch.&mdash;Consommé 150 grams, rice croquette 140 grams, syrup 48 grams, fried
-potato 100 grams, bread 36 grams, butter 15 grams, apple sauce 90 grams,
-coffee 75 grams, sugar 7 grams.</p>
-
-<p class="pl3hi3">Dinner.&mdash;Vegetable soup 100 grams, bacon 20 grams, potato croquette 50
-grams, string beans 120 grams, macaroni 104 grams, bread 26 grams,
-water ice 184 grams.</p>
-
-<p class="tac">Total nitrogen content of the day’s food = 8.393 grams.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="tac"><i>May 24.</i></p>
-<div class="fs80">
-<p class="pl3hi3">Breakfast.&mdash;Orange 80 grams, fried rice 186 grams, syrup 72 grams, coffee 100
-grams, cream 50 grams, sugar 21 grams.</p>
-
-<p class="pl3hi3">Lunch.&mdash;Celery soup 125 grams, bread 34 grams, butter 19 grams, boiled onion
-127 grams, boiled potato 150 grams, tomato sauce 50 grams, stewed
-prunes 189 grams, cream 50 grams.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_190">190</span></p>
-
-<p class="pl3hi3">Dinner.&mdash;Tomato soup 125 grams, bread 21 grams, fried potato 100 grams,
-spinach 130 grams, cream pie 158 grams, coffee 100 grams, cream 50
-grams, sugar 14 grams.</p>
-
-<p class="pl3hi3">Evening.&mdash;Ginger ale 250 grams.</p>
-
-<p class="tac">Total nitrogen content of the day’s food = 7.284 grams.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Here, again, we have dietaries not particularly attractive to
-every one, but they represent the choice of an individual who
-was following his own preferences, and like the preceding
-dietaries they are characterized by simplicity. In any event,
-they were quite adequate for the wants of the body, and
-their value to us lies in the proof they afford that a relatively
-small intake of proteid food will not only bring about
-and maintain nitrogen equilibrium for many months, and
-probably indefinitely, but that such a form of diet is equally
-as effective with vigorous athletes, accustomed to strenuous
-muscular effort, as with professional men of more sedentary
-habits. Further, these many months of observation with
-different individuals all lead to the opinion that there are
-no harmful results of any kind produced by a reduction in
-the amount of proteid food to a level commensurate with the
-actual needs of the body. Body-weight, health, physical
-strength, and muscular tone can all be maintained, in partial
-illustration of which may be offered two photographs of one
-of the eight athletes taken toward the end of the experiment;
-pictures which are certainly the antithesis of enfeebled muscular
-structure, or diminished physical vigor.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp57" id="illus-203" style="max-width: 30.3125em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/illus-203.jpg" alt="" />
- <div class="caption"><p>STAPLETON<br />
- <i>Photograph taken in the middle of the experiment, in April</i></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_191">191</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VI">CHAPTER VI</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="chaptitle">FURTHER EXPERIMENTS AND OBSERVATIONS
-BEARING ON TRUE FOOD REQUIREMENTS</p>
-
-<p class="chaptopics"><span class="smcap">Topics</span>: Dietary experiments with a detail of soldiers from the United
-States army. General character of the army ration. Samples of the
-daily dietary adopted. Rate of nitrogen metabolism attained. Effect
-on body-weight. Nitrogen balance with lowered proteid consumption.
-Influence of low proteid on muscular strength of soldiers and athletes.
-Effect on fatigue. Effect on physical endurance. Fisher’s experiments
-on endurance. Dangers of underfeeding. Dietary observations
-on fruitarians. Observations on Japanese. Recent dietary
-changes in Japanese army and navy. Observations of Dr. Hunt on
-resistance of low proteid animals to poisons. Conclusions.</p>
-
-<p>General acceptance of a new theory, or a new point
-of view, can be expected only when there is an adequate
-amount of scientific evidence on which the theory can
-safely rest. Facts cannot be ignored, and the larger the
-amount of supporting evidence the more certain becomes the
-general truth of the theory to which it points. Corroborative
-evidence, therefore, is always desirable, and he who
-would open up a new point of view must be zealous in accumulating
-facts to uphold his position. Critics there are
-without number who are ever ready to pick flaws in an argument
-or overturn a theory, especially if the one or the other
-stands opposed to their own point of view. This, however,
-is highly advantageous for the advance of sound knowledge,
-since it necessarily prompts the advocate to search in all
-directions for added data, by which he can build a bulwark<span class="pagenum" id="Page_192">192</span>
-of fact sufficient to defy just criticism. Further, the true
-scientific spirit demands persistent and painstaking effort in
-the search after truth, that error and misconception may be
-avoided.</p>
-
-<p>In harmony with these ideas, our attempt to ascertain
-the real needs of the body for proteid food led us to enlarge
-our evidence by a series of experiments with still another
-body of men, <i>i. e.</i>, a detail of soldiers from the United States
-army<span class="nowrap">.<a id="FNanchor_61" href="#Footnote_61" class="fnanchor">61</a></span> This was a somewhat more difficult and ambitious
-undertaking, since the number of subjects involved was
-larger, and because with this group of men we could not
-expect quite that high degree of intelligent co-operation
-afforded by the preceding subjects. Still, this very fact was
-in a sense an added inducement, since it offered the opportunity
-of experimenting with a body of men who naturally
-would not take kindly to anything that looked like deprivation,
-and whose continued co-operation could be expected
-only by satisfying their natural demands for food. If this
-could be accomplished by an intelligent prescription in their
-daily diet, and the experiment brought to a successful conclusion,
-with maintenance of body-weight, nitrogen equilibrium,
-health, strength, and general vigor; with an intake
-of proteid food essentially equal to that adopted by the preceding
-subjects, corroborative evidence of the highest value
-would be obtained.</p>
-
-<p>The detail was composed of a detachment of twenty men
-from the Hospital Corps of the army, under the command
-of a first lieutenant and assistant surgeon. They were located
-in a convenient house near to the laboratory, where they lived
-during their six months’ stay in New Haven, under military
-discipline, and subject to the constant surveillance of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_193">193</span>
-commanding officer and the non-commissioned officers. Having
-well-trained cooks and assistants, with all necessary
-facilities for preparing and serving their food, with members
-of the laboratory staff to superintend the weighing of the
-food as it was placed before the men, and with intelligent
-clerks to attend to the many details connected with such an
-undertaking, a somewhat unique physiological experiment
-was started. Thirteen members of the detachment really
-took part in the experiment as subjects, and they represented
-a great variety of types: of different ages, nationalities,
-temperaments, and degrees of intelligence. They were men
-accustomed to living an active life under varying conditions,
-and they naturally had great liking for the pleasures of eating.
-Further, it should be remembered that, although the
-men had volunteered for the experiment, they had no personal
-interest whatever in the principles involved, and it
-could not be expected that they would willingly incommode
-themselves, or suffer any great amount of personal inconvenience.
-Again, there were necessary restrictions placed
-upon their movements, when relieved from duty, which constituted
-something of a hardship in the minds of many of the
-men and added to the irksomeness and monotony of their
-daily life. Regularity of life was insisted upon, and this
-was a condition which brought to some of the men a new
-experience. These facts are mentioned because their recital
-will help to make clear that, from the standpoint of the men,
-there were certain depressing influences connected with the
-experiment which would add to any personal discomfort
-caused by restriction of diet.</p>
-
-<p>The ordinary army ration to which these men were accustomed
-was rich in proteid, especially in meat, and during the
-first few days they were allowed to follow their usual dietary
-habits, in order that data might be obtained bearing on their
-average food consumption. The details of one day’s food<span class="pagenum" id="Page_194">194</span>
-intake will suffice to show the average character and amount
-of the food eaten per man:</p>
-
-<div class="fs80">
-<p class="pl3hi3">Breakfast.&mdash;Beefsteak 222 grams, gravy 68 grams, fried potatoes 234 grams,
-onions 34 grams, bread 144 grams, coffee 679 grams, sugar 18 grams.</p>
-
-<p class="pl3hi3">Dinner.&mdash;Beef 171 grams, boiled potatoes 350 grams, onions 55 grams, bread
-234 grams, coffee 916 grams, sugar 27 grams.</p>
-
-<p class="pl3hi3">Supper.&mdash;Corned beef 195 grams, potatoes 170 grams, onions 21 grams, bread
-158 grams, fruit jelly 107 grams, coffee 450 grams, sugar 21 grams.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>It is not necessary to comment upon the large proportion
-of proteid matter in the day’s ration; the three large portions
-of meat testify clearly enough to that fact, while the
-three equally large volumes of coffee indicate a natural disposition
-toward generous consumption of anything available.
-Habit, reinforced by inclination, had evidently placed these
-men on a high plane of food consumption.</p>
-
-<p>For a period of six months, a daily dietary was prescribed
-for the subjects; the food for each meal and for every man
-being of known composition, each article being carefully
-weighed, while the content of nitrogen in the day’s ration
-was so graded as to bring about a gradual reduction in the
-amount of proteid ingested. The rate of proteid katabolism
-was likewise determined each day by careful estimation of
-the excreted nitrogen, balance experiments being made from
-time to time in order to ascertain if the men were in a condition
-of nitrogen equilibrium. Finally, it should be mentioned
-that the subjects lived a fairly active life, having
-each day a certain amount of prescribed exercise in the
-university gymnasium, in addition to the regular drill and
-other duties associated with their usual work.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp100" id="illus-209" style="max-width: 46.0625em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/illus-209.jpg" alt="" />
- <div class="caption"><p><i>Photograph of the soldiers taken at the close of the experiment</i></p></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp100" id="illus-210" style="max-width: 48.0625em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/illus-210.jpg" alt="" />
- <div class="caption"><p><i>Photograph of the soldiers taken at the close of the experiment</i></p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>As just stated, the amount of proteid food was gradually
-reduced, three weeks being taken to bring the amount down
-to a level somewhat commensurate with the estimated needs
-of the body. This naturally resulted in diminishing largely
-the intake of meat, though by no means entirely excluding<span class="pagenum" id="Page_195">195</span>
-it. Effort was constantly made to introduce as much variety
-as was possible with simple foods, though the main problem
-with this group of men was to keep the volume of the food
-up to such a point as would dispel any notion that they
-were not having enough to eat. A second problem, which
-at first threatened trouble, was the fear of the men, as they
-saw the proportion of meat gradually drop off, that they were
-destined to lose their strength; but fortunately, they very
-soon began to realize that their fears in this direction were
-groundless, and a little later their personal experience opened
-their eyes to possible advantages which quickly drove away
-all further thought of danger, and made them quite content
-to continue the experiment. We may introduce here a few
-samples of the daily food given to the men after they had
-reached their lower level of proteid intake:</p>
-
-
-<p class="tac"><i>January 15.</i></p>
-<div class="fs80">
-<p class="pl3hi3">Breakfast.&mdash;Wheat griddle cakes 200 grams, syrup 50 grams, one cup <span class="nowrap">coffee<a id="FNanchor_62" href="#Footnote_62" class="fnanchor">62</a></span>
-350 grams.</p>
-
-<p class="pl3hi3">Dinner.&mdash;Codfish balls (4 parts potato, 1 part fish, fried in pork fat) 150 grams,
-stewed tomato 200 grams, bread 75 grams, one cup coffee 350 grams,
-apple pie 95 grams.</p>
-
-<p class="pl3hi3">Supper.&mdash;Apple fritters 200 grams, stewed prunes 125 grams, bread 50 grams,
-butter 15 grams, one cup tea 350 grams.</p>
-
-<p class="tac">Total nitrogen content of the day’s food = 8.560 grams.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="tac"><i>January 16.</i></p>
-<div class="fs80">
-<p class="pl3hi3">Breakfast.&mdash;Soft oatmeal 150 grams, milk 100 grams, sugar 30 grams, bread
-30 grams, butter 10 grams, one cup coffee 350 grams.</p>
-
-<p class="pl3hi3">Dinner.&mdash;Baked macaroni with a little cheese 200 grams, stewed tomato 200
-grams, bread 50 grams, tapioca-peach pudding 150 grams, one cup coffee
-350 grams.</p>
-
-<p class="pl3hi3">Supper.&mdash;Fried bacon 20 grams, French fried potato 100 grams, bread 75
-grams, jam 75 grams, one cup tea 350 grams.</p>
-
-<p class="tac">Total nitrogen content of the day’s food = 7.282 grams.</p>
-</div>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_196">196</span></p>
-
-
-<p class="tac"><i>March 1.</i></p>
-<div class="fs80">
-<p class="pl3hi3">Breakfast.&mdash;Fried rice 150 grams, syrup 50 grams, baked potato 150 grams,
-butter 10 grams, one cup coffee 350 grams.</p>
-
-<p class="pl3hi3">Dinner.&mdash;Thick pea soup 250 grams, boiled onions 150 grams, boiled sweet
-potato 150 grams, bread 75 grams, butter 20 grams, one cup coffee 350
-grams.</p>
-
-<p class="pl3hi3">Supper.&mdash;Celery-lettuce-apple salad 120 grams, crackers 32 grams, American
-cheese 20 grams, potato chips 79 grams, one cup tea 350 grams, rice
-custard 100 grams.</p>
-
-<p class="tac">Total nitrogen content of the day’s food = 7.825 grams.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="tac"><i>March 3.</i></p>
-<div class="fs80">
-<p class="pl3hi3">Breakfast.&mdash;Boiled hominy 175 grams, milk 125 grams, sugar 25 grams, baked
-potato 150 grams, butter 10 grams, one cup coffee 350 grams.</p>
-
-<p class="pl3hi3">Dinner.&mdash;Hamburg steak with much bread, fat, and onions 150 grams, boiled
-potato 250 grams, bread 75 grams, butter 10 grams, one cup coffee 350
-grams.</p>
-
-<p class="pl3hi3">Supper.&mdash;Tapioca-peach pudding 250 grams, bread 75 grams, butter 20 grams,
-jam 75 grams, one cup tea 350 grams.</p>
-
-<p class="tac">Total nitrogen content of the day’s food = 8.750 grams.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="tac"><i>March 6.</i></p>
-<div class="fs80">
-<p class="pl3hi3">Breakfast.&mdash;Sliced banana 100 grams, fried Indian meal 150 grams, syrup 50
-grams, baked potato 150 grams, butter 10 grams, one cup coffee 350
-grams.</p>
-
-<p class="pl3hi3">Dinner.&mdash;Corned beef 50 grams, boiled cabbage 200 grams, mashed potato 250
-grams, bread 75 grams, fried rice 100 grams, jam 75 grams, one cup
-coffee 350 grams.</p>
-
-<p class="pl3hi3">Supper.&mdash;Crackers 32 grams, butter 10 grams, sardine 14 grams, sponge cake
-150 grams, apple sauce 150 grams, one cup tea 350 grams.</p>
-
-<p class="tac">Total nitrogen content of the day’s food = 10.265 grams.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="tac"><i>March 30.</i></p>
-<div class="fs80">
-<p class="pl3hi3">Breakfast.&mdash;Sliced banana 250 grams, fried hominy 150 grams, butter 10
-grams, syrup 75 grams, one cup coffee 350 grams.</p>
-
-<p class="pl3hi3">Dinner.&mdash;Codfish balls 125 grams, mashed potato 250 grams, stewed tomato
-200 grams, bread 35 grams, apple sauce 200 grams, one cup coffee 350
-grams.</p>
-
-<p class="pl3hi3">Supper.&mdash;Chopped fresh cabbage with salt, pepper, and vinegar 75 grams,
-bread 50 grams, butter 20 grams, fried sweet potato 250 grams, cranberry
-sauce 200 grams, sponge cake 50 grams, one cup tea 350 grams.</p>
-
-<p class="tac">Total nitrogen content of the day’s food = 9.356 grams.</p>
-</div>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_197">197</span></p>
-
-<p class="tac"><i>March 31.</i></p>
-<div class="fs80">
-<p class="pl3hi3">Breakfast.&mdash;Fried Indian meal 100 grams, syrup 75 grams, baked potato 250
-grams, butter 20 grams, one cup coffee 350 grams.</p>
-
-<p class="pl3hi3">Dinner.&mdash;Tomato soup, thick, with potatoes and onions boiled in, 300 grams,
-scrambled egg 50 grams, mashed potato 200 grams, bread 50 grams,
-butter 10 grams, one cup coffee 350 grams.</p>
-
-<p class="pl3hi3">Supper.&mdash;Fried bacon 20 grams, boiled potato 200 grams, butter 10 grams,
-bread pudding 150 grams, sliced banana 200 grams, one cup tea 350
-grams.</p>
-
-<p class="tac">Total nitrogen content of the day’s food = 8.420 grams.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="tac"><i>April 1.</i></p>
-<div class="fs80">
-<p class="pl3hi3">Breakfast.&mdash;Fried hominy 150 grams, syrup 75 grams, baked potato 200 grams,
-butter 20 grams, one cup coffee 350 grams.</p>
-
-<p class="pl3hi3">Dinner.&mdash;Baked spaghetti 200 grams, mashed potato 250 grams, boiled turnip
-150 grams, bread 35 grams, butter 10 grams, apple sauce 200 grams, one
-cup coffee 350 grams.</p>
-
-<p class="pl3hi3">Supper.&mdash;Fried bacon 25 grams, fried sweet potato 200 grams, bread 35 grams,
-butter 20 grams, jam 100 grams, apple-tapioca pudding 300 grams, one
-cup tea 350 grams.</p>
-
-<p class="tac">Total nitrogen content of the day’s food = 7.342 grams.</p>
-</div>
-<p>These dietaries are fair samples of the daily food given the
-men during the last five months of the experiment. If we
-place the intake of nitrogen at 8.5 grams per day, or even 9
-grams daily, it would mean at the most an average daily consumption
-of 56 grams of proteid; viz., about one-third the
-amount they were accustomed to take under their ordinary
-modes of life. Of greater interest, however, is the rate of
-proteid katabolism shown by these men under the above
-conditions of diet, during the five months’ period. The
-average daily output of metabolized nitrogen for each man
-ranged from 7.03 grams&mdash;the lowest&mdash;to 8.91 grams&mdash;the
-highest. An excretion of 7.03 grams of nitrogen per day
-means a katabolism, or breaking down, of 43.9 grams of proteid
-matter; while the excretion of 8.91 grams of nitrogen
-corresponds to a katabolism of 55.6 grams of proteid. The
-grand average, <i>i. e.</i>, the average daily output of nitrogen<span class="pagenum" id="Page_198">198</span>
-of all the men for the five months’ period amounted to 7.8
-grams per man, corresponding to an average daily katabolism
-of 48.75 grams of proteid. The heaviest man of the group
-had a body-weight of 74 kilograms, while his average daily
-output of metabolized nitrogen amounted to 7.84 grams.
-This corresponds to 0.106 gram of metabolized nitrogen per
-kilo of body-weight; a figure which agrees quite closely with
-the lowest figures obtained with the preceding subjects when
-calculated to the same unit of weight. Many of the men,
-however, metabolized considerably more nitrogen or proteid
-in proportion to their body-weight, due in a measure at least
-to the fact that they were being fed more liberally with proteid
-food than was really necessary for the needs of the body.
-In this group, we have a body of men doing a reasonable
-amount of physical work, who lived without discomfort for
-five consecutive months on a daily consumption of proteid
-food not much, if any, greater than one-third the amount
-called for by common usage, and the average fuel value of
-which certainly did not exceed 3000 calories per day. Indeed,
-so far as could be determined on the basis of chemical
-composition, the heat value of the food was quite a little
-less than this figure would imply.</p>
-
-<p>If the relatively small amount of proteid food made use of
-in this trial was inadequate for the real necessities of the
-body, some indication of it would be expected to reveal itself,
-with at least some of the men, by the end of the period. One
-criticism frequently made is that the subject draws in some
-measure upon his store of body material. Should this be the
-case, it is evident that body-weight&mdash;in such a long experiment
-as this&mdash;will gradually but surely diminish. Further,
-the subject will show a minus nitrogen balance, <i>i.&nbsp;e.</i>, there will
-be a constant tendency for the body to give off more nitrogen
-than it takes in. As bearing on the first point, the following
-table showing the body-weights of the men at the commencement<span class="pagenum" id="Page_199">199</span>
-of the experiment in October, and at the close of the
-experiment in April will be of interest:</p>
-
-
-<div>
-<p class="tabtitle">TABLE OF BODY-WEIGHTS</p>
-
-<div class="center">
-<table class="mb1em" cellpadding="2" summary="">
-<tr>
-<th class="tal blm bb"></th>
-<th class="tac brl bb prl2"><div>October, 1903</div></th>
-<th class="tac brm bb prl26"><div>April, 1904</div></th>
-</tr>
-<tr class="fs75">
-<td class="tal blm"></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>kilos</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>kilos</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl03">Steltz</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>52.3</div></td>
-<td class="tal brm pl3">53.0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl03">Zooman</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>54.0</div></td>
-<td class="tal brm pl3">55.0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl03">Coffman</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>59.1</div></td>
-<td class="tal brm pl3">58.0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl03">Morris</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>59.2</div></td>
-<td class="tal brm pl3">59.0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl03">Broyles</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>59.4</div></td>
-<td class="tal brm pl3">61.0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl03">Loewenthal&emsp;&emsp;</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>60.1</div></td>
-<td class="tal brm pl3">59.0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl03">Sliney</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>61.3</div></td>
-<td class="tal brm pl3">60.6</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl03">Cohn</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>65.0</div></td>
-<td class="tal brm pl3">62.6</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl03">Oakman</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>66.7</div></td>
-<td class="tal brm pl3">62.1</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl03">Henderson</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>71.3</div></td>
-<td class="tal brm pl3">71.0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl03">Fritz</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>76.0</div></td>
-<td class="tal brm pl3">72.6</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl03">Bates</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>72.7</div></td>
-<td class="tal brm pl3">64.3 (Feb.)</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm bbm pl03">Davis</td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>59.3</div></td>
-<td class="tal brm bbm pl3">57.2 (Jan.)</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>As is readily seen, five of the men practically retained their
-weight or made a slight gain. Of the others, Coffman, Loewenthal,
-Sliney, and Cohn lost somewhat, but the amount was
-very small. Further, the loss occurred during the first few
-weeks of the experiment, after which their weight remained
-practically stationary. Fritz and Oakman lost weight somewhat
-more noticeably, but this loss likewise occurred during
-the earlier part of the trial. The accompanying photographs
-of Fritz, taken at the close of the experiment, show plainly that
-such loss of weight as he suffered did not detract from the
-appearance of his well-developed musculature. Certainly, the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_200">200</span>
-photographs do not show any signs of nitrogen starvation, or
-suggest the lack of any kind of food.</p>
-
-<p>Of all the men, Bates was the only one who underwent
-any great loss of weight. He, however, was quite stout, and
-the work in the gymnasium, reinforced by the change in diet,
-brought about what was for him a very desirable loss of body-weight.
-It is evident, therefore, that there was no marked
-or prolonged loss of body-weight as a result of the continued
-use of the low proteid diet. Regarding the second
-point, viz., nitrogen equilibrium, the following illustrations
-will suffice to indicate the relationship existing between the
-income and outgo of nitrogen. A balance experiment with
-each of the men, lasting seven days, February 29 to March 6,
-is here shown, the figures given being the daily averages for
-the period:</p>
-
-<div class="center">
-<table class="mtb1em" cellpadding="2" summary="">
-<tr>
-<th class="tal blm bb "></th>
-<th class="tac brl bb prl1"><div>Nitrogen<br />of Food.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brl bb prl1"><div>Nitrogen<br />of Urine.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brl bb prl1"><div>Nitrogen of<br />Excrement.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brm bb prl1"><div>Nitrogen<br />Balance.</div></th>
-</tr>
-<tr class="fs75">
-<td class="tal blm"></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>grams</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>grams</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>grams</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>grams</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl03">Oakman</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>9.52</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>7.24</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>1.76</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>+0.52</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl03">Henderson</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>9.40</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>7.90</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>1.00</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>+0.50</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl03">Morris</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>9.49</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>6.05</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>2.30</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>+1.14</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl03">Coffman</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>9.53</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>7.92</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>1.47</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>+0.14</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl03">Steltz</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>9.62</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>7.16</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>1.95</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>+0.51</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl03">Loewenthal&emsp;&emsp;</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>9.64</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>7.00</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>1.71</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>+0.95</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl03">Cohn</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>9.27</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>7.63</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>1.41</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>+0.23</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl03">Zooman</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>9.49</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>7.13</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>1.76</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>+0.60</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl03">Sliney</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>9.52</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>8.08</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>1.92</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>–0.48</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm prl03">Broyles</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>9.43</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>7.01</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>1.19</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>+1.23</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm bbm pl03">Fritz</td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>9.37</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>6.36</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>1.81</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm bbm"><div>+1.20</div></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp59" id="illus-217" style="max-width: 29.6875em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/illus-217.jpg" alt="" />
- <div class="caption"><p>FRITZ<br />
- <i>At the close of the experiment</i></p>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p>With one exception, all of the men were plainly having
-more proteid food than was necessary to maintain the body<span class="pagenum" id="Page_201">201</span>
-in nitrogen equilibrium, the plus nitrogen balance in most
-cases being fairly large. It is only necessary to remember
-that a gain to the body of 1 gram of nitrogen means a laying
-by of 6.25 grams of proteid, and with such a gain per day it
-is apparent that the men were really being supplied with an
-excess of proteid food. This view is supported by the fact
-that a later balance experiment, when considerably less proteid
-food was being given, still showed many of the men in a
-condition of plus balance, or with a minus balance so small as
-to indicate essentially nitrogen equilibrium. The following
-figures, being daily averages of a balance period about the
-first of April, may be offered in evidence:</p>
-
-<div class="center">
-<table class="mtb1em" cellpadding="2" summary="">
-<tr>
-<th class="tal blm bb"></th>
-<th class="tac brl bb prl1"><div>Nitrogen<br />of Food.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brl bb prl1"><div>Nitrogen<br />of Urine.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brl bb prl1"><div>Nitrogen of<br />Excrement.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brm bb prl1"><div>Nitrogen<br />Balance.</div></th>
-</tr>
-<tr class="fs75">
-<td class="tal blm"></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>grams</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>grams</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>grams</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>grams</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl03">Broyles</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>8.66</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>6.63</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>1.87</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>+0.16</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl03">Fritz</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>8.13</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>5.77</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>1.63</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>+0.73</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl03">Loewenthal&emsp;&emsp;</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>8.51</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>6.51</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>2.02</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>–0.02</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl03">Steltz</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>8.32</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>6.50</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>1.88</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>–0.06</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl03">Cohn</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>8.29</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>6.25</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>1.55</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>+0.49</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl03">Morris</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>8.45</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>6.49</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>2.27</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>–0.31</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm bbm pl03">Oakman</td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>8.62</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>7.04</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>1.87</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm bbm"><div>–0.29</div></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<p>A daily intake of 8.5 grams of nitrogen means the consumption
-of 53 grams of proteid. Under these conditions of
-diet, the average daily amount of nitrogen metabolized was
-6.45 grams, corresponding to 40.3 grams of proteid. The men
-were practically in a condition of nitrogen equilibrium, so
-that we are apparently justified in the general statement that
-the simple dietary followed with these men during the six
-months’ experiment, and which was accompanied by an average
-daily metabolism, after the first three weeks, of 7.8 grams
-of nitrogen, was certainly sufficient to maintain both body-weight<span class="pagenum" id="Page_202">202</span>
-and nitrogen equilibrium. Lastly, emphasis may be
-laid upon the fact that these values for nitrogen do not
-necessarily represent the minimal proteid requirement of the
-human body, since it is a well-established physiological principle
-that by increase of non-nitrogenous food the rate of
-proteid katabolism can always be further diminished; a principle
-which is plainly in harmony with the view that a high
-rate of proteid exchange is not a necessary requisite for the
-welfare of the body.</p>
-
-<p>The experimental results presented afford very convincing
-proof that so far as body-weight and nitrogen equilibrium are
-concerned, the needs of the body are fully met by a consumption
-of proteid food far below the fixed dietary standards,
-and still further below the amounts called for by the recorded
-habits of mankind. General health is equally well
-maintained, and with suggestions of improvement that are
-frequently so marked as to challenge attention. Most conspicuous,
-however, though something that was entirely unlooked
-for, was the effect observed on the muscular strength
-of the various subjects. When the experiments were planned,
-it was deemed important to arrange for careful quantitative
-tests of the more conspicuous muscles of the body, with a
-view to measuring any loss of strength that might occur from
-the proposed reduction in proteid food. The thought that
-prompted this action was a result of the latent feeling that
-somehow muscular strength must be dependent more or less
-upon the proteid constituents of the muscles, and that consequently
-the cutting down of proteid food would inevitably
-be felt in some degree. The most that could be hoped for
-was that muscle tone and muscular strength might be maintained
-unimpaired. Hence, we were at first quite astonished
-at what was actually observed.</p>
-
-<p>With the soldier detail, fifteen distinct strength tests were
-made with each man during the six months’ period, by<span class="pagenum" id="Page_203">203</span>
-means of appropriate dynamometer tests applied to the muscles
-of the back, legs, chest, upper arms, and forearms,
-reinforced by quarter-mile run, vault, and ladder tests, etc.
-The so-called “total strength” of the man was computed
-by multiplying the weight of the body by the number of
-times the subject was able to push up (strength of triceps
-muscles) and pull up (strength of biceps muscles) his body
-while upon the parallel bars, to this product being added
-the strength (dynamometer tests) of hands, legs, back, and
-chest. It should be added that all of these tests were
-made quite independently in the university gymnasium by
-the medical assistants and others in charge of the work there.
-It will suffice for our purpose to give here the strength tests
-of the various members of the soldier detail at the beginning
-and close of the experiment.</p>
-
-
-<div>
-<p class="tabtitle">TOTAL STRENGTH</p>
-
-<div class="center">
-<table class="mb1em" cellpadding="2" summary="">
-<tr>
-<th class="tal blm bb"></th>
-<th class="tac brl bb prl2"><div>October.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brm bb prl26"><div>April.</div></th>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl03">Broyles</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>2560</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>5530</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl03">Coffman</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>2835</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>6269</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl03">Cohn</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>2210</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>4002</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl03">Fritz</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>2504</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>5178</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl03">Henderson</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>2970</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>4598</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl03">Loewenthal&emsp;&emsp;</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>2463</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>5277</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl03">Morris</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>2543</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>4869</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl03">Oakman</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>3445</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>5055</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl03">Sliney</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>3245</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>5307</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl03">Steltz</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>2838</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>4581</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm bbm pl03">Zooman</td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>3070</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm bbm"><div>5457</div></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_204">204</span>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Without exception, we note with all of the men a phenomenal
-gain in strength, which demands explanation. Was it
-all due to the change in diet? Probably not, for these men
-at the beginning of the experiment were untrained, and it is
-not to be assumed that months of practical work in the gymnasium
-would not result in a certain amount of physical development,
-with corresponding gain in muscular skill and
-power. Putting this question aside for the moment, however,
-it is surely proper to emphasize this fact; viz., that although
-the men for a period of five months were restricted to a daily
-diet containing only one-third to one-half the amount of
-proteid food they had been accustomed to, there was no loss
-of physical strength; no indication of any physical deterioration
-that could be detected. In other words, the men were
-certainly not being weakened by the lowered intake of proteid
-food. This is in harmony with the principle, already discussed,
-that the energy of muscle work comes primarily
-from the breaking down of non-nitrogenous material, and consequently
-a diminished intake of proteid food can have no
-inhibitory effect, provided, of course, there is an adequate
-amount of proteid ingested to satisfy the endogenous requirements
-of the tissues.</p>
-
-<p>On the other hand, recalling the large number of nitrogenous
-cleavage products which result from the breaking down
-of proteid material, we can conceive of an exaggerated exogenous
-proteid katabolism which may flood the tissues and
-the surrounding lymph with a variety of nitrogenous waste
-products, having an inhibitory effect upon the muscle fibres
-themselves, or upon the peripheral endings of the motor nerves,
-by which the muscles are prevented, directly or indirectly, from
-working at their highest degree of efficiency. This being true,
-a reduction of the exogenous katabolism to a level more nearly
-commensurate with the real needs of the body might result in
-a marked increase in the functional power of the tissue. However<span class="pagenum" id="Page_205">205</span>
-this may be, the fact remains that all of the subjects
-showed this great gain in strength; and furthermore, there
-was a noticeable gain in self-reliance and courage in their
-athletic work, both of which are likewise indicative of an improved
-condition of the body. How far these improvements
-are attributable to training and to the more regular life the
-men were leading, and how far to the change in diet, cannot
-be definitely determined. We may venture the opinion, however,
-for reasons to be made clear shortly, that the change in
-diet was in a measure at least responsible for the increased
-efficiency. As the writer has already expressed it, there must
-be enough food to make good the daily waste of tissue, enough
-food to furnish the energy of muscular contraction, but any
-surplus over and above what is necessary to supply these needs
-is not only a waste, but may prove an incubus, retarding the
-smooth working of the machinery and detracting from the
-power of the organism to do its best work.</p>
-
-<p>Let us now turn our attention for a moment to the group
-of university athletes, remembering that these men had been
-in training for many months, and some of them for several
-years, prior to the commencement of the trial with a reduced
-proteid intake. In the words of the director of the gymnasium,
-“These eight men were in constant practice and in the
-pink of condition; they were in ‘training form’ when they
-began the changed diet.” Some of them had gained marked
-distinction for their athletic work; one during the early
-months of the test won the Collegiate and All-around Inter-collegiate
-Championship of America. Compare now the
-strength tests of these men as taken at the beginning and
-end of the five months’ experiment, during which they reduced
-their daily intake of proteid food more than fifty per cent:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_206">206</span></p>
-
-
-<div>
-<p class="tabtitle">TOTAL STRENGTH</p>
-
-<div class="center">
-<table class="mb1em" cellpadding="2" summary="">
-<tr>
-<th class="tal blm bb"></th>
-<th class="tac brl bb prl2"><div>January.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brm bb prl26"><div>June.</div></th>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl03">G.&nbsp;W. Anderson&emsp;</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>4913</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>5722</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl03">W.&nbsp;L. Anderson&emsp;</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>6016</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>9472</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl03">Bellis</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>5993</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>8165</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl03">Callahan</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>2154</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>3983</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl03">Donahue</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>4584</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>5917</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl03">Jacobus</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>4548</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>5667</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl03">Schenker</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>5728</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>7135</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm bbm pl03">Stapleton</td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>5351</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm bbm"><div>6833</div></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>It is to be observed that the majority of these trained men
-showed at the first trial in January a total strength test approximately
-equal to that of the soldier detail at the close of
-their experiment. This by no means implies that the latter
-men owed their gain in strength wholly to the systematic
-training they had undergone, but it is certainly plausible to
-assume that in a measure this was the case. In any event, it
-is plain that the long-continued low proteid diet of the soldiers
-had not interfered with a progressive muscular development,
-and the attainment of a high degree of muscular
-strength.</p>
-
-<p>The noticeable feature in the figures obtained with the athletes,
-however, is the striking difference between the January
-and June results. Every man, without exception, showed a
-decided gain in his muscular power as measured by the strength
-tests. This improvement, to be sure, was not so marked as
-with the soldiers; a fact to be expected, since with these men
-the element of training and the acquisition of proficiency in
-athletic work could have played no part in the observed gain.
-Further, most of the tests indicated that the gain was progressive,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_207">207</span>
-each month showing an improvement, in harmony with
-the growing effect of the diminished proteid intake. With
-these subjects, the only tangible change in their mode of life
-which could in any sense be considered as responsible for their
-gain in strength was the change in diet. Consequently, it
-seems perfectly justifiable to conclude that the observations
-presented afford reasonable proof of the beneficial effects of a
-lowered proteid intake upon the muscular strength of man.</p>
-
-<p>The significance of such a conclusion is manifestly obvious.
-It confirms and gives added force to the observations that
-man can profitably maintain nitrogen equilibrium, and body-weight,
-upon a much smaller amount of proteid food than he
-is accustomed to consume. It harmonizes with the view that
-the normal requirements of the body for food, under which
-health, strength, and maximum efficiency are best maintained,
-are on a far lower level than the ordinary practices of mankind
-would lead one to believe. The widespread opinion that
-a rich proteid diet, with the correspondingly high rate of
-proteid metabolism, is a necessity for the preservation of
-bodily strength and vigor, is seen to be without foundation;
-for even the most conservative estimate of the real value of
-these strength tests must carry with it the conviction that
-lowering the consumption of proteid food does not at least
-result in any weakening of the body. This is a fact of vital
-importance, for it needs no argument to convince even the
-most optimistic that while it might be possible to maintain
-body-weight and nitrogen equilibrium on a small amount of
-proteid food, such a form of physiological economy would not
-only be of no advantage to the individual, but would be
-positively injurious if there was a gradual weakening of the
-muscles of the body with decrease of physical strength, vigor,
-and endurance.</p>
-
-<p>Another fact to be emphasized in this connection was the
-conviction, gradually acquired by many of the subjects, that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_208">208</span>
-they suffered less from fatigue after vigorous muscular effort
-than formerly. This was especially conspicuous in the case
-of Donahue, whose work on the Varsity basket-ball team
-called for vigorous exercise. It is interesting to note that
-this athlete, of 63 kilos body-weight, for the last four months
-of the experiment showed an average daily katabolism of 7.45
-grams of nitrogen, corresponding to a breaking down of 46.5
-grams of proteid material daily. Yet, with this low rate of
-proteid exchange, he maintained his position on the team with
-satisfaction to all, and with the consciousness of improved
-physical condition and greater freedom from fatigue. Other
-subjects, as the laboratory workers of the professional group,
-observed that the customary late afternoon fatigue, coincident
-with the continued walking and standing about the laboratory,
-gradually became far less conspicuous than usual; so that
-there seemed to be a consensus of opinion that in some way
-the change in diet was conducive to greater freedom from
-muscular weariness.</p>
-
-<p>It is well understood by physiologists that the ability of
-a muscle to do work is inhibited by any condition that tends
-to depress the general nutritive state of the body, or that
-interferes with the local nutrition of the muscle or muscles
-involved. On the other hand, there are certain well-recognized
-conditions that tend to augment the power of the muscle,
-notably an increased circulation of blood through the tissue,
-the taking of food, and especially the introduction of sugar.
-Further, experiments have shown that when a given set of
-muscles has been made to work excessively, other muscles of
-the body quite remote will share in the fatigue, thus implying
-that muscular weariness and the diminished power to do work
-are connected with what may be termed fatigue products,
-which are distributed by means of the circulation. In this
-way, muscles and nerve endings alike are exposed to the
-inhibitory influence of waste products of unknown composition,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_209">209</span>
-formed in the muscle, and as previously stated, we may
-conceive of an exaggerated exogenous katabolism, with excessive
-proteid intake, by which muscular fatigue and weariness
-may be augmented; hence, the beneficial effect in this direction
-of a more rational food consumption, by which proteid katabolism
-shall be reduced to a true physiological level.</p>
-
-<p>With these marked effects on strength and fatigue, it is
-reasonable to assume that some corresponding action may be
-exerted on physical endurance. As is well known, strength
-and endurance, though related, are quite distinct and can be
-separately measured. Strength tests, however, as usually
-carried out in gymnasium work, do involve in considerable
-degree the question of endurance, since it is customary to use
-as one of the factors in estimating total strength the number
-of times the man can pull up, or push up, his body on the
-parallel bars. Strictly speaking, however, the strength of
-a muscle is measured by the maximum force it can exert in a
-single contraction, while its endurance is estimated from the
-number of times it can contract well within the limit of its
-strength.</p>
-
-<p>It is well known that endurance, both physical and
-mental, is one of the most variable of the human faculties,
-and it is usually considered that exercise or training is the
-chief cause of the differences so frequently seen. The Maine
-guide will row a boat or paddle a canoe for the entire day
-without undue fatigue, while the novice, though he may have
-the necessary strength, lacks the endurance to continue the
-task longer than a few hours. As expressed by Professor
-Fisher, “Some persons are tired by climbing a flight of stairs,
-whereas the Swiss guides, throughout the summer season, day
-after day spend the entire time in climbing the Matterhorn
-and other peaks; some persons are ‘winded’ by running a
-block for a street car, whereas a Chinese coolie will run for
-hours on end; in mental work, some persons are unable to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_210">210</span>
-apply themselves more than an hour at a time, whereas
-others, like Humboldt, can work almost continuously through
-eighteen hours of the day.” Again, Fisher states that
-“among some 75 tests of different persons holding their arms
-horizontal, many were found whose arms actually dropped
-against their will inside of 10 minutes, whereas several were
-able to hold them up over 1 hour, and one man held them 3
-hours and 20 minutes, or a round 200 minutes, and then
-dropped them voluntarily. Similarly with deep knee-bending,
-some persons were found physically unable to rise again from
-the stooping posture after accomplishing less than 500 bendings,
-whereas several succeeded in stooping 1000 times, and in
-one case, 2400.” Here, we have inherent differences in endurance
-not associated with training or exercise, and the question
-may well be asked, What is the cause of these radical variations
-in the ability to repeat a simple muscular exertion?</p>
-
-<p>Hitherto, little attention has been paid to the possible influence
-of diet upon this faculty. It has always been assumed
-that endurance, like physical strength, is augmented by a rich
-proteid diet, but it has never been considered that diet by itself
-was a factor of any great moment as compared with training or
-persistent exercise. It is true that claims have been advanced
-from time to time concerning the beneficial effects on endurance
-of a vegetable diet, and vegetarians have frequently presented
-glowing reports of the great increase in endurance they
-have experienced, but little attention has been given to such
-statements, and the matter has remained more or less in
-obscurity.</p>
-
-<p>Recently, Professor Irving Fisher<span class="nowrap">,<a id="FNanchor_63" href="#Footnote_63" class="fnanchor">63</a></span> of Yale, has conducted
-an interesting experiment on the influence of a change in
-diet on endurance, having the co-operation of nine healthy<span class="pagenum" id="Page_211">211</span>
-students as subjects. The experiment extended through five
-months, with endurance tests at the beginning, middle, and end
-of the period. At the outset, the men consumed daily an
-average of 2830 calories, of which 210 were in the form of
-flesh foods, such as meats, poultry, fish and shell-fish; 2.6
-calories of proteid being ingested for each pound of body-weight.
-At the close of the experiment, the per capita calories
-had fallen to 2220, of which only 30 were in flesh
-foods, and the proteid had fallen to 1.4 calories per pound of
-body-weight. In other words, the total calories of the daily
-ration had dropped off about 25 per cent, the proteid about 40
-per cent, and the flesh foods over 80 per cent, or to about one-sixth
-of their original amount.</p>
-
-<p>To determine the endurance of the subjects, six simple
-gymnastic tests were employed, and one of mental endurance.
-The physical tests consisted of (1) in rising on the toes as
-often as possible; (2) deep knee-bending, or stooping as far
-as possible and rising to the standing posture, repeating
-as often as possible; (3) while lying on the back, raising
-the legs from the floor to a vertical position and lowering
-them again, repeating to the point of physical exhaustion;
-(4) raising a 5-lb. dumb-bell (with the triceps) in each
-hand from the shoulder up to the highest point above the
-head, repeating to the point of physical exhaustion; (5)
-holding the arms from the sides horizontally for as long a
-time as possible; (6) raising a dumb-bell (with the biceps)
-in one hand from a position in which the arm hangs free,
-to the shoulder and back, repeating to the point of physical
-exhaustion. This test was taken with four successive dumb-bells
-of decreasing weight, viz., 50, 25, 10, and 5 pounds
-respectively. The mental test consisted in adding specified
-columns of figures as rapidly as possible, the object being to
-find out whether the rapidity of performing such work tended
-to improve during the experiment.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_212">212</span></p>
-
-<p>The following table shows the results of the three sets of
-physical tests made in January, March, and June:</p>
-
-
-<div>
-<p class="tabtitle mrl20">TESTS OF PHYSICAL ENDURANCE WITH THE NINE SUBJECTS</p>
-
-<div class="center">
-<table class="mb1em" cellpadding="2" summary="" border="0">
-<tr>
-<th class="tal blm bb"></th>
-<th class="tac brl bb"><div>Time.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brl bb"><div>B.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brl bb"><div>E.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brl bb"><div>Lq.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brl bb"><div>Lw.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brl bb"><div>M.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brl bb"><div>P.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brl bb"><div>R.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brl bb"><div>T.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brm bb"><div>W.</div></th>
-</tr>
-<tr style="line-height: 0.8em;">
-<td class="tal blm ptrl03">1.&ensp;Rising on</td>
-<td class="tal brl ptl03">Jan.</td>
-<td class="tar brl ptr03"><div>300</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl ptr03"><div>1007</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl ptr03"><div>333</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl ptr03"><div>69</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl ptr03"><div>127</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl ptr03"><div>1482</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl ptr03"><div>702</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl ptr03"><div>900</div></td>
-<td class="tar brm ptr03"><div>1263</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr style="line-height: 0.8em;">
-<td class="tal blm pl16">toes</td>
-<td class="tal brl pl03">Mar.</td>
-<td class="tar brl pr03"><div>400</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr03"><div>1265</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr03"><div>2620</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr03"><div>65</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr03"><div>400</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr03"></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr03"><div>831</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr03"><div>1500</div></td>
-<td class="tar brm pr03"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr style="line-height: 0.8em;">
-<td class="tar blm"></td>
-<td class="tal brl pb1 prl03">June</td>
-<td class="tar brl pb1 pr03"><div>500</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pb1 pr03"><div>1061</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pb1 pr03"><div>3000</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pb1 pr03"><div>85</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pb1 pr03"><div>1500</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pb1 pr03"><div>1800</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pb1 pr03"><div>1263</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pb1 pr03"><div>1800</div></td>
-<td class="tar brm pb1 pr03"><div>3350</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr style="line-height: 0.8em;">
-<td class="tal blm vat prl03">2.&ensp;Deep knee-</td>
-<td class="tal brl pl03">Jan.</td>
-<td class="tar brl pr03"><div>82</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr03"><div>142</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr03"><div>70</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr03"><div>48</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr03"><div>132</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr03"><div>208</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr03"><div>374</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr03"><div>129</div></td>
-<td class="tar brm pr03"><div>404</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr style="line-height: 0.8em;">
-<td class="tal blm pl16">bending</td>
-<td class="tal brl pl03">Mar.</td>
-<td class="tar brl"></td>
-<td class="tar brl"></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr03"><div>191</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr03"><div>47</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl"></td>
-<td class="tar brl"></td>
-<td class="tar brl"></td>
-<td class="tar brl"></td>
-<td class="tar brm"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr style="line-height: 0.8em;">
-<td class="tar blm"></td>
-<td class="tal brl pb1 prl03">June</td>
-<td class="tar brl pb1 pr03"><div>200</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pb1 pr03"><div>81</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pb1 pr03"><div>202</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pb1 pr03"><div>58</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pb1 pr03"><div>155</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pb1 pr03"><div>230</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pb1 pr03"><div>453</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pb1 pr03"><div>250</div></td>
-<td class="tar brm pb1 pr03"><div>508</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr style="line-height: 0.8em;">
-<td class="tal blm vat prl03">3.&ensp;Leg</td>
-<td class="tal brl pl03">Jan.</td>
-<td class="tar brl pr03"><div>25</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr03"><div>52</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr03"><div>9</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr03"><div>22</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr03"><div>30</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr03"><div>27</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr03"><div>50</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr03"><div>23</div></td>
-<td class="tar brm pr03"><div>30</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr style="line-height: 0.6em;">
-<td class="tal blm pl16">raising</td>
-<td class="tal brl pl03">Mar.</td>
-<td class="tar brl"></td>
-<td class="tar brl"></td>
-<td class="tar brl"></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr03"><div>33</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl"></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr03"><div>34</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl"></td>
-<td class="tar brl"></td>
-<td class="tar brm pr03"><div>40</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr style="line-height: 0.8em;">
-<td class="tar blm"></td>
-<td class="tal brl pb1 prl03">June</td>
-<td class="tar brl pb1 pr03"><div>33</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pb1 pr03"><div>38</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pb1 pr03"><div>20</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pb1 pr03"><div>35</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pb1 pr03"><div>31</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pb1 pr03"><div>37</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pb1 pr03"><div>103</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pb1 pr03"><div>19</div></td>
-<td class="tar brm pb1 pr03"><div>53</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr style="line-height: 0.8em;">
-<td class="tal blm vat prl03">4.&ensp;5lb.</td>
-<td class="tal brl pl03">Jan.</td>
-<td class="tar brl pr03"><div>75</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr03"><div>138</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr03"><div>78</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr03"><div>38</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr03"><div>51</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr03"><div>44</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr03"><div>100</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr03"><div>83</div></td>
-<td class="tar brm pr03"><div>185</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr style="line-height: 0.8em;">
-<td class="tal blm pl16">Dumb-bell</td>
-<td class="tal brl pl03">Mar.</td>
-<td class="tar brl"></td>
-<td class="tar brl"></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr03"><div>106</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl"></td>
-<td class="tar brl"></td>
-<td class="tar brl"></td>
-<td class="tar brl"></td>
-<td class="tar brl"></td>
-<td class="tar brm"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr style="line-height: 0.8em;">
-<td class="tal blm pl16">(triceps)</td>
-<td class="tal brl prl03">June</td>
-<td class="tar brl pr03"><div>127</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr03"><div>59</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr03"><div>80</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr03"><div>51</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr03"><div>75</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr03"><div>56</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr03"><div>104</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr03"><div>101</div></td>
-<td class="tar brm pr03"><div>501</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="fs75">
-<td class="tal blm"></td>
-<td class="tal brl"></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>m.&ensp;s.</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>m.&ensp;s.</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>m.&ensp;s.</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>m.&ensp;s.</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>m.&ensp;s.</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>m.&ensp;s.</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>m.&ensp;s.</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>m.&ensp;s.</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>m.&ensp;s.</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr style="line-height: 0.8em;">
-<td class="tal blm vat prl03">5.&ensp;Holding</td>
-<td class="tal brl prl03">Jan.</td>
-<td class="tal brl prl03"><div>5–0</div></td>
-<td class="tal brl prl03"><div>1–33</div></td>
-<td class="tal brl prl03"><div>4–7</div></td>
-<td class="tal brl prl03"><div>3–37</div></td>
-<td class="tal brl prl03"><div>3–30</div></td>
-<td class="tal brl prl03"><div>5–39</div></td>
-<td class="tal brl prl03"><div>2–5</div></td>
-<td class="tal brl prl03"><div>3–22</div></td>
-<td class="tal brm prl03"><div>11–0</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr style="line-height: 0.8em;">
-<td class="tal blm pl16">arms hori-</td>
-<td class="tal brl pl03">Mar.</td>
-<td class="tar brl"></td>
-<td class="tar brl"></td>
-<td class="tar brl"></td>
-<td class="tar brl"></td>
-<td class="tal brl prl03"><div>5–49</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl"></td>
-<td class="tar brl"></td>
-<td class="tar brl"></td>
-<td class="tal brm prl03"><div>15–35</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr style="line-height: 0.8em;">
-<td class="tal blm pb1 pl16">zontal</td>
-<td class="tal brl pb1 prl03">June</td>
-<td class="tal brl pb1 prl03"><div>9–36</div></td>
-<td class="tal brl pb1 prl03"><div>2–56</div></td>
-<td class="tal brl pb1 prl03"><div>3–50</div></td>
-<td class="tal brl pb1 prl03"><div>3–0</div></td>
-<td class="tal brl pb1 prl03"><div>6–5</div></td>
-<td class="tal brl pb1 prl03"><div>10–1</div></td>
-<td class="tal brl pb1 prl03"><div>3–16</div></td>
-<td class="tal brl pb1 prl03"><div>3–24</div></td>
-<td class="tal brm pb1 prl03"><div>23–45</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr style="line-height: 0.8em;">
-<td class="tal blm prl03">6.&ensp;25lb.</td>
-<td class="tal brl prl03">Jan.</td>
-<td class="tar brl pr03"><div>50</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr03"><div>18</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr03"><div>16</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr03"><div>6</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr03"><div>20</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr03"><div>11</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr03"><div>10</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr03"><div>25</div></td>
-<td class="tar brm pr03"><div>54</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr style="line-height: 0.8em;">
-<td class="tal blm pl16">Dumb-bell</td>
-<td class="tal brl prl03">June</td>
-<td class="tar brl pr03"><div>105</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr03"><div>10</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr03"><div>26</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr03"><div>33</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr03"><div>30</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr03"><div>29</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr03"><div>27</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr03"><div>75</div></td>
-<td class="tar brm pr03"><div>108</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr style="line-height: 0.8em;">
-<td class="tal blm bbm pl16">(biceps)</td>
-<td class="tal brl bbm"></td>
-<td class="tar brl bbm"></td>
-<td class="tar brl bbm"></td>
-<td class="tar brl bbm"></td>
-<td class="tar brl bbm"></td>
-<td class="tar brl bbm"></td>
-<td class="tar brl bbm"></td>
-<td class="tar brl bbm"></td>
-<td class="tar brl bbm"></td>
-<td class="tar brm bbm"></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The data presented show a marked improvement in March
-and June over the record made at the beginning of the experiment
-in January, except in the case of one subject, E. As
-Fisher states, the increased endurance observed can be ascribed
-only to dietetic causes, since no other factors of known
-significance could have aided in the result. The dietetic
-changes, as we have seen, consisted in a slight reduction of
-the total amount of food consumed daily, but with a large
-reduction of the proteid element, especially from flesh foods.
-It is significant, says Fisher, that the only man whose
-strength and endurance showed any decrease was E, “whose<span class="pagenum" id="Page_213">213</span>
-case was exceptional in almost all respects. His reduction
-in quantity of food, except for a spurt at the end, was
-less than of most of the men; his reduction in proteid, with
-the same exception, was the least of all; his reduction in
-quantity of flesh foods was the least of all.” He stands out
-conspicuously as the one man whose endurance failed to
-improve. The mental test carried out with the subjects
-pointed to “a slight increase in mental quickness,” but the
-adding test was too short to be of great value.</p>
-
-<p>We see in these results another confirmation of the view
-that the welfare of the body is not impaired by a marked
-reduction in the amount of proteid food; on the contrary,
-benefit results in the increased efficiency which manifests
-itself in various directions. Physical endurance is an asset
-not to be ignored, and like the strength of an individual, it
-may well be fostered by the recognition and practice of
-a principle which seemingly has a firm physiological basis.
-Whether the fatigue poisons come from the excessive exogenous
-katabolism of proteids in general, or whether they are
-derived directly in a measure from flesh foods, need not be
-considered here; the main point is that by lowering the rate
-of proteid katabolism, which necessarily compels a reduction
-in the amount of flesh foods, there is a diminished quantity
-of nitrogenous waste floating about in the body. Further, we
-need not criticise too closely the method by which the reduction
-of food is accomplished; whether it be by encouraging
-mastication, with a view to better tasting and fuller enjoyment
-of the food, to the point of involuntary swallowing; or
-whether we follow natural taste and appetite, reinforced by
-the use of reason, with a full appreciation of the principle
-that the welfare of the body is best subserved by a quantity
-of food commensurate with true physiological needs.</p>
-
-<p>In making this presentation of the true food requirements
-of the body as based on the results of physiological experimentation<span class="pagenum" id="Page_214">214</span>
-and observation, I am by no means unmindful of
-the dangers of underfeeding; but this is a condition comparatively
-rare. When occurring, as stated by Dr. Curtis, “it is
-either because of dyspepsia, in which case it really is involuntary,
-or comes from some silly notion born of a combination
-of innate mental crookedness and that ‘little knowledge’ that
-is a dangerous thing.” Overfeeding is the predominant
-dietetic sin, and with the prevailing dietary standards, as
-fixed by common usage, there is good ground for believing
-that it will continue for many years to come. Reason tells
-us, however, in the practice of our personal nutrition, to steer
-a middle course between physiological excess on the one side,
-and the minimal food requirement on the other. To quote
-again from Dr. Curtis<span class="nowrap">,<a id="FNanchor_64" href="#Footnote_64" class="fnanchor">64</a></span> who has expressed the matter very
-forcibly, “The physiological chemist can easily draw a line
-on the Scylla (starvation) side of the channel. A dietary
-whereby the system gets less than it pays out is, obviously, a
-dangerous veer toward starvation rock. But on the Charybdis
-(stuffing) side, just as the whirlpool itself has no well-defined
-border, the channel boundary is not so easily marked. The
-case is exactly analogous to the stoking of a furnace. The
-proportion of ash to live coals is a telltale as to <i>under</i>feeding,
-but not as to <i>over</i>feeding. With undersupply of fuel the
-ashes overbalance the live coals, and the fire is thus foretold
-to be going out. But with an oversupply the fire simply
-burns the faster: all the fuel continues to be consumed; the
-more coal simply makes the more ash, so that equilibrium is
-not disturbed, although maintained at a higher level. To
-argue, therefore, that a given dietary is none too large, because
-the balance between the material receipts and expenditures of
-the economy is not upset, would be like saying that a given<span class="pagenum" id="Page_215">215</span>
-furnace-fire is certainly none too hot, since the ashes raked
-out of the fire-box just correspond to the amount of coal
-shovelled in. The same would be equally true of a slower
-fire consuming much less fuel. The philosophy of the matter
-is, then, to find the minimum of steam that will run the
-engine, and then maintain a fire somewhat hotter than the
-exact requirement, in order to run no risk of failure; or,
-to return to the metaphor already employed, the would-be
-careful liver must simply note how close to Scylla other
-voyagers have sailed with safety, and then steer his own bark
-accordingly.”</p>
-
-<p>As one looks through the many careful dietary studies that
-have been made in recent years, it is easy to find striking
-illustrations of people, and communities of people, who have
-lived for long periods of time on dietaries so strikingly simple
-and meagre that it seems difficult at first glance to believe
-their daily needs could have been entirely satisfied. Yet, such
-observations are quite in accord with the facts we have been
-presenting, and they afford additional evidence that the artificial
-dietary standards that have been set up are widely at
-variance with the real requirements of the body for food. It
-may be quite true that many of the people referred to have
-been and are faddists, with peculiar notions regarding food,
-based on religious or other scruples, but that has no bearing
-on the main contention that they have lived for many years
-on amounts of food ridiculously small as compared with the
-ordinary customs of mankind. Thus, in Professor Jaffa’s
-<span class="nowrap">report<a id="FNanchor_65" href="#Footnote_65" class="fnanchor">65</a></span> of investigations made among fruitarians and Chinese
-of California is an interesting account of a dietary study of a
-family of fruitarians, consisting of two women and three
-children. They had all been fruitarians from five to seven
-years, their diet being limited to nuts and fruit, except for<span class="pagenum" id="Page_216">216</span>
-the addition of celery, honey, olive oil, and occasionally a
-small amount of prepared cereal food. This family was in
-the habit of taking only two meals a day; at 10.30 in the
-morning and at 5 o’clock in the afternoon. The first meal
-always consisted of nuts and fruit, the nuts being eaten first.
-At the second meal, nuts were usually replaced by olive oil
-and honey. The nuts made use of were almonds, Brazil
-nuts, pine nuts, pignolias (a variety of pine nuts), and walnuts.
-Fruits, both fresh and dried, were used, the former
-including apples, apricots, bananas, figs, grapes, olives (pickled),
-oranges, peaches, pears, plums, and tomatoes. The dried fruits
-were dates and raisins.</p>
-
-<p>On this limited dietary of raw, uncooked food, with a complete
-absence of the high-proteid animal foods, and the ordinary
-vegetables, legumes, etc., and without eggs or milk, this
-family, with three growing children, had lived all these years.
-Note now what Jaffa observed regarding their food consumption.
-The first subject, a woman 33 years of age and weighing
-90 pounds, was studied for twenty consecutive days, all
-the food eaten being carefully weighed and its chemical composition
-determined. As a result, it was found that the average
-amount of food consumed per day was: proteid, 33
-grams; fat, 59 grams; carbohydrate, 150 grams; with a total
-fuel value of 1300 calories. The other members of the family
-were studied in a similar manner, one of the children being
-the subject on two separate occasions. The table (on page
-217), showing the average daily food consumption, gives a
-summary of the results obtained.</p>
-
-<div class="center">
-<table class="mtb1em" cellpadding="2" summary="">
-<tr>
-<th class="tal blm bb"></th>
-<th class="tac brl bb prl03"><div>Proteid.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brl bb"><div>Fat.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brl bb prl03"><div>Carbo-<br />hydrate.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brl bb"><div>Fuel<br />Value.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brm bb prl03"><div>Proteid<br />per Kilo<br />Body-<br />weight.</div></th>
-</tr>
-<tr class="fs75">
-<td class="tal blm"></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>grams</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl prl03"><div>grams</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>grams</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl prl03"><div>calories</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>grams</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="vab">
-<td class="tal blm pl03">Woman, 33 years old,<br />&emsp;Weight 90&nbsp;lbs. (40.9 kilos)</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>33</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>59</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>150</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>1300</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>0.80</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="vab">
-<td class="tal blm pl03">Woman, 30 years old,<br />&emsp;Weight 104&nbsp;lbs. (47.3 kilos)</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>25</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>57</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div> 90</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>1040</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>0.52</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="vab">
-<td class="tal blm prl03">Girl, 13 years old,<br />&emsp;Weight <span class="nowrap">75 <span class="fraction"><span class="fnum">1</span><span class="bar">/</span><span class="fden">2</span></span></span>&nbsp;lbs. (34.3 kilos)</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>26</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>52</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>157</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>1235</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>0.75</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="vab">
-<td class="tal blm pl03">Boy, 9 years old,<br />&emsp;Weight 43&nbsp;lbs. (19.5 kilos)</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>27</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>56</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>152</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>1255</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>1.38</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="vab">
-<td class="tal blm prl03">Girl, 6 years old,<br />&emsp;Weight <span class="nowrap">30 <span class="fraction"><span class="fnum">1</span><span class="bar">/</span><span class="fden">2</span></span></span>&nbsp;lbs. (13.9 kilos)</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>24</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>58</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>134</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>1190</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>1.72</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="vab">
-<td class="tal blm bbm pl03">Girl, 7 years old,<br />&emsp;Weight 34&nbsp;lbs. (15.4 kilos)</td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>40</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>72</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>134</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>1385</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm bbm"><div>2.59</div></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<p>As Professor Jaffa states, the tentative dietary standard for
-a woman at light work calls for 90 grams of proteid daily,
-with a fuel value of 2500 calories. Both of these women
-were light in weight, and furthermore had no occasion to do
-much physical work; but even so, a daily consumption of only
-0.8 gram and 0.52 gram of proteid, respectively, per kilo of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_217">217</span>
-body-weight, with the small calorific values indicated, represents
-a phenomenally small amount of food. And yet Jaffa, in
-referring to the woman with the lowest intake of food, states
-that even this small quantity of food, judging from the appearance
-and manner of the subject, “seemed sufficient for
-her needs, enabling her to do her customary housework and
-take care of her two nieces and nephew.” Regarding the
-children, it is stated that the commonly accepted American
-dietary standard for a child 13 years old and of an average
-activity calls for about 90 grams of proteid and 2450 calories.
-As is seen from the table, however, the 13-year-old girl
-consumed of proteid less than one-third, and of fuel value
-only about 60 per cent of the amount called for; yet, says
-Jaffa, “notwithstanding the facts brought out by this comparison,
-the subject had all the appearances of a well-fed
-child in excellent health and spirits.”</p>
-
-<p>We need not consume time in discussing the details of this
-experimental study, though the facts are interesting and suggestive,
-for it is only the general question of proteid requirement
-and calorific value that has interest for us at present.
-The fact is perfectly clear that this family of fruitarians,
-young and old, were quite able to live and thrive on a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_218">218</span>
-diet, the value of which in proteid and calories was at as
-low a level as was attained in our experimental studies.
-The rock of starvation, however, was not touched or even
-sighted by the voyagers down this stream of nutrition.
-We may all agree that it would be preferable, as a rule,
-to acquire the proteids, fats, and carbohydrates of our diet
-from a greater variety of sources than did the fruitarians; we
-might well complain at a dietary so limited in quality; but
-the point to be emphasized is that the low intake of proteid
-and the low fuel value were quite adequate for meeting the
-needs of the body. “It is a difficult matter,” says Professor
-Jaffa, “to draw any general conclusions from the foregoing
-dietaries without being unjust to the subjects. It would appear,
-upon examining the recorded data and comparing the results
-with commonly accepted standards, that all the subjects
-were decidedly undernourished, even making allowances for
-their light weight. But when we consider that the two adults
-have lived upon this diet for seven years, and think they are
-in better health and capable of more work than they ever
-were before, we hesitate to pronounce judgment. The three
-children, though below the average in height and weight, had
-the appearance of health and strength. They ran and jumped
-and played all day like ordinary healthy children, and were
-said to be unusually free from colds and other complaints
-common to childhood.”</p>
-
-<p>Turning now to a larger community,&mdash;the island nation of
-Japan,&mdash;whose exploits in war have recently attracted the
-attention of the civilized world, we find a people the great
-majority of whom have remained untouched by the prodigality
-of western civilization, and whose customs and habits still bear
-the imprint of simplicity and frugality. After the restoration
-of Japan and the reorganization of the government in 1867,
-much attention was directed to the methods of living and to
-the dietary habits of the people, with the result that during<span class="pagenum" id="Page_219">219</span>
-the last twenty-five years there have been slowly accumulating
-many important data bearing on the food consumption
-of the people. These have recently been brought together in
-an interesting volume by Kintaro Oshima, and <span class="nowrap">published<a id="FNanchor_66" href="#Footnote_66" class="fnanchor">66</a></span> in
-the English language.</p>
-
-<div class="center">
-<table class="mtb1em" cellpadding="2" summary="">
-<tr>
-<th class="tac blm bb" rowspan="2">Subjects.</th>
-<th class="tac brl bb prl03" rowspan="2"><div>Body-<br />weight.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brm bb prl03" colspan="4"><div>Digestible Nutrients and Energy per Man<br />per Day.</div></th>
-</tr>
-<tr class="fs80">
-<td class="tac ball">Proteid.</td>
-<td class="tac ball"><div>Fat.</div></td>
-<td class="tac ball"><div>Carbo-<br />hydrate.</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm bb"><div>Fuel<br />Value.</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="fs75">
-<td class="tal blm"></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>kilos</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>grams</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>grams</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>grams</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>calories</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm prl03">School business agent</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>57.5</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>65.3</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>11.3</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>493.8</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>2467</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl03">Physician</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>. . . .</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>61.9</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div> 8.0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>468.5</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>2315</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl03">Merchant</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>47.6</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>81.5</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>19.6</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>366.2</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>2082</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl03">Medical student</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>49.0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>74.8</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>11.2</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>326.9</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>1811</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl03">Medical student</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>48.5</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>64.7</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div> 5.1</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>469.6</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>2305</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl03">Military cadets</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>. . . .</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>72.3</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>11.7</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>618.1</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>3021</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm prl03">Prisoners without work</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>&#8200;47.6*</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>36.3</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div> 5.6</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>360.4</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>1726</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm prl03">Prisoners at light work</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>&#8200;48.0*</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>43.1</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div> 6.2</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>443.9</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>2112</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm prl03">Prisoners at hard work</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>. . . .</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>56.7</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div> 7.5</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>610.8</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>2884</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl03">Physician</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>40.2</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>48.3</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>15.5</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>438.2</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>2201</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl03">Hygienic assistant</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>40.5</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>46.5</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>19.7</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>485.3</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>2430</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl03">Medical student</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>51.0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>42.8</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>14.0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>438.2</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>2163</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl03">Police prisoners</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>. . . .</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>42.7</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div> 8.7</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>387.3</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>1896</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl03">Army surgeon</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>54.0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>79.3</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>11.7</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>502.0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>2567</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl03">Soldier</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>66.7</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>75.8</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>13.5</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>563.8</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>2828</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl03">Soldier</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>61.0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>58.8</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>11.3</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>467.8</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>2330</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm bbm pl03">Soldier</td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>56.7</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>55.2</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>10.9</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>459.6</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm bbm"><div>2276</div></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="tac fs80 mb1em">* Average weight of twenty subjects.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>As is well known, the great majority of the people of Japan<span class="pagenum" id="Page_220">220</span>
-live mainly on a vegetable diet. It is also known to physiologists
-at least that Japanese dietaries are characterized by
-a relatively small amount of proteid, though since the passage
-of the Food Supply Act of the navy in 1884, the proteid-content
-of the navy ration has been decidedly increased. It
-will be interesting to note a few of the results collated by
-Oshima, and some of the conclusions that he draws from the
-data presented. The foregoing table shows a few of the more
-striking results of the dietary studies obtained with various
-classes of people, where the food used was largely vegetable,
-but generally with some admixture of fish or meat.</p>
-
-<p>The figures presented, which represent the actual amounts of
-food consumed, with proper correction for the indigestible portion,
-show a much smaller intake of proteid than is common
-with European and American people; indeed, both proteid and
-fuel value are very much less than common practices call for
-among western peoples, even when due allowance is made for
-differences in body-weight. To quote from Oshima, “Probably
-the most interesting of the dietary studies are those with
-poorer classes, which comprise by far the larger part of the
-population. The dietaries of the miscellaneous class, including
-employees, prisoners, etc., consisted largely of vegetable
-foods and supplied on an average 59 grams of proteid and
-2190 calories of energy per man per day.” Especially suggestive
-were the results of a study made with a military
-colonist, a type of man very common in Japan; in reality
-farmers who live at home, but have military drill at certain
-fixed times. The subject was carefully selected under advice
-of officers in charge of the district, and weighed 59.9 kilograms.
-His diet consisted solely of cereals and vegetables,
-being identical with that of the people in the rural districts of
-Japan. His daily food was found to be composed of 46.3 grams
-of digestible proteid, with a fuel value of 2703 calories.</p>
-
-<p>Even more striking were the results obtained in a study of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_221">221</span>
-the dietary habits of three healthy natives of Formosa, employed
-as day laborers at the military hospital. They weighed
-respectively 60.9, 55, and 54.8 kilograms. The main portion
-of their diet was rice, supplemented, however, by a little salt
-fish, salted melon, spinach, ginger, and greens. The daily
-amount of proteid ingested was 48.0 grams (37.4 grams of
-digestible proteid), with a total fuel value of 1948 calories.
-A composite sample of urine covering seven days showed an
-average daily output of metabolized nitrogen of 6.93 grams,
-corresponding to a breaking down of 43.3 grams of proteid.</p>
-
-<p>Especially interesting also is a series of experiments with
-professional men, reported by Oshima, in which attention was
-paid to nitrogen balance. The following table shows the
-essential results:</p>
-
-<div class="center">
-<table class="mtb1em" cellpadding="2" summary="">
-<tr>
-<th class="tac blm bb prl03" rowspan="2"><div>Subject.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brl bb prl03" rowspan="2"><div>Body-<br />weight.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brl bb" rowspan="2"><div>Character<br />of Food.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brm bb prl03" colspan="5"><div>Digestible Nutrients and Energy per Man per Day.</div></th>
-</tr>
-<tr class="fs80">
-<td class="tac ball"><div>Proteid.</div></td>
-<td class="tac ball"><div>Fat.</div></td>
-<td class="tac ball"><div>Carbo-<br />hydrate.</div></td>
-<td class="tac ball"><div>Fuel<br />Value.</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm bb"><div>Nitrogen<br />Balance.</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="fs75">
-<td class="blm"></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>kilos</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>grams</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl prl03"><div>grams</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>grams</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>calories</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tac blm"><div>N. K.</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>43.1</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl prl03"><div>mixed diet</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>72.7</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>18.3</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>380.7</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>2091</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>+</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tac blm"><div>S. A.</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>49.5</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl prl03"><div>mixed diet</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>69.8</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>20.2</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>410.7</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>2222</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>+</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tac blm"><div>N. K.</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>42.9</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl prl03"><div>mixed diet</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>64.4</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div> 8.5</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>396.3</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>2028</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>+</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tac blm"><div>N. K.</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>43.2</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl prl03"><div>mixed diet</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>62.8</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div> 8.7</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>433.2</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>2178</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>+</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tac blm"><div>N. K.</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>43.0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>vegetable</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>68.5</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>19.7</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>433.0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>2303</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>+</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tac blm"><div>N. K.</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>43.9</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>vegetable</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>36.8</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div> 6.6</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>381.0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>1824</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>-</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tac blm"><div>N. K.</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>42.4</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>vegetable</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>40.5</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div> 8.7</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>462.6</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>2200</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>+</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tac blm"><div>S. A.</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>49.6</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>vegetable</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>34.4</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div> 7.5</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>451.9</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>2119</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>-</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tac blm bbm"><div>S. A.</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>49.9</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>vegetable</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>43.5</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div> 9.1</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>500.0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>2376</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm bbm"><div>+</div></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<p>It is to be observed that in all of the above experiments,
-excepting two, the subjects gained nitrogen even with the low
-proteid intake and the small fuel value of the day’s food.
-Particularly noteworthy, in harmony with previous statements,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_222">222</span>
-are the results of the sixth and seventh experiments.
-In the sixth experiment, the subject was not able to maintain
-nitrogen equilibrium on a diet containing 36.8 grams of digestible
-proteid and having a fuel value of 1825 calories, but by
-raising the intake of carbohydrate food (seventh experiment) to
-462 grams daily, thereby increasing the fuel value of the daily
-ration to 2200 calories (with a slight increase in the proteid
-incidental thereto), the body was able to change its previous
-loss of nitrogen into a gain; in other words, the added carbohydrate
-served as a protector of proteid.</p>
-
-<p>The series of experiments as a whole, however, is to be considered
-in the light of additional data bearing on the dietary
-customs of a people who for generations have apparently lived
-and thrived on a daily ration noticeably low in its content of
-proteid, as well as low in its calorific value. As Oshima
-states, “It is probably fair to infer that the amount of proteid
-in the dietaries of the classes living largely on vegetable
-foods (and they constitute the larger part of the population)
-may not be very far from 60 grams per day,” or 45 grams of
-digestible proteid. It is reasonable to assume that the people
-live in this way from force of habit or of necessity, and we
-may agree with Baelz, a professor connected with the medical
-faculty of Tokyo University, “that their diet is sufficient
-from a physiological standpoint.” Doubtless a mixed diet,
-with a larger proportion of animal food, did their means
-readily permit, would offer some advantages from the standpoint
-of palatability and variety, but it is questionable if any
-material gain in health or strength would result. “It is
-sometimes remarked,” says Oshima, “that the peasants in
-the rural districts of Japan, living largely on vegetable food,
-are really healthier and stronger than people of the better
-classes, who live on a mixed diet, and the better physical
-condition of the former is commonly believed to be due to
-their diet.” This, however, is a difficult matter to decide,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_223">223</span>
-since there are so many other factors that are liable to play a
-part, such as the general conditions of life which are so widely
-different in the two classes.</p>
-
-<p>It is plainly evident that the daily diet of the great bulk
-of the Japanese people has been characterized by a very low
-proteid standard, as contrasted with the standards and usages
-of the majority of European and American people. The fact
-is brought forward merely as confirmatory evidence, on a
-large scale, of the perfect safety of lowering the consumption
-of proteid food to somewhere near the level of the physiological
-requirements of the body. Generations of low proteid
-feeding, with the temperance and simplicity in dietary matters
-thereby implied, have certainly not stood in the way of phenomenal
-development and advancement when the gateway
-was opened for the ingress of modern ideas from western
-civilization. Many changes are sure to follow in the footsteps
-of the nation’s progress, and among these it is safe to
-prophesy that as public and private wealth, and resources in
-general, increase, the dietary of the people will gradually
-assume a more varied character with corresponding increase
-in volume. Whether such a change will prove of real benefit
-to the race, time alone can determine.</p>
-
-<p>Having said so much concerning the Japanese, it is proper
-that a few additional statements should be made. The
-stature and general physique of the people could be advantageously
-improved. Is this a question of dietary, or is it
-connected with some condition of life on which the daily food
-has no bearing; or is it, perchance, a racial characteristic so
-deeply ingrained that conditions of environment are without
-noticeable influence? These questions cannot be definitely
-answered at present. Finally, we may call attention to the
-dietary changes inaugurated in recent years in connection
-with the new organization of the imperial army and navy.
-With a view to increasing the efficiency of the men, following<span class="pagenum" id="Page_224">224</span>
-the customs of other countries, an act was passed increasing
-the amount of proteid food in the navy dietary. Oshima’s
-report of the various steps taken to accomplish this end, with
-the results that followed, is interesting in several ways.</p>
-
-<p>“A large part of the rice was to be replaced by bread, and
-meats were to be used liberally. The experience, during the
-first year that this ration was tried, indicated that bread and
-meat could not be advantageously substituted immediately for
-the rice, because most of the marines were unaccustomed to
-these food materials; consequently, a modification of the ration
-was introduced in 1885, whereby a rice-barley mixture was
-adopted in place of the bread. Barley was considered at that
-time as a better article of food than rice, on account of its
-higher proteid content, but later investigations showed that
-the digestibility of the nutrients of barley was small. In 1886,
-an effort was again made to substitute bread for the rice-barley
-mixture. In 1890, the ration allowance was reduced by one-fifth
-and an amount of money equivalent to the cost of the
-reduction in diet was given to each marine with which to buy
-accessory food according to his own choice. In 1898, the reduction
-was made one-tenth, instead of one-fifth as in previous
-years. In 1900, the cash allowance was abolished and a
-new ration adopted.” This ration contains about 150 grams
-of proteid (animal and vegetable food) and has a fuel value of
-over 3000 calories. In all of these changes, the proportion
-of rice was greatly reduced.</p>
-
-<p>Probably, one of the chief reasons why persistent efforts
-were made to improve the dietary of the navy was the prevalence
-among the men of the disease known as beriberi.
-“While no satisfactory explanation as to the cause of the
-disease was offered, it was generally believed that there was
-some very close relation between the disease and the rice
-diet” (Oshima). During the years 1878–1883 inclusive, nearly
-33 per cent of the marines suffered from beriberi. With the
-adoption of the new ration in 1884, in which a large part<span class="pagenum" id="Page_225">225</span>
-of the rice was replaced by bread and other articles, and
-with better hygienic conditions, this disease immediately
-began to disappear, and during the six years after the adoption
-of the new diet only 16 per cent of the marines were
-affected by the disease. Later on, hardly more than two
-or three cases a year were recorded. Advocates of a high
-proteid diet bring forward this illustration as an evidence of
-the danger connected with a lowered proteid intake; <i>i.&nbsp;e.</i>,
-that the nutrition of the body will be impaired and diseases
-of various sorts liable to follow. Yet, Oshima is very careful
-to state, “It should be especially noted that here no attempt
-has been made to indicate the cause of beriberi or the relation
-between the disease and the diet.” That rice in itself can be
-a cause of the disease is not to be considered for a moment.
-Further, so far as any facts are concerned, the writer can see
-no ground for considering that a low rate of proteid metabolism
-has in itself any direct connection with the disease.
-From a dietary standpoint, it seems far more plausible to
-assume that the great restriction in variety of foods, so strikingly
-manifest in the dietary of the poorer people of Japan,
-results in a lack of some one or more elements which conduces
-to the disease, just as in scurvy the lack of <i>fresh</i>
-vegetables on long voyages was liable to be followed by an
-epidemic of this disease.</p>
-
-<p>Consider the natural character of the dietary of the great
-bulk of the Japanese people, determined as it was by adverse
-financial circumstances. As Oshima states, “The rural population
-of the interior depends very largely or entirely upon a
-vegetable diet. Fish is eaten perhaps once or twice a month,
-and meat once or twice a year, if at all. The poorer working
-classes in the cities also use very little animal food. But the
-poorer classes in the city and the peasantry of the rural
-districts comprise nearly 75 per cent of the total population,
-and it is therefore safe to assume that this proportion lives<span class="pagenum" id="Page_226">226</span>
-chiefly, or wholly, upon vegetable diet. And this, it may be
-observed, means vegetarianism literally. The so-called lacto-vegetarianism
-is unknown in Japan. Cows are scarce, and
-milk and other dairy products are expensive, and such as
-are available are consumed almost entirely by the wealthier
-people in the cities.” It is also to be noted that the amount
-of fat in Japanese dietaries is very small. The reported
-data indicate that the usual vegetable dietaries contain only
-about 10 grams of fat per day, while even in the average
-mixed dietaries the amount rarely rises above 20 grams per
-day. In other words, the ordinary food of the Japanese was
-characterized by great lack of variety, and with such a preponderance
-of carbohydrate materials of a limited kind that
-it is easy to conceive of a possible dearth of some essential or
-accessory element, necessary for the preservation of that nutritive
-balance which aids in protection against disease.</p>
-
-<p>If the resistance of the body to disease germs and toxic
-influences in general is really diminished by reducing the
-consumption of proteid food below the set dietary standards,
-then obviously here lies a tangible reason for the maintenance
-of a high proteid intake. I know of only one series
-of scientific observations that bears directly on this question.
-Dr. Reid Hunt of Washington has studied recently the power
-of resistance to the poison acetonitrile of animals kept for
-some time upon a reduced proteid diet. “My experiments,”
-says Dr. Hunt, “showed in all cases that the resistance was
-much increased.” In other words, the animals that had been
-fed a low proteid ration were able to endure a much larger
-dose of the poison than corresponding animals on their customary
-diet; “they resisted 2–3 times the ordinary fatal dose
-of acetonitrile.” This general subject, however, is obviously
-a very important one, and merits further experimental study
-under a diversity of conditions.</p>
-
-<p>In conclusion, the facts here presented bearing on food requirements,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_227">227</span>
-especially those that relate to the need for proteid
-food, are seemingly harmonious in indicating that the physiological
-necessities of the body are fully met by a much more
-temperate use of food than is commonly practised. Dietary
-standards based on the habits and usages of prosperous communities
-are not in accord with the data furnished by exact
-physiological experimentation. Nitrogen equilibrium can be
-maintained on quantities of proteid food fully fifty per cent
-less than the every-day habits of mankind imply to be necessary,
-and this without increasing unduly the consumption of
-non-nitrogenous food. A daily metabolism of proteid matter
-equal to an exchange of 0.10–0.12 gram of nitrogen per kilogram
-of body-weight is quite adequate for physiological
-needs, provided a sufficient amount of non-nitrogenous foods&mdash;fats
-and carbohydrates&mdash;is taken to meet the energy requirements
-of the body.</p>
-
-<p>The long-continued experiments on many individuals, representing
-different types and degrees of activity, all agree
-in indicating that equilibrium can be maintained indefinitely
-on these smaller quantities of food, and that health and
-strength can be equally well preserved, to say nothing of
-possible improvement. The lifelong experience of individuals
-and of communities affords sufficient corroborative evidence
-that there is perfect safety in a closer adherence to
-physiological needs in the nutrition of the body, and that these
-needs, so far as proteid food is concerned, are in harmony with
-the theory of an endogenous metabolism, or true tissue metabolism,
-in which the necessary proteid exchange is exceedingly
-limited in quantity. There are many suggestions of improvement
-in bodily health, of greater efficiency in working power,
-and of greater freedom from disease, in a system of dietetics
-which aims to meet the physiological needs of the body without
-undue waste of energy and unnecessary drain upon the
-functions of digestion, absorption, excretion, and metabolism<span class="pagenum" id="Page_228">228</span>
-in general; a system which recognizes that the smooth running
-of man’s bodily machinery calls for the exercise of reason
-and intelligence, and is not to be intrusted solely to the
-dictates of blind instinct or to the leadings of a capricious
-appetite.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_229">229</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VII">CHAPTER VII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="chaptitle">THE EFFECT OF LOW PROTEID DIET ON HIGH
-PROTEID ANIMALS</p>
-
-<p class="chaptopics"><span class="smcap">Topics</span>: A wide variety of foods quite consistent with temperance in
-diet. Safety of low proteid standards considered. Arguments based
-on the alleged effects of low proteid diet on high proteid animals.
-Experiments of Immanuel Munk with dogs. Experiments of Rosenheim.
-Experiments of Jägerroos. Comments on the above experiments.
-The experiments of Watson and Hunter on rats. The
-writer’s experiments with dogs. Details of the results obtained with
-six dogs. Comparison of the results with those of previous investigators.
-Effect of a purely vegetable diet on dogs. Different nutritive
-value of specific proteids considered. Possible influence of difference
-in chemical constitution of individual proteids. Effect of low proteid
-diet on the absorption and utilization of food materials in the intestine
-of dogs. General conclusions from the results of experiments with
-animals.</p>
-
-<p>Man is by choice an omnivorous creature; he reaches
-out ordinarily in all directions for as wide a variety
-of foods as his circumstances and surroundings will allow. He
-rightly cultivates a taste for foods that have individuality of
-flavor, and derives pleasure and satisfaction from the eating
-of delicacies that appeal to palate and to reason. All this he
-can do without becoming an epicure or a glutton, and without
-violation of physiological laws or disregard of the teachings of
-temperance. As a being endowed with reason and intelligence
-he is, however, necessarily mindful of the possible deleterious
-effect of undue quantities of food, as he is likewise mindful of
-the desirability of avoiding certain varieties of food which personal
-experience has taught him are fraught with possible<span class="pagenum" id="Page_230">230</span>
-danger. Care and prudence in diet are legitimate outcomes
-of a reasonable interest in the welfare of the body, upon which
-so largely depend the happiness and working power of the
-individual.</p>
-
-<p>The adoption of dietary habits that aim to accord with
-the physiological requirements of the body does not compel a
-crucifying of the flesh or a disregard of personal likes and dislikes.
-A reasonable intelligence combined with a disposition to
-exercise the same degree of judgment and care in the nutrition
-of the body as is expended on other matters, of no greater importance,
-pertaining to the individual, to the household, or to
-business interests, are all that is needed to bring about harmony
-between every-day dietary habits and the nutritive requirements
-of the body. There is no occasion, unless one
-finds pleasure and satisfaction in so doing, to resort to a limited
-dietary of nuts and fruits, to become an ardent disciple of
-vegetarianism, to adopt a cereal diet, to abjure meats entirely,
-or to follow in an intensive fashion any particular dietary
-hobby, except so far as may be necessary to insure an adequate
-amount of non-nitrogenous foods to meet the energy
-requirements of the body without unduly increasing the intake
-of proteid or nitrogenous food. Naturally, a man leading
-a life of great physical activity with the consequent demand
-for a large energy-yielding intake will be compelled to resort
-largely to vegetable foods, rich in starch and poor in proteid,
-or to eat largely of fatty foods. Reliance on meats and animal
-foods in general, under such conditions, would plainly
-involve a high proteid intake with a consequent high nitrogen
-metabolism, with the chance that even then the energy
-requirement would not be fully met.</p>
-
-<p>In view of all that has been said, reinforced by the various
-facts brought forward as evidence, we must recognize the
-value of the non-nitrogenous foods as a source of energy, and
-this means plainly food from the plant kingdom. In any<span class="pagenum" id="Page_231">231</span>
-rational diet, vegetable foods of low nitrogen-content must
-predominate, while animal foods with their higher nitrogen
-values must be greatly subordinate in amount, if the nitrogen
-or proteid metabolism of the body is to be maintained at a
-level commensurate with true physiological requirements.
-But there comes the ever-recurring question, Are the lower
-proteid standards quite safe to follow? Are we warranted in
-turning aside from the teachings based on the habits and
-customs of mankind? Many reasons have already been presented
-which seemingly justify an affirmative answer, while
-the experimental results and the observations on various
-groups of people, covering years of time, speak with no uncertainty
-regarding the element of safety, and indicate clearly
-that the absolute proteid requirement of the body is quite
-small; much smaller indeed than the amount of proteid
-food consumed by the average individual would seemingly
-imply.</p>
-
-<p>Probably the most striking evidence, certainly of an experimental
-nature, so far presented against the safety of a relatively
-low proteid diet for man is that based on the results of
-several studies made to ascertain the effect of a reduced
-proteid intake on so-called high proteid animals. Animal
-kind may be divided into three groups according to the nature
-of their food, viz., high proteid feeders, such as carnivorous
-animals in general, of which the dog is a good type; omnivorous
-or moderate proteid consumers, to which class man
-belongs; and low proteid consumers, such as herbivorous
-animals. Three series of experiments have been reported by
-independent workers on the effects of reducing the amount of
-proteid food in the diet of dogs. The results of these experiments
-were of such a character that it has come to be understood
-that animals of this type cannot exist for any great
-length of time on a low proteid diet. It is affirmed that in a
-relatively short period the animals reach such a state that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_232">232</span>
-they either die, or are in such poor condition that they must
-be fed a more liberal amount of proteid to maintain them
-alive. The explanation offered is that the low proteid diet
-results “in a loss of the power of absorption from the intestinal
-tract, caused apparently by a change in the condition of
-the epithelial cells, as well as by a diminished secretion of the
-digestive juices.”</p>
-
-<p>The argument based on this evidence is that while a high
-proteid animal feels at once, or almost immediately, the deleterious
-effect of a reduction in the amount of proteid food,
-an omnivorous animal may be more tardy in manifesting the
-injurious action, which, however, is sure to follow sooner or
-later from any material reduction of proteid below the customary
-standards. In other words, man as a moderate proteid
-consumer can endure for a time even large reductions in the
-amount of proteid food, but eventually there will be manifested
-some of the disastrous results obtained with dogs. Here, we
-have a somewhat serious indictment, one that merits careful
-consideration. To be sure, it may be objected that between
-dog and man there is a wide gulf, and that there is no justification
-for assuming that these two types of animal life have
-anything in common. Still, the experience of many years
-has taught the physiologist that much light can be thrown
-upon the processes of higher types of life by a study of what
-occurs in lower forms, and on the subject of nutrition any
-one of experience would hesitate to cast out of court the
-evidence gathered from observation of what occurs among
-the higher animals. It will be the part of wisdom, therefore,
-to scrutinize somewhat carefully the character of this evidence
-obtained from a study of the behavior of dogs toward a low
-proteid diet.</p>
-
-<p>The first series of experiments was made in 1891 by the
-late Immanuel Munk of Berlin, privat docent of physiology
-at the University, followed by further experiments in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_233">233</span>
-1893<span class="nowrap">.<a id="FNanchor_67" href="#Footnote_67" class="fnanchor">67</a></span> Four dogs in all were studied. The diet made use of
-was “fleischmehl” (dried meat ground to a powder), fat (suet),
-and rice boiled together with water. We may refer briefly to
-the details of one experiment. The dog weighed 10.4 kilograms,
-and at first was given a daily diet composed of 85
-grams of rice, 29 grams of fat, and 30 grams of the flesh
-meal. This ration contained 30.3 grams of proteid, 31 grams
-of fat, and 66 grams of carbohydrate, with a total fuel value
-of 663 calories, or 63 calories per kilogram of body-weight.
-On this diet, there was at the outset a slight loss of body-weight,
-after which both body equilibrium and nitrogen equilibrium
-were practically maintained. After this preliminary
-period of three weeks, the day’s diet was altered by replacing
-15 grams of the proteid by 15 grams of rice, so that the daily
-ration consisted of 15.3 grams of proteid (with 2.42 grams of
-nitrogen), 31 grams of fat, and 81 grams of carbohydrate,
-with essentially the same fuel value per kilo of body-weight
-as before. Later, the fuel value of the food was further
-increased by raising the amount of rice to 125 grams per day,
-the day’s ration then consisting of 15.5 grams of proteid, 37
-grams of fat, and 96 grams of carbohydrate, with a total
-fuel value of 780 physiological heat units, or 78 calories
-per kilo. On this diet, nitrogen equilibrium was maintained
-and the animal gained somewhat in body-weight. By the
-seventh week, however, Munk reports that the animal began
-to show signs of change; there was loss of appetite, absorption
-of the daily food was impaired, both proteid and fat failing in
-large degree to be utilized, while nitrogen equilibrium could
-no longer be maintained. This condition continued during
-the next week, aggravated by vomiting and accompanied by
-loss of strength and vigor. At the beginning of the tenth<span class="pagenum" id="Page_234">234</span>
-week of this low proteid ration, the animal was in a very poor
-condition, with complete loss of appetite, little inclination to
-take food, etc. On feeding a liberal diet of fresh meat, as
-much as 250 grams per day, with some fat (50 grams a day),
-the animal speedily recovered its appetite, and in a short
-time was in normal condition, absorption of food and utilization
-of the same being as complete as at the beginning of the
-experiment.</p>
-
-<p>It is not necessary to give further details bearing on the
-three additional experiments. It will suffice to quote the
-general conclusions which Munk drew from the various results
-obtained, viz., that a low proteid intake in the case of
-dogs causes a loss of appetite, weakness, vomiting, etc., while
-body-weight and nitrogen equilibrium are difficult or impossible
-to maintain. More specifically, Munk’s observations led
-him to state that for dogs of ten kilograms body-weight a daily
-intake of 0.255 gram of nitrogen per kilo of body-weight is
-not sufficient to maintain the normal condition of the body,
-even when the fuel value of the day’s food amounts to more
-than 100 calories per kilo. In order to have the animal continue
-in nitrogen and body equilibrium, the daily food must
-contain at least 0.31 gram of nitrogen per kilogram of body-weight,
-with sufficient non-nitrogenous food to yield over
-100 calories per kilo.</p>
-
-<p>Let us now pass to the experiments made by Rosenheim<span class="nowrap">,<a id="FNanchor_68" href="#Footnote_68" class="fnanchor">68</a></span>
-which were carried on at about the same date as Munk’s. In
-the first experiment, the dog weighed 11.3 kilograms, and was
-fed daily a low proteid ration having a fuel value of 1447
-calories and containing 2.825 grams of nitrogen. This ration
-was reduced in a short time to a still lower plane, viz., to 1066<span class="pagenum" id="Page_235">235</span>
-calories and 2.525 grams of nitrogen daily. The food as then
-given was composed of 170 grams of rice, 50 grams of fat, and
-25 grams of chopped meat, on which the dog gained weight and
-preserved nitrogen equilibrium. For six weeks, or thereabouts,
-the animal maintained its normal condition, after
-which it began to show symptoms of a general disturbance,
-with lack of appetite and weakness accompanied by a condition
-of icterus. Addition of meat extract to the diet to improve
-the flavor was without any appreciable effect. During
-the next two weeks, the condition of the animal steadily grew
-worse, although the body-weight remained practically stationary
-and nitrogen equilibrium was maintained. A week later,
-the animal died in a condition of exhaustion, without having
-manifested any symptoms of disturbed metabolism. There
-was found a marked catarrhal condition of the mucous membrane
-of the gastro-intestinal tract, with a fatty degeneration
-or metamorphosis of the glandular apparatus, but nothing sufficiently
-specific to account for the peculiar manner of death.</p>
-
-<p>A second experiment with a dog of 5.8 kilograms, fed on
-meat, fat, and rice, led to essentially the same results as the
-preceding experiment. At the end of the first month, there
-appeared indications that the animal was not well, loss of appetite
-being marked, with disturbance of the stomach accompanied
-by occasional vomiting. These symptoms disappeared
-quickly when the animal was given for a few days large
-quantities of meat. On returning to the original low proteid
-diet, with its large content of rice, the symptoms gradually
-reappeared. At the end of two months the animal had again
-lost its appetite, and before the end of the fifth month the
-subject was dead. Post-mortem examination showed especially
-a strong fatty degeneration of the epithelial cells of the
-mucous membrane of the stomach and intestine. Rosenheim
-concludes that a diet poor in proteid is unhealthful for dogs,
-and that a daily ration containing even 0.32 gram of nitrogen<span class="pagenum" id="Page_236">236</span>
-per kilogram of body-weight, and with a fuel value of 110
-calories per kilo, is not sufficient to maintain the animal in a
-condition of health.</p>
-
-<p>The next series of experiments was made by <span class="nowrap">Jägerroos<a id="FNanchor_69" href="#Footnote_69" class="fnanchor">69</a></span> of
-Finland. This investigator was evidently impressed by the
-unfavorable and monotonous character of the diet made use
-of by the preceding investigators, and sought to introduce a
-little variety, recognizing also that with a carnivorous animal
-it is difficult to reduce the proteid to a low level and maintain
-the necessary fuel value, without introducing foodstuffs to
-which the animal is wholly unaccustomed. In the first experiment,
-the dog had a body-weight of 5.77 kilograms, and
-at the beginning was fed daily 40 grams of meat and 100
-grams of sugar, equal to 0.31 gram of nitrogen and 80 calories
-per kilo of body-weight. The experiment continued for eight
-months, sugar being replaced in part by butter, and occasionally
-bread, fat, and wheat meal being used in proper amount
-to yield the given nitrogen and fuel values. During the last
-five months, the intake of nitrogen per day averaged 0.29
-gram per kilo, with a fuel value amounting to 89 calories
-daily per kilo of body-weight. During this period, the animal
-maintained a plus nitrogen balance for a large part of the
-time. The experiment was then continued for two months
-longer, with a gradual diminution in the nitrogen of the food
-and in the fuel value, the animal dying at the end of the tenth
-month.</p>
-
-<p>In a second experiment, the dog made use of weighed at
-the beginning 11.97 kilograms. During the first five months,
-the average intake of nitrogen amounted daily to 0.29 gram
-per kilo, while the average fuel value of the food (meat, fat,
-and sugar) was 76 calories per kilo daily. In the middle
-of the seventh month the animal was quite ill, with poor appetite,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_237">237</span>
-vomiting, etc. Body-weight began to fall off, and the
-animal soon died. With both of these animals, the experiment
-ended suddenly by a sharp and short illness.</p>
-
-<p>Jägerroos, however, believed that both animals died from a
-severe case of infection, and not as the result of the diminished
-intake of proteid. This view was fully substantiated, in his
-opinion, by the evidence furnished on bacteriological and morphological
-examination. There was no pathological alteration
-and no fatty degeneration in the intestinal epithelium; nothing
-to indicate any connection between the lowered proteid intake
-and the death of the animal. To be sure, the long-continued
-diet poor in nitrogen might have diminished the power of resistance
-of the body, but no proof of this is offered. There was
-indicated merely a simple infection, as shown by the presence
-of Streptococcus and Bacterium coli communis in the blood.
-But, as Jägerroos states, one might well conceive of a lowered
-power of resistance on the part of the body, due not to any
-change in diet, but to the long-continued confinement in a
-cage with the enforced inactivity and lack of freedom. It is
-to be noted, furthermore, that here there was no sign of a
-gradual and progressive weakening of the body, no indication
-of any disturbance of the digestive tract with diminished
-power of absorption of either fat or proteid. On the contrary,
-there was a sudden and sharp attack of some infectious disease
-by which the animals quickly succumbed. Jägerroos was of
-the opinion that in the absence of this infection the animals
-would have continued to live for a long period of time.</p>
-
-<p>If a low proteid diet works so inimically on high proteid animals
-as Munk and Rosenheim thought, it would naturally be
-expected that the small proteid ration followed so long by
-Jägerroos would have resulted in the appearance of marked
-symptoms, at least a gradual and persistent falling off in
-body-weight, inability to maintain nitrogen equilibrium, etc.;
-but none of these things occurred. In Munk’s first experiment,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_238">238</span>
-the animal was given no fresh meat whatever during
-four weeks. Is it not quite possible that in the abrupt cutting
-off of this wonted form of food a disturbance may have been
-set up in the gastro-intestinal tract, which paved the way for
-the more serious results that followed? Jägerroos used only
-fresh, uncooked meat in his experiments, and laid great stress
-upon the importance of not departing any more than was
-necessary from the accustomed form of diet. The writer is
-strongly of the opinion that sufficient stress has not been laid
-upon this phase of the subject. A satisfactory diet for dog as
-for man must meet ordinary hygienic requirements; it must
-not only be sufficient in amount, but it must be easily digestible,
-of accustomed flavor, appealing to eye, nostrils, and palate,
-with reasonable variation occasionally and of moderate volume.
-With due regard to these conditions, I believe with Jägerroos
-that not much attention need be paid to the proportion of
-nitrogen therein, for however small the amount it will be
-found sufficient to meet the needs of the body.</p>
-
-<p>These are the results, collectively, so frequently used to
-point a moral for man: Beware of the possible danger of reducing
-the consumption of proteid food below the commonly
-accepted dietary standards! We must admit, however, that
-there is a woeful lack of agreement in these results, and it is
-difficult to prevent a shadow of doubt from creeping over us
-as we try to depict for ourselves the way in which a low
-proteid ration exerts its deleterious effect on dogs. I do not
-believe that radical changes in diet, whether they involve increase
-or decrease in total quantities, or in specific elements
-of the diet, can be made suddenly without danger of some
-disturbance of the gastro-intestinal tract or other parts of the
-economy, either in dog or man. It is reasonable to believe
-also that a high proteid feeder, like a dog, with his more limited
-dietary, will be far more sensitive to great changes than
-omnivorous man with his wider range of foodstuffs. Moreover,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_239">239</span>
-there is just as good ground for believing that in any
-animal, excess of proteid is as dangerous as a low proteid diet.
-Too great a disturbance in the nutritive balance, whether it
-involves excess or reduction in the amount of a given foodstuff,
-is liable to be attended with serious disturbance in any
-sensitive organism.</p>
-
-<p>In illustration of these statements, we have some recent
-results obtained by Watson and <span class="nowrap">Hunter<a id="FNanchor_70" href="#Footnote_70" class="fnanchor">70</a></span> upon the influence
-of diet on growth and nutrition. These investigators find that
-young rats&mdash;two and a half months old&mdash;when fed upon a
-diet composed exclusively of horse-flesh, which is chiefly proteid
-matter with some fat, succumb very quickly, for some
-reason. Of fourteen young rats fed on this meat diet, six died
-on the third day. On the morning of this day, as the authors
-state, “the rats appeared to be in their usual health, but an hour
-after feeding one of them was lying on its side apparently unconscious.
-In a few minutes others were affected. They
-appeared to be paralyzed, they felt cold to the touch, exhibited
-symptoms of tetany, and speedily became unconscious. Six
-succumbed within half-an-hour. Of the remainder, some
-showed similar symptoms, although in less degree, and they
-recovered when the diet was changed to bread and skim milk.”
-After two days of the so-called normal diet, composed of bread
-and skim milk, the remaining eight rats were again placed
-on an exclusive meat diet. They appeared now to have
-acquired a certain degree of immunity, for although they exhibited
-symptoms of deranged nutrition, these were gradually
-recovered from and they gained in weight. At the end of the
-eighth month, five of the animals were still alive and in apparent
-good health, but their growth was permanently stunted.
-With an exclusive diet of ox-flesh, young rats were much<span class="pagenum" id="Page_240">240</span>
-more liable to thrive, although their growth was distinctly
-retarded.</p>
-
-<p>This difference in the behavior of the animals towards the
-two forms of proteid food is to be attributed to the fact that
-ox-flesh contains more fat than horse-flesh, and consequently
-the diet with this form of meat was less exclusively proteid
-in character. Further, there were some indications that horse-flesh
-is less digestible than ox-flesh. Another fact, showing
-the far-reaching effect of a distinctly unphysiological diet, is
-the marked influence of pure meat food on the progeny.
-Thus, of 93 rats born of meat-fed parents only 19 were alive
-at the end of two months, while of 97 young born of bread
-and milk-fed rats, 82 were alive and in apparent health at the
-end of the same period.</p>
-
-<p>As illustrating how foods that have, superficially at least,
-approximately the same chemical composition may react differently
-in the animal body we have the observations of Watson
-on rats fed with porridge, made by boiling oatmeal with water
-and skim milk, as contrasted with a diet of bread and skim
-milk, the two diets having essentially the same composition.
-Of fourteen young rats fed exclusively on porridge, all, with
-the exception of two that were withdrawn, succumbed within
-five months, while the bread and milk-fed animals thrived as
-usual. Adult rats, however, can live for prolonged periods
-and maintain their weight on a porridge diet. It is believed
-that the difference in the behavior of young rats to these two
-closely allied forms of diet, is due to a difference in the digestibility
-of the food, the porridge being presumably less readily
-digested by the young animals than bread. With the more
-fully developed digestive powers of the adult animals, however,
-this difference in availability practically disappears as a
-potent factor in their nutrition. Finally, mention may be
-made of the fact that a pure rice diet, notably deficient in
-proteid, arrests the growth of young rats and leads to a fatal<span class="pagenum" id="Page_241">241</span>
-issue within three months, while adult rats placed on such a
-diet lose weight rapidly and die in about the same time. All
-of these facts bearing on the nutrition of animals quite remote
-from man have significance as showing how any wide departure
-from a physiological diet, for that particular species or type,
-may lead to very undesirable results, and they warn us not to
-be too hasty in drawing far-reaching conclusions and sweeping
-deductions from a few experiments with a given species of
-animal.</p>
-
-<p>Recurring now to the experiments made with dogs, there
-is certainly suggested an element of danger in a low proteid
-diet, which, if the experiments are taken at their face value
-and the conclusions derived therefrom applied to man, needs
-careful consideration. Jägerroos plainly was not inclined
-toward the belief that a low nitrogen intake was the cause
-of the unfortunate results that attended his experiments.
-Still, his animals did die from some cause, and thereby his
-position was weakened. Munk and Rosenheim, on the other
-hand, from their experiments were apparently convinced that
-a low proteid intake was inimical to dogs, and it will be remembered
-Rosenheim concluded that “a daily ration containing
-even 0.32 gram of nitrogen per kilogram of body-weight,
-and with a fuel value of 110 calories per kilo, is not sufficient
-to maintain the animal in a condition of health.” If this is
-really true, there is some ground for the arguments advanced
-by critical writers regarding the general subject of nitrogen
-requirements of man. The evidence and the arguments,
-however, have always seemed to the present writer frail and
-faulty; but recognizing the hold they have taken on physiologists
-and the way they are usually applied to man, I have
-attempted to test the matter experimentally under conditions
-which would yield trustworthy and conclusive results.</p>
-
-<p>The question how far results obtained with dogs can be
-applied safely to man may be open to discussion, but we must<span class="pagenum" id="Page_242">242</span>
-first be sure of our facts before arguments or conclusions of
-any kind are warranted. It is to be remembered that dogs are
-as sensitive in many ways as man, and no physiological experiment
-covering a long period of time can be carried out
-with any hope of success unless there is due regard for proper
-hygienic conditions, some degree of variety in diet, and reasonable
-opportunities for fresh air and occasional exercise. I
-fancy that even the most vigorous and hardy man, if confined
-for six consecutive months in a room just large enough to furnish
-requisite air-space and to permit of extending his body at
-full length, would find himself at the end of such a period in
-a condition far from healthful, even though there were perfect
-freedom of choice in diet. If, however, there were added to the
-above conditions monotony in diet extending through many
-months, there would be no occasion for surprise if the individual
-lost appetite and strength, and showed signs of disturbance
-of the gastro-intestinal tract.</p>
-
-<p>It is doubtful if there is full appreciation of the possible
-effect of monotony, in the ordinary dietary experiments on
-dogs. Man quickly feels the effect; the sportsman camping
-in the woods by brook or lake enjoys his first meal of speckled
-trout and has no thought of ever becoming tired of such a
-delicacy; but as trout cooked in various ways continue to be
-placed before him three times a day, and with perhaps very
-little else, he soon passes into a frame of mind where salt
-pork would be a luxury, and where he would prefer to go
-hungry rather than eat the delicacy, if indeed he has appetite
-to eat anything. Is it strange that dogs confined in cages
-barely large enough to permit of their turning around, and
-fed day after day and month after month with exactly the
-same amount of desiccated meat, fat, and rice, should show
-signs and symptoms, if nothing worse, of disturbed nutrition?
-It is necessary in experiments of this kind that the animals
-be confined for given periods, at least, since otherwise it<span class="pagenum" id="Page_243">243</span>
-would be impossible to determine the extent of nitrogen
-excretion and the rate of proteid katabolism, etc. It is
-possible, however, to limit the time of close confinement to,
-say, ten consecutive days, this to be followed by a like period
-of comparative freedom, thus insuring opportunities for an
-abundance of fresh air and exercise.</p>
-
-<p>The experiments of which I wish to speak, and which had
-for their object a study of the effect of low proteid diet on
-dogs, as types of high proteid animals, were carried out at our
-laboratory in the Sheffield Scientific School and were made
-possible by liberal grants from the Carnegie Institution of
-Washington, thus providing means for securing the requisite
-number of chemical assistants. The experiments were conducted
-on a somewhat large scale, over twenty dogs being
-made use of, while many of the experiments extended through
-a full year. The results in their entirety are not yet ready
-for publication, but I am able to present in a general way observations
-on six dogs, which will serve as an ample illustration
-of what may be expected with high proteid animals when
-living on a low proteid diet under healthful conditions. All
-of the six dogs whose cases are here presented were fed on a
-mixed diet, with some fresh meat each day; bread, cracker
-dust, milk, lard, and rice being the other foods drawn upon to
-complete the dietary. The animals were fed twice a day,
-each meal being accurately weighed and of definite chemical
-composition. A large, light, and airy room, kept scrupulously
-clean, and in the winter time properly heated by steam,
-served as their main abiding place. In this room were a
-suitable number of smaller compartments, the walls of which
-were composed of open lattice work (of iron), so as not to
-interfere with light or air, and yet adequate to keep the dogs
-apart. These compartments were not cages in the ordinary
-sense, but were truly large and roomy. The entire floor
-under the dogs was composed of metal, the joints all soldered,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_244">244</span>
-the floor being sloped to a metal gutter in front so that all
-the compartments could be flushed out each morning and
-kept sweet and clean. In pleasant weather, immediately after
-their first meal, the dogs were taken out of doors to a large
-enclosure near by, where they were allowed perfect freedom
-until about four o’clock, when they were taken in for their
-second meal (between four and five o’clock in the afternoon).
-The outdoor enclosure was inaccessible to every one except
-the holder of the key, and the dogs while there were wholly
-free from annoyance. Once every month, during a period of
-ten consecutive days, each dog was confined in the metabolism
-cage so as to admit of the collection of all excreta, in order
-to make a determination of the nitrogen balance. Practically,
-therefore, each dog was in close confinement only one-third of
-the month, the remaining two-thirds being spent in much more
-congenial surroundings. I have entered thus fully into a description
-of the conditions prevailing, because I deem them exceedingly
-important, and because therein undoubtedly lies the
-explanation of the striking contrast between our results and
-those of the earlier investigators of this subject.</p>
-
-<p>In considering the outcome of our experiments, it may be
-wise to enter into some detail concerning the first case to be
-presented. The animal employed in this experiment was
-designated as No. 5, and weighed on July 27, 1905, 17.2 kilograms;
-it was apparently full grown, but was thin and had
-the appearance of being underfed. At first, it was given daily
-172 grams of meat, 124 grams of cracker dust, and 72 grams
-of lard, the day’s ration containing 8.66 grams of nitrogen
-and having a fuel value of 1389 calories<span class="nowrap">.<a id="FNanchor_71" href="#Footnote_71" class="fnanchor">71</a></span> These figures are
-equivalent to 80 calories, and 0.50 gram of nitrogen, per kilogram
-of body-weight. The animal took kindly to the diet,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_245">245</span>
-but on August 3 it refused to eat and seemed to have a
-little fever. The next day it was better, but for the three
-following days its appetite was poor, and only a portion of
-the daily food was eaten. Body-weight began to fall off, and
-was soon at 15.5 kilograms. On the 7th of August, a dose of
-vermifuge was given, after which the appetite returned and
-the animal appeared in good spirits. From this time forward
-it seemed in perfect health, with good appetite, and showed
-the usual vivacity and playfulness of dog-kind. The diet as
-specified was continued unchanged until August 25, a balance
-experiment covering a period of ten days, from the 15th to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_246">246</span>
-the 24th of August inclusive, being carried out, in which the
-nitrogen of the intake was compared with the output for each
-day. From the accompanying table, where are given the
-average values of all the balance periods of the experiment,
-it is to be seen that during this first period the animal was
-laying on or gaining an average of 2 grams of nitrogen per
-day.</p>
-
-<div>
-<p class="tabtitle">SUBJECT No. 5. DAILY AVERAGES</p>
-
-<div class="center">
-<table class="mb1em" cellpadding="2" summary="">
-<tr>
-<th class="tac blm bb" rowspan="2"><div>Date.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brl bb prl03" rowspan="2"><div>Body-<br />weight.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brl bb" colspan="3"><div>Food.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brl bb" colspan="3"><div>Output.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brm bb prl03" rowspan="2"><div>Nitro-<br />gen<br />Balance<br />+ or –</div></th>
-</tr>
-<tr class="fs80">
-<td class="tal ball prl03">Total<br />Nitro-<br />gen.</td>
-<td class="tac ball prl03"><div>Nitro-<br />gen per<br />Kilo Body-<br />weight.</div></td>
-<td class="tac ball prl03"><div>Fuel<br />Value<br />per Kilo<br />Body-<br />weight.</div></td>
-<td class="tac ball prl03"><div>Nitro-<br />gen<br />through<br />Kid-<br />neys<span class="nowrap">.<a id="FNanchor_72" href="#Footnote_72" class="fnanchor">72</a></span></div></td>
-<td class="tac ball prl03"><div>Nitro-<br />gen<br />through<br />Excre-<br />ment.</div></td>
-<td class="tac ball prl03"><div>Nitro-<br />gen<br />through<br />Hair.</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="fs75">
-<td class="tac blm"><div>1905</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>kilos</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>grams</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>gram</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>calories</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>grams</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>gram</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>gram</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>grams</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm prl03">Aug. 15–Aug. 24</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>15.8</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>8.66</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.54</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>87.3</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>5.44</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.70</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.52</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>+2.00</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm prl03">Sept. 6–Sept. 15</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>17.1</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>4.76</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.27</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>72.4</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>3.41</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.32</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.48</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>+0.55</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm prl03">Oct. 8–Oct. 17</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>17.6</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>4.76</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.27</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>71.8</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>3.54</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.54</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.49</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>+0.19</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm prl03">Nov. 22–Dec. 1</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>16.9</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>4.77</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.28</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>72.0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>3.76</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.39</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.32</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>+0.30</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="fs75">
-<td class="tac blm"><div>1906</div></td>
-<td class="brl"></td>
-<td class="brl"></td>
-<td class="brl"></td>
-<td class="brl"></td>
-<td class="brl"></td>
-<td class="brl"></td>
-<td class="brl"></td>
-<td class="brm"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm prl03">Jan. 2–Jan. 11</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>17.2</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>4.07</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.23</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>72.0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>3.19</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.54</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.35</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>–0.01</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm prl03">Jan. 30–Feb. 8</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>18.0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>4.07</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.23</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>69.0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>2.87</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.54</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.62</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>+0.04</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm prl03">Feb. 27–Mar. 8</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>18.2</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>5.18</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.28</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>73.0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>3.69</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.66</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.74</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>+0.09</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm prl03">Mar. 27–Apr. 5</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>18.3</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>5.23</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.28</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>73.0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>3.66</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.84</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.48</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>+0.25</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm prl03">Apr. 24–May 3</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>19.1</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>5.22</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.27</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>68.0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>3.76</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.38</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.48</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>+0.60</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm prl03">May 22–May 31</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>19.4</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>5.22</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.26</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>65.0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>3.44</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.31</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.48</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>+0.99</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm bbm prl03">June 17–June 26</td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>20.0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>5.24</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>0.26</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>67.0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>3.50</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>0.71</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>0.48</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm bbm"><div>+0.55</div></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>On August 25, a radical change was made in the diet,
-by reducing the amount of meat to 70 grams daily, thereby
-lowering the intake of nitrogen to 4.76 grams, or 0.27 gram
-per kilo of body-weight; the cracker dust and lard being kept
-at essentially the same levels as before. This diet was continued
-through the next balance period, the dog in the meantime
-gaining in body-weight, and showing for the second
-balance period an average gain by the body of half a gram of
-nitrogen per day. The food was then altered by substituting
-bread for the cracker dust, but so adjusted that the nitrogen
-and fuel values of the day’s food remained practically unchanged.
-There was still, however, a gain in body-weight
-and a slight gain in body nitrogen. At the close of the third
-balance period, the diet was again altered, one-half of the
-meat being replaced by milk, while cracker dust was substituted
-for the bread. The morning meal consisted of 170
-grams of milk, 86 grams of cracker dust, and 18 grams of
-lard, while the afternoon meal was composed of 35 grams of
-meat, 63 grams of cracker, and 35 grams of lard. The day’s
-ration, however, still contained 4.76 grams of nitrogen and
-had a fuel value of 1249 calories. This diet was maintained
-until November 20, when the animal was again placed on a
-daily ration of meat (69 grams), bread (166 grams), and
-lard (80 grams), with a total fuel value of 1228 calories and
-4.77 grams of nitrogen. This was continued until December
-2, the dog still showing a plus nitrogen balance, but with a
-little loss in body-weight. On December 2, the diet was again<span class="pagenum" id="Page_247">247</span>
-changed by substituting milk for a portion of the meat, but
-the nitrogen and fuel values were maintained at the same
-level as before. After a week, December 9, the food was
-modified as follows: the morning meal contained 170 grams
-of milk, 110 grams of rice, and 11 grams of lard, while the
-afternoon meal was composed of 35 grams of meat, 81 grams
-of rice, and 30 grams of lard. The total nitrogen content
-of the day’s ration was 4.07 grams, while the fuel value was
-1255 calories. At this time, the animal weighed 17.1 kilograms,
-consequently the intake of nitrogen had been reduced
-to 0.23 gram per kilo of body-weight, while the fuel
-value stood at 73 calories per kilogram. This diet was continued
-until February 9, the balance period, between January 2
-and 11, showing that the animal was in nitrogen equilibrium,
-in spite of the material reduction in the intake of proteid, and
-that body-weight was increasing. The next balance period,
-January 30 to February 8, showed still further gain in weight
-with continuance of nitrogen equilibrium. On February 9, the
-diet was changed by returning to 70 grams of meat, 158 grams
-of cracker dust, and 60 grams of lard, with a daily intake of
-0.28 gram of nitrogen per kilo of body-weight.</p>
-
-<p>In this manner, the experiment was continued with frequent
-changes in the character of the diet, but always maintaining
-essentially the same values in nitrogen and calories as shown
-in the table, until June 27; having extended through just eleven
-months, with the animal at the close of the experiment still
-gaining in body-weight, with a steady plus balance of nitrogen,
-and with every indication of good health and strength.
-For ten months the animal lived with perfect comfort and in
-good condition on an average daily intake of 0.26 gram of
-nitrogen per kilogram of body-weight, and with an average
-fuel value of 70.3 calories per kilo. Further, it is to be observed
-that at no time during the ten months did the daily intake
-of nitrogen rise above 0.28 gram per kilo, while during one<span class="pagenum" id="Page_248">248</span>
-month it fell to 0.23 gram per kilo. Similarly, the fuel value
-of the daily food never exceeded 73 calories per kilo, while at
-times it dropped as low as 67 and 65 calories per kilo. That
-this diet was more than sufficient, both in nitrogen and fuel
-value, is indicated by the steady increase in body-weight and
-by the plus nitrogen balances observed in most of the periods
-throughout the experiment. Indeed, with the comparatively
-low degree of muscular activity which this animal was accustomed
-to, it would have been unwise to have kept the subject
-much longer on a diet so rich as the above, since there would
-have been danger of detriment to its health and good condition.
-When these results are contrasted with the statements
-of Munk and Rosenheim, the latter of whom found that even
-0.32 gram of nitrogen and 110 calories per kilo were insufficient
-to maintain dogs in a condition of health, it is plain that for
-some reason our results are quite at variance with their
-findings.</p>
-
-<p>The accompanying photographs, taken on August 19, 1905,
-February 27, April 24, and at the close of the experiment on
-June 27, 1906, show the appearance of the animal at the
-respective dates, and indicate more clearly than words can
-express the actual condition of the animal.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp96" id="illus-265a" style="max-width: 29.6875em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/illus-265a.jpg" alt="" />
- <div class="caption"><p><i>Subject No. 5.</i>&emsp;&emsp;<i>August 19, 1905</i></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp99" id="illus-265b" style="max-width: 29.6875em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/illus-265b.jpg" alt="" />
- <div class="caption"><p><i>Subject No. 5.</i>&emsp;&emsp;<i>November 18, 1905</i></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp75" id="illus-266a" style="max-width: 29.6875em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/illus-266a.jpg" alt="" />
- <div class="caption"><p><i>Subject No. 5.</i>&emsp;&emsp;<i>April 24, 1906</i></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp75" id="illus-266b" style="max-width: 29.6875em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/illus-266b.jpg" alt="" />
- <div class="caption"><p><i>Subject No. 5.</i>&emsp;&emsp;<i>June 27, 1906</i></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Turning now to a second subject, designated as dog No. 3,
-the experiment with which lasted for nearly an entire year,
-the following general statements may be made. The animal
-was a small black and white fox terrier, weighing on July 6,
-1905, 6.5 kilograms. It was a nervous, affectionate little
-creature, far less phlegmatic than the animal just described,
-always on the alert for a petting, and unceasingly active. For
-these reasons, it seemingly required per kilogram of body-weight
-a little more food than the preceding animal; a fact
-also in harmony with the general law that small animals, per
-unit of body-weight, need more food than larger ones. The
-diet made use of was of the same general character as employed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_249">249</span>
-with the preceding animal, and was changed from time
-to time to give requisite variety and to insure freedom from
-too great monotony. The accompanying table, showing daily
-averages during the twelve balance periods, gives all necessary
-information regarding the outcome of the experiment.</p>
-
-<div>
-<p class="tabtitle">SUBJECT No. 3. DAILY AVERAGES</p>
-
-<div class="center">
-<table class="mb1em" cellpadding="2" summary="">
-<tr>
-<th class="tac blm bb" rowspan="2">Date.</th>
-<th class="tac brl bb prl03" rowspan="2">Body-<br />weight.</th>
-<th class="tac brl bb" colspan="3">Food.</th>
-<th class="tac brl bb" colspan="3">Output.</th>
-<th class="tac brm bb" rowspan="2">Nitro-<br />gen<br />Balance<br />+ or –</th>
-</tr>
-<tr class="fs80">
-<td class="tac ball prl03"><div>Total<br />Nitro-<br />gen.</div></td>
-<td class="tac ball prl03"><div>Nitro-<br />gen per<br />Kilo<br />Body-<br />weight.</div></td>
-<td class="tac ball prl03"><div>Fuel<br />Value<br />per Kilo<br />Body-<br />weight.</div></td>
-<td class="tac ball prl03"><div>Nitro-<br />gen<br />through<br />Kidneys.</div></td>
-<td class="tac ball prl03"><div>Nitro-<br />gen<br />through<br />Excre-<br />ment.</div></td>
-<td class="tac ball prl03"><div>Nitro-<br />gen<br />through<br />Hair.</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="fs75">
-<td class="tac blm"><div>1905</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>kilos</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>grams</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>gram</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>calories</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>grams</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>gram</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>gram</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>gram</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm prl03">July 18-July 28</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>6.8</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>5.88</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.84</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>79.0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>5.58</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.43</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.05</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>–0.18</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm prl03">Aug. 15-Aug. 24</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>7.1</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>3.44</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.49</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>77.4</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>3.35</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.17</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.13</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>–0.21</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm prl03">Sept. 6-Sept. 15</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>6.9</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>2.11</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.30</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>80.0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>1.93</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.21</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.07</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>–0.10</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm prl03">Oct. 8-Oct. 17</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>6.9</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>2.10</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.30</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>80.0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>1.83</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.20</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.07</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>0</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm prl03">Nov. 22-Dec. 1</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>6.0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>1.83</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.31</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>80.0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>1.48</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.21</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.11</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>+0.03</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="fs75">
-<td class="tac blm"><div>1906</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"></td>
-<td class="tac brl"></td>
-<td class="tac brl"></td>
-<td class="tac brl"></td>
-<td class="tac brl"></td>
-<td class="tac brl"></td>
-<td class="tac brl"></td>
-<td class="tac brm"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm prl03">Jan. 2-Jan. 11</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>5.6</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>1.63</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.29</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>81.0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>1.54</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.17</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.08</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>–0.16</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm prl03">Jan. 30-Feb. 8</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>5.5</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>1.63</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.30</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>82.0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>1.60</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.15</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.05</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>–0.17</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm prl03">Feb. 27-Mar. 8</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>5.5</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>1.78</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.32</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>84.0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>1.66</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.17</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.05</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>–0.10</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm prl03">Mar. 27-Apr. 5</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>5.7</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>1.98</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.34</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>81.0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>1.75</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.21</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.06</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>–0.04</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm prl03">Apr. 24-May 3</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>5.7</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>1.98</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.34</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>83.0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>1.68</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.13</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.13</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>+0.04</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm prl03">May 22-May 31</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>5.8</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>1.98</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.34</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>80.0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>1.77</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.13</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.11</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>–0.03</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm bbm prl03">June 17-June 26</td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>6.0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>1.98</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>0.33</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>77.0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>1.53</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>0.21</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>0.07</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm bbm"><div>+0.17</div></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>It will be observed that during the first three months the
-animal showed a tendency to gain in weight slightly, recalling
-that its initial weight on July 6 was 6.5 kilograms. Later,
-the weight fell off a little, but in March it showed an upward
-movement, though very gradual. With the amount of proteid
-food given, it is evident that the animal needed about 80
-calories per kilo to maintain a condition of body-equilibrium.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_250">250</span>
-Nitrogen equilibrium was practically maintained throughout
-the larger portion of the twelve months, but evidently the
-animal required 0.31–0.33 gram of nitrogen per kilogram of
-body-weight. Attention may be directed, in view of the results
-reported by Munk regarding loss of the power of absorption
-and utilization of proteid food, to the figures showing
-the average daily output of nitrogen through the excrement.
-It is plain from the data presented, that this animal was not
-suffering from any trouble of this order; indeed, the utilization
-of proteid food throughout the entire experiment was
-exceedingly complete, as shown by the relatively small loss of
-nitrogen through the excrement, thus implying vigorous and
-unimpaired digestion, together with thorough absorption of
-the products formed.</p>
-
-<p>The accompanying photographs show the appearance of the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_251">251</span>
-animal on August 19, 1905, November 18, 1905, April 3 and
-June 27, 1906, the close of the experiment.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp95" id="illus-269a" style="max-width: 29.6875em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/illus-269a.jpg" alt="" />
- <div class="caption"><p><i>Subject No. 3.</i>&emsp;&emsp;<i>August 19, 1905</i></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp95" id="illus-269b" style="max-width: 29.6875em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/illus-269b.jpg" alt="" />
- <div class="caption"><p><i>Subject No. 3.</i>&emsp;&emsp;<i>November 18, 1905</i></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp96" id="illus-270a" style="max-width: 29.6875em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/illus-270a.jpg" alt="" />
- <div class="caption"><p><i>Subject No. 3.</i>&emsp;&emsp;<i>April 24, 1906</i></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp95" id="illus-270b" style="max-width: 29.6875em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/illus-270b.jpg" alt="" />
- <div class="caption"><p><i>Subject No. 3.</i>&emsp;&emsp;<i>June 27, 1906</i></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>Passing now to the third subject, we have an experiment of
-somewhat shorter duration, viz., of nine months, but sufficiently
-long to afford ample opportunity for any deleterious
-effect to manifest itself. The initial weight of the dog,
-No. 13, was 14.5 kilograms on September 14. The lowest
-intake of nitrogen was 0.26 gram per kilo of body-weight per
-day, while the fuel value of the daily food was during one
-period reduced to 55 calories per kilo. A daily proteid consumption
-equalling 0.30 gram of nitrogen per kilo, with a
-total fuel value in the day’s food of 66–70 calories per kilo, was
-clearly quite sufficient to maintain nitrogen equilibrium and
-body-weight; indeed, toward the end of the experiment, the
-animal commenced to gain in weight quite noticeably on the
-above diet, and was laying by fairly large amounts of nitrogen<span class="pagenum" id="Page_252">252</span>
-daily. The accompanying table gives the average daily
-nitrogen exchange, etc., of the nine balance periods, while the
-photographs, taken on the dates indicated under each, show
-the appearance of the animal at various times.</p>
-
-<div>
-<p class="tabtitle">SUBJECT No. 13. DAILY AVERAGES</p>
-
-<div class="center">
-<table class="mb1em" cellpadding="2" summary="">
-<tr>
-<th class="tac blm bb" rowspan="2">Date.</th>
-<th class="tac brl bb prl03" rowspan="2">Body-<br />weight.</th>
-<th class="tac brl bb" colspan="3">Food.</th>
-<th class="tac brl bb" colspan="3">Output.</th>
-<th class="tac brm bb prl03" rowspan="2">Nitro-<br />gen<br />Balance<br />+ or –</th>
-</tr>
-<tr class="fs80">
-<td class="tac ball prl03"><div>Total<br />Nitro-<br />gen.</div></td>
-<td class="tac ball prl03"><div>Nitro-<br />gen per <br />Kilo<br />Body-<br />weight.</div></td>
-<td class="tac ball prl03"><div>Fuel<br />Value<br />per Kilo<br />Body-<br />weight.</div></td>
-<td class="tac ball prl03"><div>Nitro-<br />gen<br />through<br />Kid-<br />neys.</div></td>
-<td class="tac ball prl03"><div>Nitro-<br />gen<br />through<br />Excre-<br />ment.</div></td>
-<td class="tac ball prl03"><div>Nitro-<br />gen<br />through<br />Hair.</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="fs75">
-<td class="tac blm"><div>1905</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>kilos</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>grams</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>gram</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>calories</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>grams</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>gram</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>gram</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>gram</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm prl03">Sept. 24-Oct. 3</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>14.0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>7.22</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.52</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>86.0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>6.40</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.71</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.19</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>–0.08</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm prl03">Nov. 5-Nov. 14</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>13.0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>4.78</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.35</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>80.0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>4.29</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.37</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.25</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>–0.13</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm prl03">Dec. 19-Dec. 28</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>13.4</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>3.70</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.27</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>72.0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>2.86</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.49</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.13</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>+0.22</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="fs75">
-<td class="tac blm"><div>1906</div></td>
-<td class="brl"></td>
-<td class="brl"></td>
-<td class="brl"></td>
-<td class="brl"></td>
-<td class="brl"></td>
-<td class="brl"></td>
-<td class="brl"></td>
-<td class="brm"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm prl03">Jan. 16-Jan. 25</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>14.1</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>3.72</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.26</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>70.0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>3.16</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.61</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.16</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>–0.21</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm prl03">Feb. 13-Feb. 22</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>14.3</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>4.26</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.30</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>78.0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>3.54</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.67</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.37</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>–0.32</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm prl03">Mar. 13-Mar. 22</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>14.1</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>3.62</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.26</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>55.0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>3.29</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.46</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.14</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>–0.27</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm prl03">Apr. 10-Apr. 19</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>14.2</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>4.59</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.32</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>73.0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>2.84</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.51</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.10</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>+1.14</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm prl03">May 8-May 17</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>14.2</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>4.59</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.32</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>71.0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>3.56</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.48</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.18</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>+0.37</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm bbm prl03">June 5-June 14</td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>15.3</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>4.58</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>0.30</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>66.0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>2.98</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>0.55</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>0.28</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm bbm"><div>+0.77</div></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp95" id="illus-273a" style="max-width: 29.6875em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/illus-273a.jpg" alt="" />
- <div class="caption"><p><i>Subject No. 13.</i>&emsp;&emsp;<i>January 2, 1906</i></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp95" id="illus-273b" style="max-width: 29.6875em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/illus-273b.jpg" alt="" />
- <div class="caption"><p><i>Subject No. 13.</i>&emsp;&emsp;<i>February 27, 1906</i></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp95" id="illus-274a" style="max-width: 29.6875em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/illus-274a.jpg" alt="" />
- <div class="caption"><p><i>Subject No. 13.</i>&emsp;&emsp;<i>April 24, 1906</i></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp96" id="illus-274b" style="max-width: 29.6875em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/illus-274b.jpg" alt="" />
- <div class="caption"><p><i>Subject No. 13.</i>&emsp;&emsp;<i>June 19, 1906</i></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Results of the same general tenor with dogs No. 15 and
-No. 20 are seen in the appended tables, while the accompanying
-photographs testify clearly to the general good
-condition of the animals up to the end of the experiments.
-In No. 20 particularly, the great gain in body-weight is
-to be noted, even though the fuel value of the food was
-reduced as low as 64 calories per kilo, with the nitrogen intake
-at 0.28 gram per kilo daily. Plainly, the day’s food could
-have been diminished still more, with perfect safety to both
-body and nitrogen equilibrium.</p>
-
-<div>
-<p class="tabtitle">SUBJECT No. 15. DAILY AVERAGES</p>
-
-<div class="center">
-<table class="mb1em" cellpadding="2" summary="">
-<tr>
-<th class="tac blm bb" rowspan="2"><div>Date.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brl bb prl03" rowspan="2"><div>Body-<br />weight.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brl bb" colspan="3"><div>Food.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brl bb" colspan="3"><div>Output.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brm bb prl03" rowspan="2"><div>Nitro-<br />gen<br />Balance<br />+ or –</div></th>
-</tr>
-<tr class="fs80">
-<td class="tac ball prl03"><div>Total<br />Nitro-<br />gen.</div></td>
-<td class="tac ball prl03"><div>Nitro-<br />gen per<br />Kilo<br />Body-<br />weight.</div></td>
-<td class="tac ball prl03"><div>Fuel<br />Value<br />per Kilo<br />Body-<br />weight.</div></td>
-<td class="tac ball prl03"><div>Nitro-<br />gen<br />through<br />Kid-<br />neys.</div></td>
-<td class="tac ball prl03"><div>Nitro-<br />gen<br />through<br />Excre-<br />ment.</div></td>
-<td class="tac ball prl03"><div>Nitro-<br />gen<br />through<br />Hair.</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="fs75">
-<td class="tac blm"><div>1905</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>kilos</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>grams</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>gram</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>calories</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>grams</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>gram</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>gram</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>gram</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm prl03">Nov. 5-Nov. 14</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>9.2</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>3.35</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.36</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>82.0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>2.95</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.11</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.14</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>+0.15</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm prl03">Dec. 19-Dec. 28</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>8.9</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>2.61</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.30</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>75.0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>2.47</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.12</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.12</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>–0.10</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="fs75">
-<td class="tac blm"><div>1906</div></td>
-<td class="brl"></td>
-<td class="brl"></td>
-<td class="brl"></td>
-<td class="brl"></td>
-<td class="brl"></td>
-<td class="brl"></td>
-<td class="brl"></td>
-<td class="brm"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm prl03">Jan. 16-Jan. 25</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>8.7</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>2.60</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.30</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>79.9</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>2.15</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.21</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.16</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>+0.08</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm prl03">Feb. 13-Feb. 16</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>8.5</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>2.61</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.30</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>82.0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>2.37</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.20</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.15</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>–0.11</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm prl03">Mar. 13-Mar. 22</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>8.7</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>2.82</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.32</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>80.0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>2.68</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.17</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.19</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>–0.22</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm prl03">Apr. 10-Apr. 19</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>9.0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>2.80</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.31</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>82.0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>2.14</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.26</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.09</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>+0.31</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm prl03">May 8-May 17</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>9.5</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>2.83</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.30</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>75.0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>2.26</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.30</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.12</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>+0.15</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm bbm prl03">June 5-June 14</td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>10.2</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>2.81</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>0.27</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>70.0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>2.26</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>0.28</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>0.24</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm bbm"><div>+0.03</div></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp96" id="illus-277a" style="max-width: 29.6875em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/illus-277a.jpg" alt="" />
- <div class="caption"><p><i>Subject No. 15.</i>&emsp;&emsp;<i>January 2, 1906</i></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp95" id="illus-277b" style="max-width: 29.6875em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/illus-277b.jpg" alt="" />
- <div class="caption"><p><i>Subject No. 15.</i>&emsp;&emsp;<i>February 27, 1906</i></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp95" id="illus-278a" style="max-width: 29.6875em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/illus-278a.jpg" alt="" />
- <div class="caption"><p><i>Subject No. 15.</i>&emsp;&emsp;<i>April 24, 1906</i></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp94" id="illus-278b" style="max-width: 29.6875em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/illus-278b.jpg" alt="" />
- <div class="caption"><p><i>Subject No. 15.</i>&emsp;&emsp;<i>June 19, 1906</i></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div>
-<p class="tabtitle">SUBJECT No. 20. DAILY AVERAGES</p>
-
-<div class="center">
-<table class="mb1em" cellpadding="2" summary="">
-<tr>
-<th class="tac blm bb" rowspan="2"><div>Date.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brl bb prl03" rowspan="2"><div>Body-<br />weight.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brl bb" colspan="3"><div>Food.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brl bb" colspan="3"><div>Output.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brm bb prl03" rowspan="2"><div>Nitro-<br />gen<br />Balance<br />+ or –</div></th>
-</tr>
-<tr class="fs80">
-<td class="tac ball prl03"><div>Total<br />Nitro-<br />gen.</div></td>
-<td class="tac ball prl03"><div>Nitro-<br />gen per<br />Kilo<br />Body-<br />weight.</div></td>
-<td class="tac ball prl03"><div>Fuel<br />Value<br />per Kilo<br />Body-<br />weight.</div></td>
-<td class="tac ball prl03"><div>Nitro-<br />gen<br />through<br />Kid-<br />neys.</div></td>
-<td class="tac ball prl03"><div>Nitro-<br />gen<br />through<br />Excre-<br />ment.</div></td>
-<td class="tac ball prl03"><div>Nitro-<br />gen<br />through<br />Hair.</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="fs75">
-<td class="tac blm"><div>1905</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>kilos</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>grams</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>gram</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>calories</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>grams</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>gram</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>gram</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>gram</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm prl03">Dec. 6-Dec. 15</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>15.9</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>8.35</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.52</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>82.0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>6.03</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.74</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.38</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>+1.20</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="fs75">
-<td class="tac blm"><div>1906</div></td>
-<td class="brl"></td>
-<td class="brl"></td>
-<td class="brl"></td>
-<td class="brl"></td>
-<td class="brl"></td>
-<td class="brl"></td>
-<td class="brl"></td>
-<td class="brm"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm prl03">Jan. 16-Jan. 25</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>16.4</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>4.47</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.27</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>73.0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>3.61</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.55</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.15</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>+0.16</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm prl03">Feb. 13-Feb. 22</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>17.2</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>4.45</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.25</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>72.0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>3.92</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.36</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.13</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>+0.04</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm prl03">Mar. 13-Mar. 22</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>17.4</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>5.00</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.28</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>72.0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>5.49</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.33</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.10</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>–0.92</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm prl03">Apr. 10-Apr. 19</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>18.4</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>5.60</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.30</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>69.0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>4.88</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.52</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.18</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>+0.02</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm prl03">May 8-May 17</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>19.6</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>5.58</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.28</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>69.0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>3.85</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.75</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.38</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>+0.60</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm bbm prl03">June 5-June 14</td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>19.7</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>5.59</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>0.28</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>64.0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>4.69</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>0.45</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>0.40</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm bbm"><div>+0.05</div></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_253">253</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp95" id="illus-281a" style="max-width: 29.6875em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/illus-281a.jpg" alt="" />
- <div class="caption"><p><i>Subject No. 20.</i>&emsp;&emsp;<i>January 2, 1906</i></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp95" id="illus-281b" style="max-width: 29.6875em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/illus-281b.jpg" alt="" />
- <div class="caption"><p><i>Subject No. 20.</i>&emsp;&emsp;<i>February 27, 1906</i></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp95" id="illus-282a" style="max-width: 29.6875em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/illus-282a.jpg" alt="" />
- <div class="caption"><p><i>Subject No. 20.</i>&emsp;&emsp;<i>April 24, 1906</i></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp96" id="illus-282b" style="max-width: 29.6875em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/illus-282b.jpg" alt="" />
- <div class="caption"><p><i>Subject No. 20.</i>&emsp;&emsp;<i>June 19, 1906</i></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<p>
-The illustrations so far presented, with the general agreement
-in the character of the results, might perhaps be interpreted
-as indicating that there is no difficulty whatever in
-bringing a high proteid consumer, like a dog, down to a low
-level of proteid consumption. This, however, would be a
-false impression. Much depends upon the character of the
-proteid food, at least where any attempt at rapid change is
-made, for a certain modicum of meat or other animal food
-seems a necessary part of the daily diet if health and strength
-are to be maintained. A dog transferred suddenly from a
-daily ration in which meat and milk are conspicuous elements
-to a diet in which these are wholly wanting is very liable to
-show disturbing symptoms almost immediately. One case
-may be cited in illustration of these statements. On September
-29, 1905, dog No. 17, weighing 18.2 kilos, was placed on
-a daily diet composed of 70 grams of fresh meat, 442 grams
-of milk, 300 grams of bread, and 28 grams of lard. This
-ration contained 9.06 grams of nitrogen and had a fuel value
-of 1465 calories, or 0.5 gram of nitrogen and 80 calories per
-kilogram of body-weight. On October 11, the animal weighed
-18.6 kilograms and was in perfect condition. On the 13th, the
-meat was reduced to 34 grams per day, but the milk was increased
-in amount so as to maintain the same nitrogen intake
-and fuel value as before. This diet was continued until November
-3, a balance experiment covering ten days from October
-22 to the 31 inclusive, showing that the animal was laying
-by a little nitrogen. On November 3, the diet was changed to
-milk, bread, and lard, the fuel value being maintained at 80
-calories per kilo daily, while the nitrogen intake was reduced
-to 0.30 gram per kilo. On this diet, the animal seemed to
-thrive perfectly, and at the end of two weeks showed a
-body-weight of 18.2 kilograms. November 19, the milk
-was withdrawn, the bread being increased so as to keep the
-daily nitrogen intake and the fuel value unchanged. The
-day’s food was now composed of bread and lard solely, but, as
-just stated, the nitrogen and fuel values were unaltered. In
-four days’ time, however, a change began to creep over the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_254">254</span>
-animal; the appetite diminished, and there was apparent a
-condition of lassitude and general weakness which deterred
-the animal from moving about as usual.</p>
-
-<p>During the next week the animal grew steadily worse, and
-would eat only when coaxed with a little milk or with bread
-softened with milk, the diet of bread and lard being invariably
-refused. There was marked disturbance of the gastro-intestinal
-tract; bloody discharges were frequent; the mucous
-membrane of the mouth was greatly inflamed and very sore;
-body-weight fell off, and the animal was in a very enfeebled
-condition. This continued until December 4, with every indication
-that the animal would not long survive, but by
-feeding carefully with a little milk and occasionally some
-meat, improvement finally manifested itself, and by December
-18 there was good appetite, provided bread was not conspicuous
-in the food. Body-weight, which had fallen to 15.5 kilos,
-was being slowly regained, and on December 30 the animal
-was again placed on a weighed diet, consisting of 70 grams of
-meat, 442 grams of milk, 210 grams of cracker dust, and 10
-grams of lard. This diet contained 8.26 grams of nitrogen
-and had a fuel value of 1330 calories, equivalent to 0.5 gram
-nitrogen and 80 calories per kilogram of body-weight. On
-January 12, 1906, the weight of the animal was 16.7 kilos,
-while in general condition there was nothing to be desired.
-The food was then modified by diminishing the amounts of
-meat and milk fed daily by one-half, thus reducing the nitrogen
-intake to 0.35 gram per kilo of body-weight, but maintaining
-the fuel value of the food at 80 calories per kilo. Under this
-régime, body-weight still increased, and on January 27 was
-17.5 kilograms. A balance period, shown in the accompanying
-table, extending from January 30 to February 8, affords
-ample evidence that the body was laying by nitrogen.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_255">255</span></p>
-<div>
-<p class="tabtitle">SUBJECT No. 17. DAILY AVERAGES</p>
-
-<div class="center">
-<table class="mb1em" cellpadding="2" summary="">
-<tr>
-<th class="tac blm bb" rowspan="2">Date.</th>
-<th class="tac brl bb prl03" rowspan="2"><div>Body-<br />weight.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brl bb" colspan="3"><div>Food.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brl bb" colspan="3"><div>Output.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brm bb prl03" rowspan="2"><div>Nitro-<br />gen<br />Balance<br />+ or –</div></th>
-</tr>
-<tr class="fs80">
-<td class="tac ball prl03">Total<br />Nitro-<br />gen.</td>
-<td class="tac ball prl03"><div>Nitro-<br />gen<br />per Kilo<br />Body-<br />weight.</div></td>
-<td class="tac ball prl03"><div>Fuel<br />Value<br />per Kilo<br />Body-<br />weight.</div></td>
-<td class="tac ball prl03"><div>Nitro-<br />gen<br />through<br />Kid-<br />neys.</div></td>
-<td class="tac ball prl03"><div>Nitro-<br />gen<br />through<br />Excre-<br />ment.</div></td>
-<td class="tac ball prl03"><div>Nitro-<br />gen<br />through<br />Hair.</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="fs75">
-<td class="tac blm"><div>1905</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>kilos</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>grams</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>gram</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>calories</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>grams</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>gram</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>gram</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>gram</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm prl03">Oct. 22-Oct. 31</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>18.3</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>9.06</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.49</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>80.0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>7.73</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.66</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.28</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>+0.39</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="fs75">
-<td class="blm"><div>1906</div></td>
-<td class="brl"></td>
-<td class="brl"></td>
-<td class="brl"></td>
-<td class="brl"></td>
-<td class="brl"></td>
-<td class="brl"></td>
-<td class="brl"></td>
-<td class="brm"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm prl03">Jan. 30-Feb. 8</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>17.6</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>5.77</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.33</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>78.0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>4.12</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.44</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.21</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>+1.00</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm prl03">Feb. 27-Mar. 8</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>17.9</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>5.31</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.30</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>72.0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>4.59</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.59</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.37</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>–0.24</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm prl03">Mar. 27-Apr. 5</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>18.1</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>5.33</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.29</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>70.0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>5.63</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.89</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.27</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>–1.52</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm prl03">Apr. 24-May 3</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>18.4</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>5.90</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.32</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>68.0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>5.06</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.49</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.30</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>+0.05</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm prl03">May 22-May 31</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>18.6</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>5.90</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.31</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>67.0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>5.25</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.53</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.43</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>–0.31</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm bbm prl03">June 17-June 26</td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>19.9</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>5.89</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>0.29</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>70.0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>4.29</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>0.39</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>0.28</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm bbm"><div>+0.93</div></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>In all of the subsequent months, a small amount of meat
-was a part of the daily food, but as is seen from the table of
-balance periods, the total nitrogen intake and the fuel value
-of the food were reduced to even lower levels per kilogram of
-body-weight. Yet the animal gained steadily, until at the
-latter part of June the weight was considerably above that
-noted at the commencement of the experiment in the preceding
-October. Further, the animal was in nitrogen equilibrium
-or even gaining nitrogen, and in perfect condition of health
-and vigor, as is indicated by the accompanying photographs
-taken at the different periods stated. Especially to be emphasized
-is the fact that during the last six months of the
-experiment, the daily intake of nitrogen and the fuel value of
-the food were as low or even lower than in November, when
-the daily diet was limited to bread and lard. The disastrous
-result which showed itself at once on this latter diet, with all
-animal food excluded, was not due to low proteid or to deficiency
-in fuel value, but simply to the fact that the animal for<span class="pagenum" id="Page_256">256</span>
-some reason could not adjust itself to a simple dietary of
-bread and fat, although there was ample available nitrogen and
-fuel value for the body’s needs. Something was lacking,
-which meat or milk could supply, and this something was
-indispensable for the maintenance of the normal nutritional
-rhythm.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp95" id="illus-285a" style="max-width: 29.6875em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/illus-285a.jpg" alt="" />
- <div class="caption"><p><i>Subject No. 17.</i>&emsp;&emsp;<i>January 2, 1906</i></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp95" id="illus-285b" style="max-width: 29.6875em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/illus-285b.jpg" alt="" />
- <div class="caption"><p><i>Subject No. 17.</i>&emsp;&emsp;<i>February 27, 1906</i></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp89" id="illus-286a" style="max-width: 33.4375em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/illus-286a.jpg" alt="" />
- <div class="caption"><p><i>Subject No. 17.</i>&emsp;&emsp;<i>April 24, 1906</i></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp74" id="illus-286b" style="max-width: 26.25em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/illus-286b.jpg" alt="" />
- <div class="caption"><p><i>Subject No. 17.</i>&emsp;&emsp;<i>June 27, 1906</i></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>This is by no means an exceptional case, but we can cite
-many other examples of like results where the animal when
-restricted to a purely vegetable diet, such as bread, pea-soup,
-bean soup, etc., reinforced by an animal fat, quickly passed
-from a condition of health into a state of utter wretchedness,
-with serious gastro-intestinal disturbance. The results are
-not to be attributed to the lower utilization of the vegetable
-food, for the disastrous effect is too quickly manifest, and
-further, often shows itself when the animal plainly has a
-large store of available nutriment in its own tissues.</p>
-
-<p>This experiment with dog No. 17 has been dwelt upon at
-some length, because it illustrates a very important principle
-in the nutrition of a high proteid and carnivorous animal. As
-before stated, it is not a question of high or low proteid simply,
-but involves possibly the more subtle question of the relative
-value of specific forms of proteid food. It will be noted that
-this statement is made somewhat guardedly, in harmony with
-the caution necessarily called for in view of our lack of
-knowledge regarding the possible need of the animal’s body
-for extraneous principles which only meat, milk, or other
-animal products can supply. Inorganic salts, nitrogenous
-extractives, and other substances without any appreciable fuel
-value, are quite likely to be of primary importance in controlling
-and regulating the various processes of the body, which
-combine to maintain the condition of normal nutrition. With
-a diet restricted to one or two vegetable products, it is quite
-conceivable that something may be lacking which the system
-demands, though it cannot be measured in terms of nitrogen
-or calories. It may be said that man thrives on a purely
-vegetable diet, but while this is unquestionably true, it must
-be remembered that man with his free choice of food has recourse,
-as a rule, to a large variety of vegetable products from
-many sources, and consequently there is great likelihood of
-his absorbing from these varied products such supplementary
-matters as may be needed. On this question, we are in a
-realm of doubt and uncertainty, but the possibilities suggested
-must not be ignored, for they may contain a germ of truth of
-the utmost importance. The fact remains, however, that a
-dog when restricted to a purely vegetable dietary does not
-thrive; a little animal food seems necessary to keep up health
-and strength, and this suffices even though the daily nitrogen
-intake and fuel value of the food are restricted to a level below
-that of the vegetable dietary.</p>
-
-<p>With these facts before us, it is difficult to avoid the conclusion
-that some significance may attach to the specific nature
-of the proteid. Of course, we must not overlook the radical
-difference in dietary habits of man and dog. Man as an omnivorous
-creature has for generations been accustomed to partake
-largely of vegetable foods, and as a result his digestive
-tract and his system as a whole has become acclimated, as it
-were, to the nutritive effects of vegetable matter. Dogs, on
-the other hand, are typical carnivores, and their habits for
-generations have led in an opposite direction, so that their
-gastro-intestinal tracts and their systems have become accustomed
-to the effects of a diet in which animal food largely
-predominates. Whether these deeply ingrained characteristics
-are responsible in any large measure for the difference in
-behavior of man, on a purely vegetable diet, and dogs is open
-to question. It would certainly not be strange if such were
-the case, but as we look at the facts collected in our study of
-this subject, it is somewhat impressive to note how well dogs
-thrive on a relatively large amount of vegetable food, provided<span class="pagenum" id="Page_258">258</span>
-there is a modicum of animal food added thereto. In
-other words, these high proteid consumers are apparently quite
-able to utilize the vegetable foods, but there is something lacking
-in such a dietary which the body has great need of. Is it
-not quite possible, as already suggested, that the specific nature
-of the proteid counts for something in nutrition? The
-question cannot be answered definitely at present, but there
-are certain facts slowly accumulating which make the question
-a pertinent one in this connection.</p>
-
-<p>Thus, it is becoming evident, as was pointed out in an
-earlier chapter, that the many proteid substances occurring
-in the animal and vegetable kingdoms are more or less unlike
-each other in their chemical make-up. They yield different
-decomposition products, or the same products in widely different
-proportion, when broken down by the action of hydrolyzing
-agents; and when we recall that the digestive enzymes of
-the body convert the proteids of the food into these same
-end-products, it is plain that in the assimilation and utilization
-of the proteid foodstuffs the body has to deal with these
-various chemical units. Hence, an animal suddenly restricted
-to a dietary in which all of the proteid is furnished
-by bread might be seriously incommoded, either by the excess
-of certain amino-acids resulting therefrom, or by a lack of
-certain other end-products to which its body is accustomed.
-As an example, we may take the three typical proteids of the
-wheat kernel, gliadin, glutenin, and leucosin, and note the
-very striking difference in the proportion of certain of the
-decomposition products of each, as reported by Osborne and
-Clapp<span class="nowrap">.<a id="FNanchor_73" href="#Footnote_73" class="fnanchor">73</a></span></p>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_259">259</span></p>
-
-<div class="center">
-<table class="mtb1em" cellpadding="2" summary="">
-<tr>
-<th class="tal blm bb"></th>
-<th class="tac brl bb prl1">Gliadin.</th>
-<th class="tac brl bb prl1">Glutenin.</th>
-<th class="tac brm bb prl1">Leucosin.</th>
-</tr>
-<tr class="fs75">
-<td class="tal blm"></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>per cent</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>per cent</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>per cent</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl03">Leucin</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div> 5.61</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div> 5.95</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>11.34</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl03">Lysin</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div> 1.92</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div> 2.75</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl03">Arginin</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div> 3.16</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div> 4.72</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div> 5.94</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm prl03">Glutaminic acid</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>37.33</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>23.42</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div> 6.73</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl03">Ammonia</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div> 5.11</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div> 4.01</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div> 1.41</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl03">Aspartic acid</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div> 0.58</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div> 0.91</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div> 3.35</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm bbm pl03">Tyrosin</td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div> 1.20</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div> 4.25</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm bbm"><div> 3.34</div></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<p>It is obvious from these figures that the three proteids of
-the wheat kernel are radically different from each other.
-Contrast, for example, the content of glutaminic acid in gliadin
-with the amount in leucosin. With such striking differences
-in chemical make-up, it is reasonable to assume that corresponding
-differences in physiological action or food values may
-exist. Further, “in respect to the amount of these amino-acids,
-leucosin more nearly resembles the animal proteins than
-the seed proteins thus far examined, and in this connection it
-is interesting to note that leucosin occurs chiefly if not wholly
-in the embryo of this seed and is probably one of its ‘tissue’
-proteins, in contrast to the ‘reserve’ proteins of the endosperm
-of which gliadin and glutenin form the chief part” (Osborne
-and Clapp). In other words, animal proteids, such as those
-of meat, are characterized like leucosin by a small content of
-glutaminic acid and ammonia; while leucin, lysin, aspartic
-acid, and arginin are relatively more abundant. Until we
-know more on this subject, however, any broad generalization
-would be out of place, but certainly there is justification for
-the supposition that in these differences in chemical constitution
-are to be found explanation of some of the peculiarities
-common to certain varieties of proteid food. Wheat flour,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_260">260</span>
-aside from its starch, is composed mainly of glutenin and
-gliadin with their large content of glutaminic acid. Meat
-proteids, on the other hand, like leucosin, contain only a
-small fraction of this acid, and, with the other differences indicated,
-meat proteid and wheat proteid as food for dogs or
-other high proteid consumers may reasonably be expected to
-have at the least very unequal values. And if we go a step
-beyond this and suppose that in the formation of true tissue
-proteid or the living protoplasm of the cell, certain of these
-end-products of proteid decomposition are absolutely indispensable,
-we can easily picture for ourselves a dearth of
-such building stones in the long-continued use of a diet
-which lacks that particular proteid from which the necessary
-building stones can be split off in adequate number.</p>
-
-<p>It has been said, notably by Munk, that in dogs fed for
-some time on a low proteid diet there is a diminished power
-of absorption from the intestinal tract, associated with
-weakened digestion. If it is true that a lowered proteid intake
-results in a diminished utilization of the ingested food,
-that efficiency in the digestion and absorption of foodstuffs is
-impaired, it can only be interpreted as meaning that some injurious
-influence has been exerted on the epithelial cells of the
-intestine or the adjacent gland cells. We have, however,
-failed to find any evidence of deleterious action in the dogs that
-we have experimented with, where due regard was paid to maintaining
-a diet suitable for the physiological needs of the body.
-In the experiments that we have cited, both nitrogen intake
-and the fuel value of the food per day were lower than in
-Munk’s experiments, but the utilization of fat and proteid
-was not sensibly affected. The following tables give the results
-with ten dogs (including the six dogs already described)
-for lengths of time ranging from seven to twelve months, the
-periods indicated being each of ten days’ duration and occurring
-once each month. In the first table, the utilization of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_261">261</span>
-fat is shown, the figures given being based on determinations
-of the amount of fat contained in the excrement.
-Knowing the amount of fat in the daily food and the amount
-which passed through the intestine, it is easy to calculate the
-percentage of fat utilized.</p>
-
-<div>
-<p class="tabtitle">UTILIZATION OF FAT IN PERCENTAGES.</p>
-
-<div class="center">
-<table class="mb1em" cellpadding="2" summary="">
-<tr>
-<th class="tac blm brb prl03" rowspan="2"><div>Periods.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brm bb" colspan="10"><div>Dogs.</div></th>
-</tr>
-<tr class="fs80">
-<td class="tac ball prl15"><div>1</div></td>
-<td class="tac ball prl15"><div>2</div></td>
-<td class="tac ball prl15"><div>3</div></td>
-<td class="tac ball prl15"><div>4</div></td>
-<td class="tac ball prl15"><div>5</div></td>
-<td class="tac ball prl15"><div>12</div></td>
-<td class="tac ball prl15"><div>13</div></td>
-<td class="tac ball prl15"><div>15</div></td>
-<td class="tac ball prl15"><div>17</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm bb prl15"><div>20</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tac blm"><div> 1</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>97</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>96</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>93</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>97</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>97</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>96</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>96</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>98</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>98</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>95</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tac blm"><div> 2</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>96</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>96</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>98</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>98</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>98</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>94</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>95</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>97</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>98</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>95</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tac blm"><div> 3</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>98</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>97</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>97</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>99</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>96</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>97</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>97</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>98</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>94</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>98</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tac blm"><div> 4</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>98</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>96</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>97</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>97</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>96</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>94</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>95</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>98</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>97</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>97</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tac blm"><div> 5</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>96</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>. .</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>94</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>98</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>97</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>95</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>95</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>98</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>97</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>96</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tac blm"><div> 6</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>97</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>98</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>94</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>98</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>97</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>96</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>94</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>97</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>96</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>97</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tac blm"><div> 7</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>97</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>98</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>98</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>97</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>96</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>93</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>95</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>97</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>98</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>96</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tac blm"><div> 8</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>. .</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>. .</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>98</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>96</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>96</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>96</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>93</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>97</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>. .</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>. .</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tac blm"><div> 9</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>. .</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>. .</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>98</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>97</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>98</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>. .</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>97</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>98</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>. .</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>. .</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tac blm"><div>10</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>. .</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>. .</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>98</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>97</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>98</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>. .</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>. .</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>. .</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>. .</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>. .</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tac blm"><div>11</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>. .</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>. .</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>97</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>92</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>97</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>. .</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>. .</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>. .</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>. .</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>. .</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tac blm bbm"><div>12</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>. .</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>. .</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>97</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>97</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>. .</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>. .</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>. .</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>. .</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>. .</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm bbm"><div>. .</div></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>It is perfectly plain from these results that there was no
-falling off in the utilization of fat; the percentage amount
-digested and absorbed, as in dogs 3 and 4, was just as large
-at the end of the twelve months’ experiment as at the beginning.
-Clearly, a so-called low nitrogen intake with dogs does
-not lead to any loss of power in the utilization of the fat of
-the food. This being so, it is equally clear that the arguments
-based on Munk’s results in this direction, and applied
-to man, are without adequate foundation.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_262">262</span></p>
-
-<div>
-<p class="tabtitle">UTILIZATION OF NITROGEN IN PERCENTAGES.</p>
-
-<div class="center">
-<table class="mb1em" cellpadding="2" summary="">
-<tr>
-<th class="tac blm brb prl03" rowspan="2">Periods.</th>
-<th class="tac brm bb" colspan="10">Dogs.</th>
-</tr>
-<tr class="fs80">
-<td class="tac ball prl15"><div>1</div></td>
-<td class="tac ball prl15"><div>2</div></td>
-<td class="tac ball prl15"><div>3</div></td>
-<td class="tac ball prl15"><div>4</div></td>
-<td class="tac ball prl15"><div>5</div></td>
-<td class="tac ball prl15"><div>12</div></td>
-<td class="tac ball prl15"><div>13</div></td>
-<td class="tac ball prl15"><div>15</div></td>
-<td class="tac ball prl15"><div>17</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm bb prl15"><div>20</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tac blm"><div>1</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>95</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>91</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>92</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>94</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>91</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>91</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>90</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>93</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>92</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>91</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tac blm"><div>2</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>92</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>94</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>94</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>95</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>93</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>90</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>92</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>96</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>92</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>87</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tac blm"><div>3</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>91</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>92</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>90</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>91</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>88</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>89</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>86</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>95</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>89</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>91</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tac blm"><div>4</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>90</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>85</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>90</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>92</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>91</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>82</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>83</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>91</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>83</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>93</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tac blm"><div>5</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>90</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>82</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>88</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>92</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>86</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>85</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>84</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>96</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>91</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>90</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tac blm">6</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>86</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>87</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>89</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>83</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>86</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>89</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>87</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>94</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>91</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>86</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tac blm"><div>7</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>87</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>87</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>90</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>83</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>87</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>83</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>88</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>90</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>93</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>91</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tac blm"><div>8</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>. .</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>. .</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>90</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>83</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>84</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>81</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>89</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>89</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>. .</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>. .</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tac blm"><div>9</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>. .</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>. .</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>89</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>87</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>92</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>. .</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>87</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>89</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>. .</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>. .</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tac blm"><div>10</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>. .</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>. .</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>93</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>85</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>94</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>. .</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>. .</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>. .</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>. .</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>. .</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tac blm"><div>11</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>. .</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>. .</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>93</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>81</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>86</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>. .</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>. .</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>. .</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>. .</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>. .</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tac blm bbm"><div>12</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>. .</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>. .</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>89</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>92</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>. .</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>. .</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>. .</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>. .</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>. .</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm bbm"><div>. .</div></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The figures in the above table were obtained by determining
-the amount of nitrogen in the dried excrement from the
-animals, <i>i. e.</i> the amount that passed through the intestine unchanged<span class="nowrap">;<a id="FNanchor_74" href="#Footnote_74" class="fnanchor">74</a></span>
-and knowing the content of nitrogen in the daily
-food, the percentage of unabsorbed nitrogen was then easily
-calculated, after which by simple subtraction the percentage
-of utilized nitrogen was found. At first glance, it would
-appear that as the experiments proceeded utilization of nitrogen
-was less complete. In a sense, this was true, but it was
-not connected with any impairment of the digestive or absorptive
-powers of the intestine. It must be remembered that in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_263">263</span>
-the earlier periods a larger proportion of the ingested nitrogen
-was in the form of readily digestible meat, but as the latter
-was reduced in amount larger proportions of vegetable food
-were introduced in order to maintain the desired fuel value,
-and consequently the percentage of non-absorbable nitrogen
-was increased. The well-known difference in the availability
-of animal and vegetable proteid has already been referred to
-in other connections; a difference due not so much to any inherent
-quality in the digestibility of the two forms of proteid as
-to the presence of cellulose and other material in the vegetable
-food which retards in some measure the action of the digestive
-juices. To this cause must be ascribed the slight falling off
-in the utilization of nitrogen noticeable in most of the experiments.
-If, however, the figures are compared with those
-usually obtained on a diet largely vegetable in nature, it will
-be seen that the utilization of nitrogen by these dogs was in
-no sense abnormal.</p>
-
-<p>These experiments on the influence of a low proteid diet on
-dogs, as a type of high proteid consumers, taken in their entirety,
-afford convincing proof that such animals can live and
-thrive on amounts of proteid and non-nitrogenous food far
-below the standards set by Munk and Rosenheim. The deleterious
-results reported by these investigators were not due
-to the effects of low proteid or to diminished consumption of
-non-nitrogenous foods, but are to be ascribed mainly to non-hygienic
-conditions, or to a lack of care and physiological
-good sense in the prescription of a narrow dietary not suited
-to the habits and needs of this class of animals. Further, it is
-obvious that the more or less broad deductions so frequently
-drawn from the experiments of Munk and Rosenheim, especially
-in their application to mankind, are entirely unwarranted
-and without foundation in fact. Our experiments offer
-satisfying proof that not only can dogs live on quantities of
-proteid food per day smaller than these investigators deemed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_264">264</span>
-necessary, and with a fuel value far below the standard adopted
-by them; but, in addition, that these animals are quite able
-on such a diet to gain in body-weight and to lay by nitrogen,
-thereby indicating that even smaller quantities of food might
-suffice to meet their true physiological requirements.</p>
-
-<p>The results of these experiments with dogs, which we have
-recorded in such detail, are in perfect harmony with the conclusions
-arrived at by our experiments and observations with
-man, and serve to strengthen the opinion, so many times expressed,
-that the dietary habits of mankind and the dietary
-standards based thereon are not always in accord with the true
-physiological requirements of the body. If these views are
-correct, and the facts presented seemingly indicate that they
-are, it is time for enlightened people to give heed to such suggestions,
-that their lives may be ordered more nearly in accord
-with the best interests of the body. Physiological economy
-in nutrition is not a myth, but a reality full of promise for the
-welfare of the individual and of the community in general.
-Ignorance on dietary matters should give place to an intelligent
-comprehension of the body’s needs, and an adequate
-understanding of how best to meet the legitimate demands of
-the system for nourishment under given conditions of life. It
-is said that more than half the earnings of the working people
-of this country is spent for food. Here, we have suggested
-another form of economy as worthy of consideration; less important
-perhaps than that which relates to health and strength,
-but still calling for thoughtful attention. We cannot afford to
-be ignorant of these things; we must have definite knowledge
-of the actual facts, and these can only be obtained by careful
-research and investigation.</p>
-
-<p>As a prominent writer on nutrition has well said, “The
-health and strength of all are intimately dependent upon their
-diet. Yet most people understand very little about what their
-food contains, how it nourishes them, whether they are economical<span class="pagenum" id="Page_265">265</span>
-or wasteful in buying and preparing it for use, and
-whether or not the food they eat is rightly fitted to the demands
-of their bodies. The result of this ignorance is great
-waste in the purchase and use of food, loss of money, and
-injury to health” (Atwater). We all recognize the general
-force and truth of this statement, but there is a surprising lack
-of appreciation of the full significance of what is involved
-thereby. If it is true that the demands of the body for proteid
-food&mdash;which of all foods is the most expensive&mdash;are
-fully met by an amount equal to one-half that ordinarily consumed,
-and that health and strength are more satisfactorily
-maintained thereby, it is easy to see how the acquisition of
-dietary habits leading to consumption of food in harmony
-with physiological needs will result in a fruitful twofold
-economy; viz., economy in expenditure, and of still greater
-moment, economy in the activities of the body by which food
-and its waste products are cared for.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_266">266</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VIII">CHAPTER VIII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="chaptitle">PRACTICAL APPLICATIONS WITH SOME
-ADDITIONAL DATA</p>
-
-<p class="chaptopics"><span class="smcap">Topics</span>: Proper application of the results of scientific research helpful
-to mankind. Dietary habits should be brought into conformity with
-the true needs of the body. The peculiar position of proteid foods
-emphasized. The evil effects of overeating. What the new dietary
-standards really involve. The actual amounts of foodstuffs required.
-Relation of nutritive value to cost of foods. The advantages of simplicity
-in diet. A sample dietary for a man of 70 kilograms body-weight.
-A new method of indicating food values. Moderation in
-the daily dietary leads toward vegetable foods. The experiments of
-Dr. Neumann. The value of fruits as food. The merits of animal
-and vegetable proteids considered in relation to the bacterial processes
-in the intestine. A notable case of simplicity in diet. Intelligent
-modification of diet to the temporary needs of the body. Diet in
-summer and winter contrasted. Value of greater protection to the
-kidneys. Conclusion.</p>
-
-<p>Knowledge has value in proportion to the benefit it
-confers, directly or indirectly, on the human race.
-Every new scientific fact or principle brought to light promises
-help in the understanding of Nature’s laws, and when
-rightly interpreted and properly applied is sure to aid in the
-advancement and prosperity of the individual and of the
-community. Proper methods of living, economical adjustment
-of the intake to the varying needs of the body, avoidance
-of excessive waste of foodstuffs and of energy, are all
-desirable precepts, which rational people presumably are inclined
-to follow so far as their knowledge and understanding
-of the subject will permit. Here, as elsewhere, false teaching<span class="pagenum" id="Page_267">267</span>
-may be exceedingly mischievous and lead to costly errors;
-while blind reliance upon customs, instinct, and superstitions
-is hardly in keeping with twentieth-century progress.</p>
-
-<p>Modern scientific methods should give us help in dietetics,
-as in other branches of hygiene and practical medicine. A
-few short years ago, diphtheria was a scourge which brought
-misery to many a home, for there was at hand no adequate
-means of combating the disease; but scientific research has
-given us new light, and placed at our command a weapon of
-inestimable value. Do we hesitate to use it when the occasion
-arises, because it happens to be out of keeping with old-time
-customs and traditions? No, we recognize the possibility of
-help, and as the need is urgent we turn to it quickly, with
-hope and thankfulness that scientific progress has opened up
-a pathway of escape from a threatened calamity.</p>
-
-<p>Not many years ago we drank freely of such water as was
-at hand, without realization of danger from bacteria or disease
-germs, looking on epidemics of typhoid fever perhaps as a visitation
-of Divine Providence, in punishment of our many sins
-and to be borne meekly and with resignation. But all this
-has changed through the researches of bacteriologists and
-chemists; scientific facts of the utmost importance have been
-clearly established; a classification of water-borne diseases has
-been adopted, and we realize fully that diseases of this order
-can be kept from our doors by proper precautions applied to
-our water supply. To-day, epidemics of typhoid fever are
-traceable solely to the ignorance or carelessness of the individual
-or of the commonwealth, and the exemption which we of
-the present generation have from this class of diseases is
-directly due to the application of precautionary measures
-based on the information furnished by scientific investigation.
-It is proper for us to use caution in the acceptance of new ideas,
-but not that form of caution which refuses change on the
-ground that what has been is sufficiently good for the present<span class="pagenum" id="Page_268">268</span>
-and the future. The point of view is ever changing with
-advance of knowledge, and it is not profitable to exclude opportunities
-for improvement in personal hygiene and general
-good health, any more than in other matters that affect the
-prosperity of the individual or the community.</p>
-
-<p>Dietary habits should be brought into conformity with the
-true needs of the body. Excessive consumption of proteid
-food, especially, should be avoided on the ground that it is
-not only unnecessary and wasteful, but is liable to bring
-penalties of its own, most undesirable and wholly uncalled
-for. We may, perhaps, accept these statements at their full
-value, and yet have a shadow of doubt in our minds as to
-whether, after all, dietary customs do not harmonize sufficiently
-at least with true nutritive requirements. All the data that
-we have presented in the preceding chapters, however, have
-seemingly given a positive answer to such doubts, and indicate
-quite clearly that the results of scientific study are opposed to
-the prevailing dietary standards, especially as regards proteid
-food. As the celebrated physiologist Bunge has expressed it,
-“The necessity for a daily consumption of 100 grams of proteid
-is incomprehensible, so long as we do not know of any
-function of the body in the performance of which the chemical
-potential energies of the destroyed proteid are used up.”</p>
-
-<p>Perfectly trustworthy evidence is at hand showing that the
-needs of the body for potential energy can be fully met, and
-indeed are more advantageously met, by the non-nitrogenous
-foods, carbohydrates and fats. The energy of muscle work,
-as we have seen, comes preferably from the breaking down of
-non-nitrogenous material, so that there is no special call for
-proteid in connection with increased muscular activity. In
-fact, it would appear that the need for proteid food by man is
-limited to the requirements of growth and development, reinforced
-by the amount called for in that form of tissue
-exchange which we have emphasized under the term “endogenous<span class="pagenum" id="Page_269">269</span>
-proteid metabolism,” or true tissue metabolism.
-To be sure, there must be a certain reserve of proteid, available
-in case of emergency, but this is easily established without
-resorting to excessive feeding.</p>
-
-<p>The peculiar position which proteid foods occupy in man’s
-dietary naturally make them the central figure, around which
-the other foods are grouped. No other form of food can take
-the place of proteid; a certain amount is needed each day to
-make good the loss of tissue material broken down in endogenous
-katabolism, and consequently our choice and combination
-of the varied articles of diet made use of should be
-regulated by the amount of proteid they contain. But while
-proteid foods occupy this commanding position, it is not necessary
-or desirable that they should exceed the other foodstuffs
-in amount, or indeed approach them in quantity. We
-must be ever mindful of the fact, so many times expressed,
-that proteid does not undergo complete oxidation in the body
-to simple gaseous products like the non-nitrogenous foods,
-but that there is left behind a residue of non-combustible
-matter&mdash;solid oxidation products&mdash;which are not so easily
-disposed of. In the forceful language of another, “The combustion
-of proteid within the organism yields a solid ash
-which must be raked down by the liver and thrown out by
-the kidneys. Now when this task gets to be over-laborious,
-the laborers are likely to go on strike. The grate, then, is
-not properly raked; clinkers form, and slowly the smothered
-fire glows dull and dies” (Curtis).</p>
-
-<p>Even though no such dire fate overtakes one, the penalties
-of excessive proteid consumption are found in many ills, for
-which perhaps the victim seeks in vain a logical explanation;
-gastro-intestinal disturbance, indigestion, intestinal toxæmia,
-liver troubles, bilious attacks, gout, rheumatism, to say nothing
-of many other ailments, some more and some less serious, are
-associated with the habitual overeating of proteid food. But<span class="pagenum" id="Page_270">270</span>
-excessive food consumption is by no means confined to the
-proteid foodstuffs; general overfeeding is a widespread evil,
-the marks of which are to be detected on all sides, and in no
-uncertain fashion. One of the most common signs of excessive
-food consumption is the tendency toward obesity, a condition
-which is distinctly undesirable and may prove decidedly
-injurious. Undue accumulation of fat is not only a mechanical
-obstacle to the proper activity of the body as a whole,
-but it interferes with the freedom of movement of such
-muscular organs as the heart and stomach, thereby interposing
-obstacles to the normal action of these structures. Further,
-whenever undue fat formation is going on in the body, there
-is the ever present danger that the lifeless fat may replace
-the living protoplasm of the tissue cells and so give rise to a
-condition known as “fatty degeneration.” While a superabundance
-of fat in the body is a sure telltale of overeating,
-the absence of obesity is by no means an indication that excess
-of food is being avoided. There is here, in man as in animal
-kind, much idiosyncrasy; some persons, especially those endowed
-with a long and large frame, tend to keep thin even
-though they eat excessively, while others grow fat much
-more readily. As a well-known physician has expressed it,
-“In the one case, the subject burns, instantly and mercilessly,
-every stick of fuel delivered at his door, whether or not he
-needs the resulting hot fire roaring within, while the other,
-miser-like, hoards the rest in vast piles, filling the house from
-cellar to garret.”</p>
-
-<p>Temperance in diet, like temperance in other matters, leads
-to good results, and our physiological evidence points out
-plainly, like a signpost all can read, that there is no demand
-on the part of the body for such quantities of food as custom
-and habit call for. Healthfulness and longevity are the prizes
-awarded for the successful pursuance of a temperate life,
-modelled in conformity with Nature’s laws. Intemperance, on<span class="pagenum" id="Page_271">271</span>
-the other hand, in diet as in other matters, is equally liable
-to be followed by disaster. A physician of many years’ experience,
-with opportunities for observation among different
-classes of people, has written, “that overeating tends to
-shrink the span of life in proportion as it expands the liver is
-demonstrable both directly and indirectly. Let any actuary
-of life-insurance be asked his experience with heavy-weight
-risks, where the waist measures more than the chest, and the
-long-drawn face of the businessman, at memory of lost dollars,
-will make answer without need of words. Then let be noted
-the physique of the blessed ones that attain to green old age,
-and, in nine cases out of ten, spry old boys&mdash;no disparagement,
-but all honor in the phrase&mdash;will be found to be
-modelled after the type of octogenarian Bryant or nonogenarian
-Bancroft&mdash;the whitefaced, wiry, and spare, as contrasted
-with the red-faced, the pursy, and the stout. It is
-true, as has already been mentioned, that in old age much of
-an adventitious obesity is absorbed and disappears, but the
-Bryant-Bancroft type is that of a subject who never has been
-fat at all. And just such is preëminently the type that rides
-easily past the fourscore mark, reins well in hand, and good
-for many another lap in the race of life.<span class="nowrap">”<a id="FNanchor_75" href="#Footnote_75" class="fnanchor">75</a></span></p>
-
-<p>With these thoughts before us, we may consider briefly
-just what is involved in these new dietary standards that aim
-to conform more closely with actual body needs. Referring
-at first to proteid food, it may be wise to again emphasize the
-fact that the weight of the body, <i>i. e.</i>, the weight of the proteid-containing
-tissues, as contrasted with excessive fat accumulation,
-is one of the important factors not to be overlooked
-when determining the dietary needs of a given individual.
-As must be perfectly clear, from all that has been said, the
-man of 170 pounds’ body-weight has more proteid tissue to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_272">272</span>
-nourish than the man of 130 pounds’ weight, and consequently
-what will satisfy the requirements of the latter individual will
-not suffice for the former. We must understand distinctly
-that no general statement can be made applicable to mankind
-at large, but due consideration must be given to the size and
-weight of the individual structure. We have found that the
-average need for proteid food by adults is fully met by a daily
-metabolism equal to an exchange of 0.12 gram of nitrogen
-per kilogram of body-weight. This means a katabolism of
-three-fourths of a gram of proteid matter daily, per kilogram.</p>
-
-<p>Remembering, however, that the intake of proteid food must
-be somewhat in excess of the actual proteid katabolism, since
-not all of the proteid of the food is available, and as this is a
-variable amount depending upon the proportion of animal and
-vegetable foods with their different degrees of digestibility
-and availability, we may place the required intake of proteid
-at 0.85 gram per kilogram of body-weight, still keeping to
-maximum figures for safety’s sake. Hence, for a man weighing
-70 kilograms or 154 pounds, there would be required
-daily 59.5 grams&mdash;say 60 grams&mdash;of proteid food to meet
-the needs of the body. These are perfectly trustworthy
-figures, with a reasonable margin of safety, and carrying perfect
-assurance of being really more than sufficient to meet the
-true wants of the body; adequate to supply all physiological
-demands for reserve proteid, and able to cope with the erratic
-requirements of personal idiosyncrasies. It will be observed
-that such an intake of proteid food daily is equal to one-half
-the Voit standard for a man of this weight, while it is still
-further below the Atwater standard and far below the common
-practices of the majority of mankind in Europe and America,
-as indicated by the published dietary studies.</p>
-
-<p>It may not be out of place to state at this point that in the
-writer’s opinion the use of the terms “standard diet” and
-“dietary standards,” etc., is objectionable, since such usage<span class="pagenum" id="Page_273">273</span>
-seems to demand a certain degree of definiteness in the daily
-diet for which there is no justification. As in the use of the
-term “normal diet,” there is danger of misinterpretation, and
-of the assumption that dietary habits should be regulated
-strictly in accord with certain set principles. This I believe
-to be altogether wrong; there should be, on the contrary, full
-latitude for individual freedom, but freedom governed by an
-intelligence that appreciates the significance of scientific fact
-and is willing to mould custom and habit into accord with
-them. What is needed to-day is not so much an acceptance
-of the view that man requires daily 0.85 gram of proteid per
-kilogram of body-weight, as a full appreciation of the general
-principle, which our definite figures have helped to work out,
-that the requirements of the body for proteid food are far
-below the customary habits of mankind, and that there is both
-economy and gain in various directions to be derived by following
-the general precepts which this view leads to. In other
-words, there is no advantage, but, on the contrary, much bother
-and worriment, in attempting to follow out in practice the
-details of our more or less exact physiological experiments.</p>
-
-<p>The general teaching which they afford, however, can be
-adopted and put in practice in our daily lives, without striving
-to follow too closely the so-called standards which our
-experiments have led to. Again, the sample dietaries adopted
-in our experiments have no special virtue, aside from the
-general principle they teach that simple foods are quite adequate
-for the nourishment of the body, and that the amount
-of nitrogen or proteid they contain was sufficient to meet the
-demands of the particular individuals consuming it. Broadening
-intelligence on matters of food composition is called for
-on all sides, and as this is acquired together with due appreciation
-of the relative nutritive values of proteid, fat, and carbohydrate,
-there is placed at our command the power of
-intelligent discrimination, with the ability to apply the principles<span class="pagenum" id="Page_274">274</span>
-set forth in our own way, in harmony with personal
-likes and dislikes.</p>
-
-<p>To the majority of us, not very familiar with the percentage
-composition of ordinary food materials, and unaccustomed to
-the weighing of food in grams, the figures given from time to
-time may have failed to convey a very definite impression regarding
-the actual amounts of the various foods made use of.
-Further, our ideas concerning the bulk of many of the common
-articles of food necessary to furnish the 60 grams of proteid
-required daily by a man of 70 kilograms body-weight
-may be somewhat hazy. The following table, however, will
-be of service in this direction:</p>
-
-<div>
-<p class="tabtitle">SIXTY GRAMS OF PROTEID ARE CONTAINED IN</p>
-
-<div class="center">
-<table cellpadding="0" summary="">
-<tr>
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tal fs75" colspan="2"><div>&nbsp;Fuel Value*</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal">One-half pound fresh lean beef, loin</td>
-<td class="tar"><div>308</div></td>
-<td class="tal">&nbsp;calories</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal">Nine hens’ eggs</td>
-<td class="tar"><div>720</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal">Four-fifths pound sweetbread</td>
-<td class="tar"><div>660</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal">Three-fourths pound fresh liver</td>
-<td class="tar"><div>432</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal">Seven-eighths pound lean smoked bacon</td>
-<td class="tar"><div>1820</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal">Three-fourths pound halibut steak</td>
-<td class="tar"><div>423</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal">One-half pound salt codfish, boneless</td>
-<td class="tar"><div>245</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal">Two-and one-fifth pounds oysters, solid</td>
-<td class="tar"><div>506</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal">One-half pound American pale cheese</td>
-<td class="tar"><div>1027</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal">Four pounds whole milk (two quarts)</td>
-<td class="tar"><div>1300</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal">Five-sixths pound uncooked oatmeal</td>
-<td class="tar"><div>1550</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal">One and one-fourth pounds shredded wheat</td>
-<td class="tar"><div>2125</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal">One pound uncooked macaroni</td>
-<td class="tar"><div>1665</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal pr2">One and one-third pounds white wheat bread</td>
-<td class="tar"><div>1520</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal">One and one-fourth pounds crackers</td>
-<td class="tar"><div>2381</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal">One and two-thirds pounds flaked rice</td>
-<td class="tar"><div>2807</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal">Three-fifths pound dried beans</td>
-<td class="tar"><div>963</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal">One and seven-eighths pounds baked beans</td>
-<td class="tar"><div>1125</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal">One-half pound dried peas</td>
-<td class="tar"><div>827</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal pr2">One and eleven-twelfths pounds potato chips</td>
-<td class="tar"><div>5128</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal">Two-thirds pound almonds</td>
-<td class="tar"><div>2020</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal">Two-fifths pound pine nuts, pignolias</td>
-<td class="tar"><div>1138</div><span class="pagenum" id="Page_275">275</span></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal">One and two-fifths pounds peanuts</td>
-<td class="tar"><div>3584</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal">Ten pounds bananas, edible portion</td>
-<td class="tar"><div>4600</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal">Ten pounds grapes</td>
-<td class="tar"><div>4500</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal">Eleven pounds lettuce</td>
-<td class="tar"><div>990</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal">Fifteen pounds prunes</td>
-<td class="tar"><div>5550</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal">Thirty-three pounds apples</td>
-<td class="tar"><div>9570</div></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="tac fs80 mb1em">*&nbsp;Fuel value of the quantity needed to furnish the sixty grams of proteid.</p>
-
-<p>The figures in this table are instructive in many ways.
-First, it is to be noted that the daily proteid requirement of
-sixty grams can be obtained from one-half pound of lean meat
-(uncooked), of which the loin steak is a type. Subject to some
-variations in content of water, an equivalent weight of lean
-flesh of any variety, lamb, veal, poultry, etc., will furnish
-approximately the same amount of proteid. With fish, such
-as halibut steak, and with liver, three-quarters of a pound are
-required; while with sweetbreads, four-fifths of a pound are
-needed to furnish the requisite amount of proteid. Of salt
-codfish, one-half pound will provide the same amount of proteid
-as an equivalent weight of fresh beef; while with lean
-smoked bacon the amount rises to seven-eighths of a pound.
-Among the vegetable products, it is to be observed that dried
-peas and beans, almonds and pine nuts, are as rich in proteid
-as the above-mentioned animal foods, essentially the same
-weights being called for to provide the daily requirement of
-proteid. The same is true of cheese, the variety designated
-having such a composition that one-half pound is the equivalent,
-so far as the content of proteid is concerned, of a like
-amount of fresh beef. We must not be unmindful of the fact
-previously mentioned, however, that there are differences in
-digestibility among these various foodstuffs which tend to
-lower somewhat the availability of the vegetable products,
-also of the cheese, thereby necessitating a slight increase
-in the amount of these foods required to equal the value to
-the body of lean meat.</p>
-
-<p>Secondly, passing to the other extreme in our list, we find<span class="pagenum" id="Page_276">276</span>
-indicated types of foods exceedingly poor in proteid, such as
-the fruits; notably, bananas, grapes, prunes, apples, etc., also
-lettuce, and in less degree potatoes. These are the kinds of
-food that may legitimately attract by their palatability, but do
-not add materially to our intake of proteid even when consumed
-in relatively large amounts. Thirdly, we see clearly
-indicated a radical difference between the animal foods and
-those of vegetable origin, in that with the former the fuel
-value of the quantity necessary to furnish the sixty grams of
-proteid is very small, as compared with a like amount of the
-average vegetable product. One-half pound of lean meat, for
-example, with its 60 grams of proteid, has a fuel value of
-only 308 calories, while two-thirds of a pound of almonds
-has a fuel value of 2020 calories, and one-half pound of dried
-peas 827 calories. Naturally, this is mainly a question of
-the proportion of fat or oil present. With fat meat, as in
-bacon, the calorific value rises in proportion to increase in
-the amount of fat, the proteid decreasing in greater or less
-measure.</p>
-
-<p>The main point to be emphasized in this connection, however,
-is that a high proteid animal food, like lean meat, eggs,
-fish, etc., obviously cannot alone serve as an advantageous
-food for man. We see at once the philosophy of a mixed
-diet. Let us assume that our average man of 70 kilograms
-body-weight needs daily 2800 calories. On this assumption,
-if he were to depend entirely upon lean beef for his sustenance,
-he would require daily four and a half pounds of
-such meat, which amount would furnish nine times the
-quantity of proteid needed by his system. The same would
-be more or less true of other kindred animal products. On
-the other hand, certain vegetable foods on our list, such as
-flaked rice, crackers, and shredded wheat, contain proteid,
-with carbohydrate and fat, in such proportion that the energy
-requirement would be met essentially by the same quantity as<span class="pagenum" id="Page_277">277</span>
-served to furnish the necessary proteid. Passing to the other
-extreme among the vegetable products, as in potatoes and
-bananas, for example, we find fuel value predominating largely
-over proteid content. The ideal diet, however, is found in a
-judicious admixture of foodstuffs of both animal and vegetable
-origin. Wheat bread, reinforced by a little butter or fat
-bacon to add to its calorific value, shredded wheat with rich
-cream, crackers with cheese, bread and milk, eggs with bacon,
-meat with potatoes, etc.; the common, every-day household
-admixtures, provide combinations which can easily be made to
-accord with true physiological requirements. The same may
-be equally true of the more complicated dishes evolved by the
-high art of modern cookery.</p>
-
-<p>Lastly, our table throws light upon certain questions of
-household economy. The cost of foods is regulated mainly
-not by the value of the nutrients contained therein, but
-by other factors of quite a different nature. Relationship
-between supply and demand naturally counts here as in
-other directions, but our demand is liable to be based not
-upon food values, but rather upon delicacy of flavor, palatability,
-and other kindred fancies, some real and some imaginary.
-Ordinary crackers can be purchased for ten cents a
-pound, but if we desire a little stronger flavor of salt and a
-special box to hold them, we pay eighteen cents a pound.
-Rolled very thin and thus made more delicate, they cost
-twenty-five cents, while sold under a special name and perhaps
-tied with a blue ribbon they cost thirty-five cents a pound.
-Their nutritive value per pound is the same in all cases, but
-we pay something for the increased labor of preparation and
-a good deal for the added attractiveness to eye and palate.
-We pay twenty-two cents a pound for round steak, thirty-two
-cents for loin steak, and seventy-five cents a pound for sweetbreads,
-the high price of the latter being regulated by the
-relative scarcity of the article and not by its food value. As<span class="pagenum" id="Page_278">278</span>
-our table indicates, the real value of sweetbread as a source of
-proteid is only a little more than half that of lean beef. Its
-fuel value, however, is somewhat more than that of beef, but
-a little fat added to the latter will more than compensate and
-at a trifling cost. When we can afford it, we pay the increased
-price for sweetbreads simply because their delicacy and
-flavor are attractive to us. We should not do it under the
-mistaken idea that we are indulging in a highly nutritive
-article of food, for as a matter of fact it is not only less nutritive
-than a corresponding weight of lean beef, but in addition
-it possesses certain qualities, in its high purin-content,
-that are a menace to good health if indulged in too freely.</p>
-
-<p>Where expense must be carefully guarded, or where the condition
-of the family purse is such that conflicting demands
-must be intelligently considered in order to insure wise expenditure
-and the greatest permanent good of the many, it is
-well to remember that price is no guarantee whatever of real
-nutritive value. Two quarts of milk will furnish half the
-daily fuel requirement of our average man and the entire
-proteid requirement, while its cost is only sixteen cents.
-Reinforced by a pound loaf of wheat bread, the energy requirement
-for the day would be fully met, with surplus nitrogen
-to store up for future needs, and at an additional cost
-of only ten cents. A mixture in this proportion, however,
-would not be strictly physiological, since it is wasteful of proteid,
-but it may serve to illustrate the point. A better illustration
-is found in an admixture, quite adequate to supply the
-daily needs of our average man, both for proteid and energy,
-composed of one-quarter of a pound of lean beef, two-thirds of
-a pound of bread, and half a pound of butter, and at a total
-cost not to exceed thirty cents. The contrast of such prices
-with what is so commonly paid for table delicacies is somewhat
-striking; it could be made still more so by drawing
-upon many common vegetable foods, rich alike in proteid and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_279">279</span>
-in fuel value, the cost of which is even less than the simple
-food mixtures just referred to. It is not necessary, however,
-to enlarge upon this question; it is sufficient to merely emphasize
-the fact that the exaggerated demand of our present
-generation for dietetic luxuries is leading us far away from
-the proverbially simple life of our forefathers, and without
-adding in any way to the effectiveness of the daily diet. On
-the contrary, it is in part responsible for the high proteid consumption
-of the present day, with its attendant evils, and involves
-a large and unnecessary expenditure without adequate
-return. The wants of the body for food are far more advantageously
-met by a simple dietary, moderate in amount and at
-an expense comparatively slight.</p>
-
-<p>A recent writer<span class="nowrap">,<a id="FNanchor_76" href="#Footnote_76" class="fnanchor">76</a></span> in the “British Medical Journal,” a
-practitioner of medicine in the Highlands of Scotland, has
-said that these are “facts of common experience in the Highlands
-of Scotland, and probably among the peasantry of other
-countries also, where the old beliefs and customs have not too
-readily given way to the luxuries of civilization. Oatmeal in
-one form or another is a daily ingredient in the diet of a
-Highland peasant. The potato also is a staple food, and is
-consumed in large quantities with salt herring or other fish,
-and perhaps in some cases salt mutton or pork. Milk and
-eggs are used by most. The growing consumption of tea,
-however, and the increasing relish for sweets, candy, pastry,
-and biscuits, threaten to destroy the old way of living. A
-typical day’s diet for a crofter or fisherman who still believes
-in the traditional diet would be somewhat like this:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-<p>Breakfast.&mdash;Oatmeal porridge or brose with milk; bread, butter, and tea.</p>
-<p>Dinner.&mdash;Potatoes galore and herrings, or other salt fish.</p>
-<p>Supper.&mdash;Porridge and milk, or oat bread and cheese, and tea.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>“I have often been assured by shepherds that they could
-work all day ‘on the hill’ after a breakfast of oatmeal brose<span class="pagenum" id="Page_280">280</span>
-and milk, without fatigue and without feeling hungry, returning
-in the evening to partake of a dish of broth, potatoes, and
-salt mutton. In these diets, proteid forms a very small proportion,
-and yet a hardier race than these shepherds and fishermen
-cannot be found.” It should be added that “brose”
-consists of a few handfuls of oatmeal, to which is added boiling
-water, the mixture being stirred vigorously and placed
-for a few minutes near the fire. It is then eaten with milk,
-or better, with cream. In the absence of positive data, it can
-only be asserted that the above dietary stands for simplicity
-and frugality. Its proteid-content may be low, but the
-amount of proteid taken per day by these Highlanders will
-obviously depend upon the <i>quantity</i> of food consumed. Oatmeal
-is fairly rich in proteid, and it is quite conceivable that
-the amount eaten daily may be such as to result in a high
-proteid exchange.</p>
-
-<p>It will be profitable for us to gain, if possible, a fairly clear
-idea of the quantities of food requisite for our average man
-of 70 kilograms body-weight; <i>i. e.</i>, the amounts necessary to
-provide 60 grams of proteid and 2800 calories. With this
-end in view, we may outline a simple dietary, expressed in
-terms that will convey a clear impression, showing what may
-be eaten without overstepping the required limits of proteid
-or total calories:</p>
-
-<div class="center htmlonly">
-<table class="mtb1em" summary="">
-<tr>
-<td class="tac"><div>BREAKFAST</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="fs75">
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tar"><div>Proteid</div></td>
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tar"><div>Calories</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="vat">
-<td class="tal pl3hi3">One shredded wheat biscuit<br />30 grams</td>
-<td class="tar"><div>3.15</div></td>
-<td class="tal">&nbsp;grams</td>
-<td class="tar pr05"><div>106</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="vat">
-<td class="tal pl3hi3">One teacup of cream<br />120 grams</td>
-<td class="tar"><div>3.12</div></td>
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tar pr05"><div>206</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="vat">
-<td class="tal pl3hi3">One German water roll<br />57 grams</td>
-<td class="tar"><div>5.07</div></td>
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tar pr05"><div>165</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="vat">
-<td class="tal pl3hi3">Two one-inch cubes of butter<br />38 grams</td>
-<td class="tar"><div>0.38</div></td>
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tar pr05"><div>284</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="vat">
-<td class="tal pl3hi3">Three-fourths cup of coffee<br />100 grams</td>
-<td class="tar"><div>0.26</div></td>
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tar pr05"><div>. . . </div><span class="pagenum" id="Page_281">281</span></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="vat">
-<td class="tal pl3hi3">One-fourth teacup of cream<br />30 grams</td>
-<td class="tar"><div>0.78</div></td>
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tar pr05"><div>51</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="vat">
-<td class="tal pl3hi3">One lump of sugar<br />10 grams</td>
-<td class="tar"><div>. . .</div></td>
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tar pr05"><div>88</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="vat">
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tar o pb1"><div>12.76</div></td>
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tar o pr05 pb1"><div>850</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tac"><div>LUNCH</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="fs75">
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tar"><div>Proteid</div></td>
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tar"><div>Calories</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="vat">
-<td class="tal pl3hi3">One teacup homemade chicken soup<br />144 grams</td>
-<td class="tar"><div>5.25</div></td>
-<td class="tal">&nbsp;grams</td>
-<td class="tar pr05"><div>60</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="vat">
-<td class="tal pl3hi3">One Parker-house roll<br />38 grams</td>
-<td class="tar"><div>3.38</div></td>
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tar pr05"><div>110</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="vat">
-<td class="tal pl3hi3">Two one-inch cubes of butter<br />38 grams</td>
-<td class="tar"><div>0.38</div></td>
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tar pr05"><div>284</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="vat">
-<td class="tal pl3hi3">One slice lean bacon<br />10 grams</td>
-<td class="tar"><div>2.14</div></td>
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tar pr05"><div>65</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="vat">
-<td class="tal pl3hi3">One small baked potato<br />2 ounces, 60 grams</td>
-<td class="tar"><div>1.53</div></td>
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tar pr05"><div>55</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="vat">
-<td class="tal pl3hi3">One rice croquette<br />90 grams</td>
-<td class="tar"><div>3.42</div></td>
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tar pr05"><div>150</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="vat">
-<td class="tal pl3hi3">Two ounces maple syrup<br />60 grams</td>
-<td class="tar"><div>. . .</div></td>
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tar pr05"><div>166</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="vat">
-<td class="tal pl3hi3">One cup of tea with one slice lemon</td>
-<td class="tar"><div>. . .</div></td>
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tar pr05"><div>. .</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="vat">
-<td class="tal pl3hi3">One lump of sugar<br />10 grams</td>
-<td class="tar"><div>. . .</div></td>
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tar pr05"><div>38</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="vat">
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tar o pb1"><div>16.10</div></td>
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tar o pr05 pb1"><div>928</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tac"><div>DINNER</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="fs75">
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tar"><div>Proteid</div></td>
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tar"><div>Calories</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="vat">
-<td class="tal pl3hi3">One teacup cream of corn soup<br />130 grams</td>
-<td class="tar"><div>3.25</div></td>
-<td class="tal">&nbsp;grams</td>
-<td class="tar pr05"><div>72</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="vat">
-<td class="tal pl3hi3">One Parker-house roll<br />38 grams</td>
-<td class="tar"><div>3.38</div></td>
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tar pr05"><div>110</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="vat">
-<td class="tal pl3hi3">One-inch cube of butter<br />19 grams</td>
-<td class="tar"><div>0.19</div></td>
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tar pr05"><div>142</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="vat">
-<td class="tal pl3hi3">One small lamb chop, broiled<br />lean meat, 30 grams</td>
-<td class="tar"><div>8.51</div></td>
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tar pr05"><div>92</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="vat">
-<td class="tal pl3hi3">One teacup of mashed potato<br />167 grams</td>
-<td class="tar"><div>3.34</div></td>
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tar pr05"><div>175</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="vat">
-<td class="tal pl3hi3">Apple-celery lettuce salad with<br />mayonnaise dressing 50 grams</td>
-<td class="tar"><div>0.62</div></td>
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tar pr05"><div>75</div><span class="pagenum" id="Page_282">282</span></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="vat">
-<td class="tal pl3hi3">One Boston cracker, split<br />2 inches diameter, 12 grams</td>
-<td class="tar"><div>1.32</div></td>
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tar pr05"><div>47</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="vat">
-<td class="tal pl3hi3">One-half inch cube American cheese<br />12 grams</td>
-<td class="tar"><div>3.35</div></td>
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tar pr05"><div>50</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="vat">
-<td class="tal pl3hi3">One-half teacup of bread pudding<br />85 grams</td>
-<td class="tar"><div>5.25</div></td>
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tar pr05"><div>150</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="vat">
-<td class="tal">One demi-tasse coffee</td>
-<td class="tar"><div>. . .</div></td>
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tar pr05"><div>. .</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="vat">
-<td class="tal pl3hi3">One lump of sugar<br />10 grams</td>
-<td class="tar"><div>. . .</div></td>
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tar pr05"><div>38</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="vat">
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tar o"><div>29.21</div></td>
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tar o pr05"><div>951</div></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class="epubonly">
-<div class="center">
-<table class="mtb1em" summary="">
-<tr>
-<td class="tac"><div>BREAKFAST</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="fs75">
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tar"><div>Proteid</div></td>
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tar"><div>Calories</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="vat">
-<td class="tal pl3hi3">One shredded wheat biscuit<br />30 grams</td>
-<td class="tar"><div>3.15</div></td>
-<td class="tal">&nbsp;grams</td>
-<td class="tar pr05"><div>106</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="vat">
-<td class="tal pl3hi3">One teacup of cream<br />120 grams</td>
-<td class="tar"><div>3.12</div></td>
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tar pr05"><div>206</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="vat">
-<td class="tal pl3hi3">One German water roll<br />57 grams</td>
-<td class="tar"><div>5.07</div></td>
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tar pr05"><div>165</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="vat">
-<td class="tal pl3hi3">Two one-inch cubes of butter<br />38 grams</td>
-<td class="tar"><div>0.38</div></td>
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tar pr05"><div>284</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="vat">
-<td class="tal pl3hi3">Three-fourths cup of coffee<br />100 grams</td>
-<td class="tar"><div>0.26</div></td>
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tar pr05"><div>. . . </div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="vat">
-<td class="tal pl3hi3">One-fourth teacup of cream<br />30 grams</td>
-<td class="tar"><div>0.78</div></td>
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tar pr05"><div>51</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="vat">
-<td class="tal pl3hi3">One lump of sugar<br />10 grams</td>
-<td class="tar"><div>. . .</div></td>
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tar pr05"><div>88</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="vat">
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tar o pb1"><div>12.76</div></td>
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tar o pr05 pb1"><div>850</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tac"><div>LUNCH</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="fs75">
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tar"><div>Proteid</div></td>
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tar"><div>Calories</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="vat">
-<td class="tal pl3hi3">One teacup homemade chicken soup<br />144 grams</td>
-<td class="tar"><div>5.25</div></td>
-<td class="tal">&nbsp;grams</td>
-<td class="tar pr05"><div>60</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="vat">
-<td class="tal pl3hi3">One Parker-house roll<br />38 grams</td>
-<td class="tar"><div>3.38</div></td>
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tar pr05"><div>110</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="vat">
-<td class="tal pl3hi3">Two one-inch cubes of butter<br />38 grams</td>
-<td class="tar"><div>0.38</div></td>
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tar pr05"><div>284</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="vat">
-<td class="tal pl3hi3">One slice lean bacon<br />10 grams</td>
-<td class="tar"><div>2.14</div></td>
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tar pr05"><div>65</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="vat">
-<td class="tal pl3hi3">One small baked potato<br />2 ounces, 60 grams</td>
-<td class="tar"><div>1.53</div></td>
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tar pr05"><div>55</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="vat">
-<td class="tal pl3hi3">One rice croquette<br />90 grams</td>
-<td class="tar"><div>3.42</div></td>
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tar pr05"><div>150</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="vat">
-<td class="tal pl3hi3">Two ounces maple syrup<br />60 grams</td>
-<td class="tar"><div>. . .</div></td>
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tar pr05"><div>166</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="vat">
-<td class="tal pl3hi3">One cup of tea with one slice lemon</td>
-<td class="tar"><div>. . .</div></td>
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tar pr05"><div>. .</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="vat">
-<td class="tal pl3hi3">One lump of sugar<br />10 grams</td>
-<td class="tar"><div>. . .</div></td>
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tar pr05"><div>38</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="vat">
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tar o pb1"><div>16.10</div></td>
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tar o pr05 pb1"><div>928</div></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-<table class="mtb1em" summary="">
-<tr>
-<td class="tac"><div>DINNER</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="fs75">
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tar"><div>Proteid</div></td>
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tar"><div>Calories</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="vat">
-<td class="tal pl3hi3">One teacup cream of corn soup<br />130 grams</td>
-<td class="tar"><div>3.25</div></td>
-<td class="tal">&nbsp;grams</td>
-<td class="tar pr05"><div>72</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="vat">
-<td class="tal pl3hi3">One Parker-house roll<br />38 grams</td>
-<td class="tar"><div>3.38</div></td>
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tar pr05"><div>110</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="vat">
-<td class="tal pl3hi3">One-inch cube of butter<br />19 grams</td>
-<td class="tar"><div>0.19</div></td>
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tar pr05"><div>142</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="vat">
-<td class="tal pl3hi3">One small lamb chop, broiled<br />lean meat, 30 grams</td>
-<td class="tar"><div>8.51</div></td>
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tar pr05"><div>92</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="vat">
-<td class="tal pl3hi3">One teacup of mashed potato<br />167 grams</td>
-<td class="tar"><div>3.34</div></td>
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tar pr05"><div>175</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="vat">
-<td class="tal pl3hi3">Apple-celery lettuce salad with<br />mayonnaise dressing 50 grams</td>
-<td class="tar"><div>0.62</div></td>
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tar pr05"><div>75</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="vat">
-<td class="tal pl3hi3">One Boston cracker, split<br />2 inches diameter, 12 grams</td>
-<td class="tar"><div>1.32</div></td>
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tar pr05"><div>47</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="vat">
-<td class="tal pl3hi3">One-half inch cube American cheese<br />12 grams</td>
-<td class="tar"><div>3.35</div></td>
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tar pr05"><div>50</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="vat">
-<td class="tal pl3hi3">One-half teacup of bread pudding<br />85 grams</td>
-<td class="tar"><div>5.25</div></td>
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tar pr05"><div>150</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="vat">
-<td class="tal">One demi-tasse coffee</td>
-<td class="tar"><div>. . .</div></td>
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tar pr05"><div>. .</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="vat">
-<td class="tal pl3hi3">One lump of sugar<br />10 grams</td>
-<td class="tar"><div>. . .</div></td>
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tar pr05"><div>38</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="vat">
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tar o"><div>29.21</div></td>
-<td class="tal"></td>
-<td class="tar o pr05"><div>951</div></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The grand totals for the day, with this dietary, amount to
-58.07 grams of proteid and 2729 calories. It is of course
-understood that these figures are to be considered as only approximately
-correct, but the illustration will suffice, perhaps, to
-give a clearer understanding of the actual quantities of food
-involved in a daily ration approaching the requirements for a
-man of 70 kilograms body-weight. Further, there may be
-suggested by the figures given for proteid and fuel value of
-the different quantities of foods, a clearer conception of how
-much given dietary articles count for in swelling the total
-values of a day’s intake. Moreover, it is easy to see how the
-diet can be added to or modified in a given direction. If a
-little more proteid is desired without changing materially the
-fuel value of the food a boiled egg can be added to the breakfast,
-for example. An average-sized egg (of 53 grams) contains
-6.9 grams of proteid, while it will increase the fuel value
-of the food by only 80 calories. Or, if more vegetable proteid
-is wished for, a soup of split-peas can be introduced, without
-changing in any degree the calorific value of the diet. Thus,
-one teacup of split-pea soup (144 grams) contains 8.64 grams
-of proteid, while the fuel value of this quantity may be only
-94 calories. The addition of one banana (160 grams) will
-increase fuel value 153 calories, but will add only 2.28 grams<span class="pagenum" id="Page_283">283</span>
-of proteid. If it is desired to increase fuel value without
-change in the proteid-content of the food, recourse can always
-be had to butter, fat of meat, additional oil in salads, or to syrup
-and sugar.</p>
-
-<p>Such a menu as is roughly outlined, however, has perhaps
-special value in emphasizing how largely the proteid intake
-is increased by foods other than meats, and which are not
-conspicuously rich in proteid matter. All wheat products,
-for example, while abounding in starch, still show a large proportion
-of proteid. Thus, shredded wheat biscuit (1 ounce),
-which is a type of many kindred wheat preparations, from
-bread and biscuit to the various so-called breakfast foods,
-yields about 3 grams of proteid per ounce and approximately
-100 calories. Even potato, which is conspicuously a carbohydrate
-food owing to its large content of starch, yields of
-nitrogen the equivalent of at least three-fourths of a gram of
-proteid per ounce. If larger volume is desired without much
-increase in real food value, there are always available green
-foods, such as lettuce, celery, greens of various sorts, fruits,
-such as apples, grapes, oranges, etc. Too great reliance on
-meats as a type of concentrated food, on the other hand,
-augments largely the intake of proteid, and adds a relatively
-small amount to the fuel value of the day’s ration.</p>
-
-<p>An ingenious method of indicating food values, which
-promises to be of service in sanatoria and under other conditions
-where it is desirable to record or correct the diet of a
-large number of persons, has been devised recently by Professor
-Fisher<span class="nowrap">.<a id="FNanchor_77" href="#Footnote_77" class="fnanchor">77</a></span> The method aims to save labor, and is likewise
-designed to visualize the magnitude and proportions of
-the diet. The food is measured by calories instead of by
-weight, a “standard portion” of 100 large calories being the
-unit made use of. In carrying out the method, foods are<span class="pagenum" id="Page_284">284</span>
-served at table in “standard portions,” or multiples thereof.
-In the words of Fisher, the amount of milk served, for
-example, “instead of being a whole number of ounces,
-should be 4.9 ounces&mdash;the amount that contains 100 calories.
-This ‘standard portion’ constitutes about two-thirds of an
-ordinary glass of milk. Of the 100 calories which it contains
-19 will be in the form of proteid, 52 in fat, and 29 in
-carbohydrate.” In the carrying out of this plan, it is evident
-that the weight of any food yielding 100 calories becomes
-a measure of the degree of concentration. From the standpoint
-of fuel value, olive oil is probably one of the most
-concentrated of foods, approximately one-third of an ounce
-containing 100 calories. The following table, taken from
-Fisher’s description of his method, will serve to show the
-amounts of several foods constituting a “standard portion,”
-and also the number of calories in the form of proteid, fat,
-and carbohydrate:</p>
-
-<div class="center">
-<table class="mtb1em" summary="">
-<tr>
-<th class="tac blm bb">Name of Food and “Portion”<br />roughly estimated.</th>
-<th class="tac brl bb prl03" colspan="2">Weight contain-<br />ing 100 Calories.</th>
-<th class="tac brl bb prl03">Proteid.</th>
-<th class="tac brl bb">Fat.</th>
-<th class="tac brl bb prl03">Carbo-<br />hydrate.</th>
-<th class="tac brm bb">Total.</th>
-</tr>
-<tr class="fs75">
-<td class="tal blm"></td>
-<td class="tac brl prl03">ounces</td>
-<td class="tac brl prl03">grams</td>
-<td class="tac brl prl03">calories</td>
-<td class="tac brl prl03">calories</td>
-<td class="tac brl prl03">calories</td>
-<td class="tac brm prl03">calories</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl03">Almonds, a dozen</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.53</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr06"><div>15</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr05"><div>13.0</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr05"><div>77.0</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr08"><div>10</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>100</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl03">Bananas, one large</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>3.50</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr06"><div>98</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr05"><div>5.0</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr05"><div>5.0</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr08"><div>90</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>100</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl03">Bread, a large slice</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>1.30</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr06"><div>37</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr05"><div>13.0</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr05"><div>6.0</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr08"><div>81</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>100</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl03">Butter, an ordinary pat</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.44</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr06"><div>13</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr05"><div>0.5</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr05"><div>99.5</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr08">. .</td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>100</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl03">Eggs, one large</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>2.10</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr06"><div>60</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr05"><div>32.0</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr05"><div>68.0</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr08"><div>. .</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>100</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl03">Oysters, a dozen</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>6.80</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr06"><div>190</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr05"><div>49.0</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr05"><div>22.0</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr08"><div>29</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>100</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl03">Potatoes, one</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>3.60</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr06"><div>100</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr05"><div>10.0</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr05"><div>1.0</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr08"><div>89</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>100</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm prl03">Whole milk, two-thirds glass</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>4.90</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr06"><div>140</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr05"><div>19.0</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr05"><div>52.0</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr08"><div>29</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>100</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl03">Beef sirloin, a small piece</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>1.40</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr06"><div>40</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr05"><div>31.0</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr05"><div>69.0</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr08"><div>. .</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>100</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm bbm pl03">Sugar, five teaspoons</td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>0.86</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl bbm pr06"><div>24</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl bbm pr05"><div>. . . .</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl bbm pr05"><div>. . . .</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl bbm pr08"><div>100</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm bbm">100 <span class="pagenum" id="Page_285">285</span></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<p>Obviously, to make use of the “calories per cent” method
-a table such as the above, covering all common foodstuffs and
-showing the weight of each food constituting a standard portion,
-together with the calories of proteid, fat, and carbohydrate
-in this portion, is necessary. The chief advantage of
-the method, however, is that it lends itself readily to geometrical
-representation and affords an easy means of determining
-the constituents of combinations of different foods by
-use of a simple mechanism, for a description of which reference
-must be made to the original paper.</p>
-
-<p>Any attempt to follow a daily routine which accords with
-the true needs of the body leads necessarily toward foods
-derived from the plant kingdom, with the adoption of simple
-dietary habits, and with greater freedom from the exciting influence
-of the richer animal foods. There is, however, virtue
-in a simple dietary that appeals and satisfies, and in so doing
-testifies to the completeness with which it meets the physiological
-requirements of the body. A physician<span class="nowrap">,<a id="FNanchor_78" href="#Footnote_78" class="fnanchor">78</a></span> writing in
-the “British Medical Journal,” says: “I determined to give the
-minimum-of-proteid diet a fair trial in my own case. The result
-was that I was relieved of a life-long tendency to acid
-dyspepsia and occasional sick headache; my fitness for work,
-my appetite and relish for food, were increased, without any
-diminution, but rather a slight increase, in my weight. My
-practice extends over a wide area of rough mountainous
-country involving long journeys on cycle, on foot, driving,
-and in open boats, in fair and foul weather. The muscular
-exertion and endurance necessary for the work would seem to
-require a large proportion of proteid and a generous diet altogether,
-but since I began to experiment I have suffered less
-than formerly from fatigue, and seem to eat in all a smaller
-quantity of food. My diet consists of:</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_286">286</span></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-<p>Breakfast, 8.30&nbsp;<span class="lowercase smcap">A.M.</span>&mdash;Oatmeal cakes, bread and butter, about 1 cubic inch of
-cheese or bloater paste, marmalade, and one breakfast cup of tea.</p>
-
-<p>Lunch, 1.30&nbsp;<span class="lowercase smcap">P.M.</span>&mdash;Same as breakfast, with occasionally a boiled egg, and
-sometimes coffee instead of tea.</p>
-
-<p>Dinner, 7&nbsp;<span class="lowercase smcap">P.M.</span>&mdash;Thick soup containing vegetables, with bread, followed by
-suet pudding or fruit tart; or vegetable stew, containing 2 or 3 ounces of meat,
-with boiled potatoes, followed by milk pudding and jam, and occasionally a
-cup of black coffee.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>This statement of personal experience is in close accord
-with statements that have come to the writer in hundreds of
-letters during the past two or three years, from persons who
-have for some reason chosen to follow a more abstemious
-mode of life. Such testimony has a certain measure of value
-in that it offers corroborative evidence of the beneficial effects
-of a moderate diet, more closely in accord with the actual demands
-of the body for food. It does not, however, carry quite
-that degree of assurance that scientific evidence, gathered by
-careful observers and controlled by weights and measures that
-hold the imagination in check, affords; and so we may turn to a
-different type of testimony, presented in an elaborate research
-by Dr. Neumann<span class="nowrap">,<a id="FNanchor_79" href="#Footnote_79" class="fnanchor">79</a></span> of the Hygienic Institute at Kiel, an experiment
-on himself extending through a total of 746 days.</p>
-
-<p>The experiment was divided into three periods. In the first
-period of ten months the subject, with a body-weight of 66.5
-kilograms, consumed daily on an average the amounts of food
-indicated in the following table. In this same table are also
-included the daily values, based on the preceding data, for a
-body-weight of 70 kilograms. Thirdly, the table likewise
-shows the amounts of utilizable food contained in the foodstuffs
-actually eaten, on the basis of 70 kilos body-weight.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_287">287</span></p>
-
-<p class="tabtitle">AVERAGE DAILY FOOD FOR TEN MONTHS</p>
-
-<div class="center">
-<table class="mb1em" cellpadding="2" summary="">
-<tr>
-<th class="tal blm bb"></th>
-<th class="tac brl bb prl03"><div>Actually consumed<br />by the Subject,<br />66.5 Kilos</div></th>
-<th class="tac brl bb prl03"><div>Calculated for a<br />Body-weight of<br />70 Kilos</div></th>
-<th class="tac brm bb prl03"><div>Utilizable Food<br />for a Body-weight of<br />70 Kilos</div></th>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl03">Proteid</td>
-<td class="tar brl pr08"><div>66.1 grams</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr05"><div>69.1 grams</div></td>
-<td class="tar brm pr1"><div>57.3 grams</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl03">Fat</td>
-<td class="tar brl pr08"><div>83.5<span class="hide"> grams</span></div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr05"><div>90.2<span class="hide"> grams</span></div></td>
-<td class="tar brm pr1"><div>81.2<span class="hide"> grams</span></div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm prl03">Carbohydrate</td>
-<td class="tar brl pr08"><div>230.0<span class="hide"> grams</span></div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr05"><div>242.0<span class="hide"> grams</span></div></td>
-<td class="tar brm pr1"><div>225.0<span class="hide"> grams</span></div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl03">Alcohol</td>
-<td class="tar brl pr08"><div>43.7<span class="hide"> grams</span></div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr05"><div>45.6<span class="hide"> grams</span></div></td>
-<td class="tar brm pr1"><div>41.0<span class="hide"> grams</span></div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm bbm pl03">Fuel value</td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>2309 calories</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm prl03"><div>2427 calories</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm bbm">2199 calories</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<p>During this period of ten months, the body-weight of the
-subject remained practically constant, or indeed showed a
-slight gain up to 67 kilograms. All the functions of the
-body, and the general condition of good health, were in no
-wise impaired; so that in the words of the subject, the amount
-of food eaten must have been sufficient for the needs of the
-body. Somewhat striking is the fact that of the 2309 calories
-in the daily food, more than one-fourth was derived from the
-beer consumed daily (1200&nbsp;c.c.). Also noticeable is the relatively
-small amount of carbohydrate taken daily, only about
-one-half the quantity designated by Voit as the average requirement
-of German laborers. Finally, it is to be observed
-that during this period of ten months, the daily consumption
-of food as calculated for a man of 70 kilograms body-weight,
-based on the actual food consumption of the subject with a
-weight of 66.5 kilos, was not widely different from our own
-statement of 60 grams of proteid and 2800 calories. The
-tendency, however, in Dr. Neumann’s experiment was toward
-lower fuel values and somewhat higher proteid consumption.</p>
-
-<p>In a second period of 50 days, with a slightly larger daily
-intake, Dr. Neumann observed that his body was laying by
-nitrogen, <i>i.&nbsp;e.</i>, storing up proteid on a daily diet of 76.5 grams<span class="pagenum" id="Page_288">288</span>
-of proteid and with sufficient fat and carbohydrate to furnish
-a total fuel value of 2658 calories. In the final period of 8
-months, the following data were obtained:</p>
-
-
-<p class="tabtitle">AVERAGE DAILY FOOD FOR EIGHT MONTHS</p>
-
-<div class="center">
-<table class="mb1em" cellpadding="2" summary="">
-<tr>
-<th class="tal blm bb"></th>
-<th class="tac brl bb prl03"><div>Actually consumed<br />by the Subject,<br />71.5 Kilos.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brl bb prl03"><div>Calculated for a<br />Body-Weight of<br />70 Kilos.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brm bb prl03"><div>Utilizable Food for a<br />Body-Weight of<br /> 70 Kilos.</div></th>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl03">Proteid</td>
-<td class="tar brl pr08"><div>76.2 grams</div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr05"><div>74.0 grams</div></td>
-<td class="tar brm pr1"><div>61.4 grams</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl03">Fat</td>
-<td class="tar brl pr08"><div>109.0<span class="hide"> grams</span></div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr05"><div>106.1<span class="hide"> grams</span></div></td>
-<td class="tar brm pr1"><div>95.5<span class="hide"> grams</span></div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm prl03">Carbohydrate</td>
-<td class="tar brl pr08"><div>168.9<span class="hide"> grams</span></div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr05"><div>164.2<span class="hide"> grams</span></div></td>
-<td class="tar brm pr1"><div>152.7<span class="hide"> grams</span></div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm pl03">Alcohol</td>
-<td class="tar brl pr08"><div>5.5<span class="hide"> grams</span></div></td>
-<td class="tar brl pr05"><div>5.3<span class="hide"> grams</span></div></td>
-<td class="tar brm pr1"><div>4.7<span class="hide"> grams</span></div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm bbm pl03">Fuel value</td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>2057 calories</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm prl03"><div>1999 calories</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm bbm"><div>1766 calories</div></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<p>During this period, it is to be noted that the fuel value of
-the day’s food averaged only 2057 calories, which for a body-weight
-of 70 kilograms would amount to less than 2000 calories.
-The proteid consumption, however, was larger than we
-have found to be necessary for a man of the above weight.
-Still, the facts are in harmony with the general principle that
-there is no necessity for a daily intake of food such as common
-usage dictates, there being obviously a wide difference between
-a minimal daily consumption of 118 grams of proteid and
-3000 or more calories, such as is assumed to be needed by a
-man of 70 kilos, and 74 grams of proteid with 1999 calories.
-Under the latter conditions, the subject gained a kilogram in
-weight during the eight months, while the establishment of
-nitrogen equilibrium testifies to the now generally accepted
-view that it is quite possible for the body to establish nitrogen
-equilibrium at different levels, <i>i.&nbsp;e.</i>, with different quantities
-of proteid food and different fuel values.</p>
-
-<p>The diet made use of by Neumann was a mixed one, containing<span class="pagenum" id="Page_289">289</span>
-a great variety of animal and vegetable foods, but
-withal simple and moderate in quantity. Calculated per kilogram
-of body-weight, the average consumption of food material
-per day during the three periods was as indicated in
-the following table:</p>
-
-
-<p class="tabtitle">DAILY FOOD CONSUMPTION PER KILOGRAM OF WEIGHT</p>
-
-<div class="center">
-<table class="mb1em" cellpadding="2" summary="">
-<tr>
-<th class="tal blm bb"></th>
-<th class="tac brl bb prl05"><div>Proteid.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brl bb prl03"><div>Fat.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brl bb prl03"><div>Carbohydrate.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brl bb prl05"><div>Alcohol.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brm bb prl03"><div>Calories</div></th>
-</tr>
-<tr class="fs75">
-<td class="blm"></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>grams</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl prl1"><div>grams</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>grams</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>grams</div></td>
-<td class="brm"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm prl03">First Period</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.99</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>1.3</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>34.5</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>0.56</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>34.7</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm prl03">Second Period</td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>1.10</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>2.3</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>33.4</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>. .</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>59.7</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tal blm bbm prl03">Third Period</td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>1.00</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>1.5</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>23.4</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>0.07</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm bbm"><div>28.5</div></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<p>The average of daily food consumption for the total of 746
-days was as follows: 74.2 grams proteid, 117 grams fat, 213
-grams carbohydrate, and 2367 calories. On such a diet, during
-this long period, equilibrium was satisfactorily maintained,
-thereby furnishing additional evidence that quantities of food
-way below the so-called normal amounts are quite adequate
-to meet the needs of the body. There is no conflict whatever
-between these results and our own; they both point in the
-same general direction. Perhaps the one thing that needs to
-be again emphasized, however, in view of the low fuel values
-used by Neumann, is that while they proved quite adequate
-in his case, the demand in this direction is governed largely
-by the degree of bodily activity. In fact, Neumann’s results
-with fuel values are in perfect harmony with the data obtained
-by us with professional men, but the writer is inclined to
-believe that for the majority of mankind, with the varying
-degrees of activity and muscular exertion called for, a somewhat
-larger number of heat units is desirable, and indeed on
-many occasions demanded.</p>
-
-<p>Still, it is perfectly obvious that custom has greatly exaggerated<span class="pagenum" id="Page_290">290</span>
-the fuel values required in ordinary muscular work,
-and such results as are here presented tend to emphasize the
-true relationship between actual requirements and fuel intake.
-Further, it must not be overlooked that the rate of proteid
-katabolism is governed in large measure by the amount of
-non-nitrogenous food, and consequently a too narrow margin
-in the consumption of the latter will obviously result in a
-higher rate of proteid exchange. We are inclined to the
-belief that a satisfactory degree of bodily efficiency is more
-liable to be maintained with a somewhat larger consumption
-of carbohydrate food, combined with a reduction in proteid
-food to a level nearer our own figures. It will be observed
-that the average amount of carbohydrate taken daily by
-Neumann, during the 746 days, was only 213 grams, while the
-daily consumption of fat averaged 117 grams. These figures
-are interesting and instructive in many ways, especially as indicating
-the ease with which the body accommodates itself to
-a relatively low intake of proteid food, combined with a small
-proportion of starches and sugars. This relationship between
-carbohydrate and fat might well occur at times as a natural
-result of personal taste, but as a general rule it is probably
-better, from the standpoint of digestibility and general availability,
-for the daily food to contain a larger proportion of
-carbohydrate.</p>
-
-<p>Under this head, I would lay special stress upon the value
-to the body of the natural sugars as well as of starch. We
-are inclined to deprecate the widespread use of candy, especially
-among children, and there is no doubt that the too lavish use
-of sugar in such concentrated form does at times do harm;
-but when eaten as an integral part of the many available fruits
-its use cannot be too highly lauded, for both young and old.
-Oranges, grapes, prunes, dates, plums, and bananas are especially
-to be commended, and in lesser degree peaches, apricots,
-pears, apples, figs, strawberries, raspberries, and blueberries.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_291">291</span>
-In all of these fruits, it is the sugar especially that gives food
-value to the article, while the mild acids and other extractives,
-together with the water of the fruit, help in other ways
-in the maintenance of good health. Where personal taste and
-inclination are favorably disposed, the first six fruits named
-can be partaken of freely, and the diet of the young, especially,
-can be advantageously modified by the liberal use of such
-articles of food.</p>
-
-<p>Of the other fruits, apples when thoroughly ripe are
-above reproach if properly masticated, but the raw fruit is
-somewhat indigestible when swallowed in too large pieces, and
-may cause trouble to a delicate stomach. A baked apple, on
-the other hand, is both savory and wholesome, and if served
-with sugar and cream, for example, constitutes a most healthful
-and satisfying article of food. Peaches, apricots, and
-strawberries as ripe fruits are likewise exceedingly valuable,
-but here personal idiosyncrasy frequently comes to the fore,
-especially with strawberries, and prohibits their free use.
-The peculiar acidity of these latter fruits is occasionally a
-source of trouble, which leads to their avoidance; but this is
-far less liable to happen with people living on a low proteid
-diet with its greater freedom from purin derivatives, or uric
-acid antecedents. Further, there is a tendency on the part of
-some individuals to suffer from acid fermentation with too
-liberal use of starches and sugar, but as a rule the advantages
-of ordinary starchy and natural sugar-containing foods cannot
-be overestimated. It is certainly wise to give them a conspicuous
-place in the daily dietary and to encourage their use,
-especially by children.</p>
-
-<p>As has been stated in several connections, a diet which
-conforms to the true nutritive requirements of the body must
-necessarily lead toward vegetable foods. In no other satisfactory
-way can excess of proteid be avoided, and at the same
-time the proper calorific value be obtained. This, however,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_292">292</span>
-does not mean vegetarianism, but simply a greater reliance
-upon foods from the plant kingdom, with a corresponding diminution
-in the typical animal foods. This raises the question
-of the possible relation of diet to the bacterial processes of
-the intestine, knowing, as we do, that the latter are of
-primary importance in the causation of certain forms of auto-intoxication,
-etc. Recent studies have indicated that the bacterial
-flora of carnivorous animals is quite different from that
-of herbivorous animals, and this being so, it is easy to see how
-a predominance of vegetable or animal food may modify the
-bacterial conditions of the intestinal tract in man. Dr.
-<span class="nowrap">Herter<a id="FNanchor_80" href="#Footnote_80" class="fnanchor">80</a></span> has reported the presence in the intestines of cats,
-dogs, tigers, lion, and wolf of many spore-holding bacilli, as
-well as free spores and vegetative forms of anærobic organisms;
-some of which at least are decidedly pathogenic when
-injected into the subcutaneous connective tissue, leading to
-serious and even fatal results within twenty-four hours.
-With herbivorous animals, on the other hand, such as the
-buffalo, goat, horse, elephant, etc., the predominating organisms
-are of a different order from those found in the intestines
-of the carnivora; proving practically non-pathogenic,
-or only slightly so, when injected subcutaneously, and less
-disposed to produce putrefactive changes or other chemical
-decompositions.</p>
-
-<p>In the words of Dr. Herter, “These differences in the
-appearance and behavior of the bacteria derived from typical
-carnivora and herbivora suggest that the habit of living
-upon a diet consisting exclusively of raw meat entails
-differences in the types of bacteria that characterize the contents
-of the large intestine. The occurrence of considerable
-numbers of spore-bearing organisms in the carnivora points
-to the presence of anærobic putrefactive forms in great numbers.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_293">293</span>
-The results of subcutaneous inoculations into guinea-pigs
-bear out this view and indicate that the numbers of
-organisms capable of producing a hemorrhagic œdema with
-tissue necrosis, with or without gas-production, are very considerable.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-The observations recorded are of much interest
-in relation to the bacterial processes and nutrition of
-herbivorous as distinguished from carnivorous animals, and
-are significant furthermore for the interpretation of bacterial
-conditions found in man. The question arises whether the
-abundant use of meat over a long period of time may not
-favor the development of much larger numbers of spore-bearing
-putrefactive anærobes in the intestinal tract than
-would be the case were a different type of proteid substituted
-for meat.” While it may be said truly that observations of
-this character are as yet not sufficiently numerous or conclusive
-to warrant positive or sweeping statements, yet there is
-a suggestion here well worthy of thoughtful consideration in
-its general bearing on the nutrition of mankind.</p>
-
-<p>Simplicity in diet, with or without complete abstinence
-from meat, is often resorted to as a means of relief from bodily
-ailments, and such cases sometimes afford striking illustrations
-of the adequacy and benefits of a relatively low intake of food.
-Cases of this sort, perhaps, are more frequently observed
-among elderly people, where the daily requirements are not so
-great as with younger and more active persons, but they offer
-evidence in support of our main thesis that dietary habits are
-no guarantee of bodily requirements. I have in mind the details
-of an exceedingly interesting case reported with much
-care by Dr. Fenger<span class="nowrap">;<a id="FNanchor_81" href="#Footnote_81" class="fnanchor">81</a></span> the case of a man who at 61 years of
-age, after a long period of poor health, brought himself
-quickly into a condition of sound health by a daily diet characterized
-by extreme simplicity and with an exceedingly low<span class="pagenum" id="Page_294">294</span>
-fuel value. The daily diet made use of during the fifteen
-years the subject was under examination consisted of the
-following articles:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="pl3hi3">1889–1892: 1 egg, 1 quart of oatmeal soup, 2 quarts of skim milk, <span class="nowrap">1 <span class="fraction"><span class="fnum">1</span><span class="bar">/</span><span class="fden">2</span></span></span> ounces of
-red wine, <span class="nowrap"> <span class="fraction"><span class="fnum">1</span><span class="bar">/</span><span class="fden">4</span></span></span> ounce of sugar.</p>
-
-<p class="pl3hi3">1892–1894: 2 eggs, 1 quart of oatmeal soup, 2 quarts of skim milk, <span class="nowrap">1 <span class="fraction"><span class="fnum">1</span><span class="bar">/</span><span class="fden">2</span></span></span> ounces
-of red wine, <span class="nowrap"> <span class="fraction"><span class="fnum">1</span><span class="bar">/</span><span class="fden">4</span></span></span> ounce of sugar.</p>
-
-<p class="pl3hi3">1894–1900: 3 eggs, 1 pint of oatmeal soup, 2 quarts of skim milk, <span class="nowrap">1 <span class="fraction"><span class="fnum">1</span><span class="bar">/</span><span class="fden">2</span></span></span> ounces of
-red wine, <span class="nowrap"> <span class="fraction"><span class="fnum">1</span><span class="bar">/</span><span class="fden">4</span></span></span> ounce of sugar, 2 ounces of plum and raspberry juice.</p>
-
-<p class="pl3hi3">1900–1903: 3 eggs, 1 pint of barley soup, 3 pints of sweet milk, 1 pint of buttermilk,
-<span class="nowrap">1 <span class="fraction"><span class="fnum">1</span><span class="bar">/</span><span class="fden">2</span></span></span> ounces of red wine, <span class="nowrap"> <span class="fraction"><span class="fnum">1</span><span class="bar">/</span><span class="fden">4</span></span></span> ounce of sugar, 2 ounces of plum and
-raspberry juice.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>It will be observed that during these fifteen years the subject
-partook of no meat whatever, and further, that the diet
-was wholly in fluid form. At the close of this long period,
-the subject, being then 75 years of age, was reported as well
-and in good health, with satisfactory physical condition for a
-person of his years. He was a man of small body-weight,
-only 42 kilograms, but during this period of voluntary restriction
-in diet, he suffered no loss. It is perhaps worthy of
-comment also that all through this lengthy period no salt was
-taken other than what was naturally present in the simple
-foods made use of. The point to attract our attention especially,
-however, is that for fifteen years, during which the
-quality and quantity of this man’s food was carefully observed,
-body-weight, general good health, and physical vigor were all
-maintained, together with freedom from the ills of previous
-years and with a daily diet characterized by extreme simplicity.
-The chemical composition of the diet was likewise peculiar,
-particularly in its exceedingly low fuel value. The following
-table shows the amounts of proteid, fat, and carbohydrate
-consumed daily during the four periods designated:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_295">295</span></p>
-
-<div class="center">
-<table class="mtb1em" cellpadding="2" summary="">
-<col width="20%" /><col width="13%" /><col width="13%" /><col width="13%" /><col width="13%" /><col width="14%" /><col width="14%" />
-<tr>
-<th class="tac blm bb"><div>Period.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brl bb"><div>Proteid.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brl bb"><div>Fat.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brl bb prl03"><div>Carbo-<br />hydrate.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brl bb prl03"><div>Calories.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brl bb prl03"><div>Calories<br />per Kilo-<br />gram.</div></th>
-<th class="tac brm bb prl03"><div>Proteid<br />per Kilo-<br />gram.</div></th>
-</tr>
-<tr class="fs75">
-<td class="tac blm"></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>grams</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>grams</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>grams</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"></td>
-<td class="tac brl"></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>grams</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tac blm prl03"><div>1889–1892</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>79.8</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>21.7</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>152.0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>1125</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>26</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>1.90</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tac blm prl03"><div>1892–1894</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>85.2</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>27.0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>152.0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>1200</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>28</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>2.03</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tac blm prl03"><div>1894–1900</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>87.0</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>30.1</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>150.1</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>1230</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl"><div>29</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm"><div>2.07</div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tac blm bbm prl03"><div>1900–1903</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>84.4</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>73.7</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>148.3</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>1600</div></td>
-<td class="tac brl bbm"><div>38</div></td>
-<td class="tac brm bbm"><div>2.00</div></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<p>Especially noticeable here is the low intake of fat and carbohydrate,
-with the corresponding low fuel value, and also the
-relatively high consumption of proteid, averaging 2.0 grams
-daily per kilogram of body-weight. Dr. Fenger concludes
-that for a man of this age and weight, with the relative inactivity
-characteristic of old age, a heat value in the intake of 30
-calories per kilogram of body-weight is quite sufficient for the
-needs of the body. This may be quite true, but to maintain
-nitrogen equilibrium under such conditions requires a larger
-intake of proteid food than is desirable. It will be observed
-that in the last period of four years a very decided change in
-the diet was instituted; proteid was diminished somewhat,
-but the noticeable change was the decided increase in fat, produced
-in large measure by the substitution of whole milk,
-with its contained cream, for skim milk. In the words of Dr.
-Fenger, this change was necessitated by the appearance of
-gout in the subject. From superficial examination of the dietary
-of the preceding eleven years there would seem no occasion
-for criticising the subject for high living, and yet I
-believe we are quite within the limits of reason in saying that
-the proteid exchange for a subject of this body-weight was
-altogether too high. The heat requirements of the body were
-being met in an unnecessarily large degree from the breaking
-down of proteid material, with consequent formation of excessive<span class="pagenum" id="Page_296">296</span>
-nitrogenous waste, among which uric acid was plainly
-conspicuous.</p>
-
-<p>One comment to be made here is that meat and other rich
-purin-containing foodstuffs are not the only source of gout
-and uric acid. Excessive proteid katabolism, both exogenous
-and endogenous, is a possible source of danger in this
-respect, and the above subject, though living on an exceptionally
-simple diet, was consuming far more proteid per
-kilogram of body-weight than was necessary or desirable.
-Increase of fatty food naturally served to diminish the rate of
-proteid katabolism, and this could have been advantageously
-accompanied by a still greater reduction in the amount of
-proteid ingested, and a larger addition of non-nitrogenous
-foodstuffs. In old age, there is naturally a slowing down of the
-metabolic processes, and both nitrogen equilibrium and body
-equilibrium can be satisfactorily maintained by a relatively
-small intake of food and with gain to the body; but there is
-every reason to believe that economy in proteid food can be
-more advantageously adopted than economy in non-nitrogenous
-foodstuffs.</p>
-
-<p>Finally, we may call attention to the many possibilities of
-an intelligent modification of the daily diet to the temporary
-needs of the individual. The season of the year, summer and
-winter, the climate, the degree of activity of the body, the
-state of health, temporary ailments, etc., all present special
-conditions which admit of particular dietetic treatment. In
-hot summer weather, for example, there is plainly less need
-for food than in the cold winter season, especially for fat with
-its high calorific value. During the cold part of the year, the
-lower temperature of the surrounding air, with the tendency
-toward greater muscular activity, calls for more extensive
-chemical decomposition in order to meet the demand for
-heat, and the energy of muscular contraction. There is perhaps
-no special reason for any material change in the amount<span class="pagenum" id="Page_297">297</span>
-of proteid food consumed in the two seasons, except in so far
-as it may seem desirable at times to take advantage of the
-well-known stimulating properties of proteid to whip up
-the general metabolism of the body, in harmony with the
-principle that all metabolic processes may need spurring to
-meet the demands of a greatly lowered temperature in the
-surrounding air.</p>
-
-<p>Fuel value, however, should be increased somewhat during
-the winter months in our climate. Fat promises the largest
-amount of energy, but there is more of a tendency to
-store up excess of fat than of carbohydrate, hence the latter
-foods have certain advantages as a source of the additional
-energy needed during cold weather. In warm weather, it
-should be our aim to diminish unnecessary heat production as
-much as possible, though it must be remembered that the
-body is to be maintained approximately at least in equilibrium,
-and this calls for an adequate amount of food. Lighter foods,
-however, may be advantageously employed, such as fruits,
-vegetables, fresh fish, etc. Fats and fat meats especially are
-to be avoided, not only because there is no specific need for
-them, but particularly on account of a greater sensitiveness of
-the gastro-intestinal tract during the hot seasons of the year,
-that is liable to result in a disturbance whenever undue quantity
-of rich or heavy food is taken. Further, in hot summer
-weather we may advantageously live more largely on foods
-served cold, and thereby avoid the heat ordinarily introduced
-into the body by hot fluids and solids. These, however, are
-all obvious physiological truths, constituting a form of physiological
-good sense the application of which calls for no special
-expert knowledge.</p>
-
-<p>Less obvious, though no less important, is the partial protection
-that can be afforded to weakened or disabled kidneys
-by judgment and discrimination in the matter of diet. In
-acute or chronic nephritis, forms of so-called Bright’s disease,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_298">298</span>
-is there not danger of overtaxing organs already weakened by
-placing upon them the daily duty of excreting large amounts
-of solid nitrogenous waste, as well as of the various inorganic
-salts which are so intimately associated with many of the
-organic foodstuffs? The consumption of excessive and unnecessary
-amounts of proteid food simply means the ultimate
-formation of just so much more urea, uric acid, etc., which
-must be passed out through the kidneys. In the words of
-Bunge, “There is no organ in our body so mercilessly ill
-treated as the kidneys. The stomach reacts against overloading.
-The kidneys are obliged to let everything pass through
-them, and the harm done to them is not felt till it is too late
-to avoid the evil consequences.” It would seem the part of
-wisdom, therefore, to adjust the daily intake of proteid food to
-as low a level as is consistent with the true needs of the body,
-in those cases where the kidneys are at all enfeebled, or where
-it seems desirable to exercise due precaution as a possible
-means of prevention.</p>
-
-<p>Equal care is frequently called for in connection with the
-mineral matters which enter so largely into many natural
-foodstuffs, or which are introduced as condiments. As an
-illustration, we may note one or two peculiarities in the distribution
-of sodium and potassium salts in the tissues of the
-body. Potassium is an indispensable constituent of every living
-cell, and the latter has the power of absorbing and holding
-on to such amounts of this particular element as may be necessary
-for the functional activity of the tissue of which it is
-a part. Sodium, on the other hand, stands in a different
-relationship to living structures. It is widely distributed,
-but in the higher animals, as in man, sodium salts are most
-abundant in the fluids of the body, notably in the plasma
-of the blood. Herbivorous animals have a strong liking
-for sodium chloride or common salt, but this is not true of
-carnivorous animals; indeed, the latter animals have a great<span class="pagenum" id="Page_299">299</span>
-dislike for salty articles of food. Vegetable products are
-all rich in potassium salts, whereas ordinary animal foods,
-such as meat, eggs, milk, and blood, are relatively poor in this
-element.</p>
-
-<p>It is claimed that the abundance of potassium salts in
-vegetable foods is the cause of the apparent need for sodium
-chloride by herbivorous animals, and in lesser degree by
-man. This is explained by supposing that when the salts of
-potassium reach the blood by absorption of the vegetable
-foods, an interchange takes place with the sodium chloride of
-the blood plasma. “Chloride of potassium and the sodium
-salt of the acid which was combined with the potassium are
-formed. Instead of the chloride of sodium, therefore, the
-blood now contains another sodium salt, which did not form
-part of the normal composition of the blood, or at any rate
-not in so large a proportion. A foreign constituent or an
-excess of a normal constituent, <i>i. e.</i>, sodium carbonate, has
-arisen in the blood. But the kidneys possess the function of
-maintaining the same composition of the blood, and of thus
-eliminating every abnormal constituent and any excess of a
-normal constituent. The sodium salt formed is therefore
-ejected by the kidneys, together with the chloride of potassium,
-and the blood becomes poorer in chlorine and sodium.
-Common salt is therefore withdrawn from the organism by
-the ingestion of potassium salts. This loss can only be made
-up from without, and this explains the fact that animals which
-live on a diet rich in potassium, have a longing for salt”
-(Bunge). It is certainly a fact worthy of note that man takes
-only one salt as such in addition to those that are naturally
-present in his food, and it is equally significant that sodium
-chloride is by no means lacking in ordinary foodstuffs. If
-the individual lives entirely on animal foods, he has no desire
-for salt, but as soon as he adopts a vegetable diet the craving
-for salt shows itself. Vegetable foods, however, are not all<span class="pagenum" id="Page_300">300</span>
-alike in their content of potassium salts; some, like rice,
-contain relatively little, while others, like potatoes, peas, and
-beans, are comparatively rich in this element.</p>
-
-<p>We may recognize in these statements a physiological demand
-for a certain amount of salt, especially when vegetable
-foods enter into the daily dietary, but there is no justification
-for the employment of such quantities as are generally made
-use of. Where the vegetable food is largely rice, a small
-fraction of a gram of salt is really sufficient for all physiological
-purposes; and in those cases where ordinary cereals, legumes,
-potatoes, etc., constitute the chief part of the dietary,
-a few grams of salt, at the most, will suffice to meet the daily
-needs. Common usage, however, frequently raises the amount
-consumed to 25 grams or more per day, the bulk of which is at
-once eliminated through the kidneys; thereby entailing a certain
-amount of renal activity, which must, it would seem,
-constitute something of a strain upon organs ordinarily hard
-worked at the best. “Do we not impose too great a task
-upon them, and may it not be fraught with serious consequences?
-When on a diet of meat and bread, without salt,
-we excrete not more than from 6 to 8 grams of alkaline salts
-in twenty-four hours. With a diet of potatoes, and a corresponding
-addition of salt, over 100 grams of alkaline salts pass
-through the kidneys in the day. May not there be danger
-in this? The habit of drinking spirituous liquors, which
-moreover is reckoned one of the causes of chronic nephritis,
-also brings about the immoderate use of salt, and thus one
-sin against nature leads to another” (Bunge).</p>
-
-<p>The moral we would draw (from these observations) is that
-in weakened conditions of the kidneys there is reason in reducing
-the rate of proteid exchange to the lowest level consistent
-with the maintenance of equilibrium and the preservation
-of strength and vigor, thereby diminishing the amount of nitrogenous
-waste to be eliminated and the consequent strain<span class="pagenum" id="Page_301">301</span>
-upon these organs. Further, there is suggested moderation
-in the amount of salt to be used daily, and some circumspection
-in the amount and quality of vegetable foods consumed
-in order to regulate more effectually the quantity of saline
-waste to be handled by the kidneys. These conclusions are
-just as worthy of consideration as the more obvious rule that
-in diabetes or glycosuria proper precaution must be observed
-in the eating of carbohydrate foods. In gout and rheumatism,
-accumulated physiological knowledge teaches plainly the
-necessity of avoiding those foods that are rich in purin-containing
-compounds. Uric acid owes its origin in part at
-least to substances of this class; and as an ounce of prevention
-is worth more than a pound of cure, we may by proper moderation
-in the use of such foods save ourselves from the disagreeable
-effects of accumulated uric acid deposits.</p>
-
-<p>In conclusion, the nutrition of man, if it is to be carried
-out by the individual in a manner adapted to obtaining the
-best results, involves an intelligent appreciation of the needs
-of the body under different conditions of life, and a willingness
-to accept and put in practice the principles that scientific
-research has brought to light, even though such principles
-stand opposed to old-time traditions and customs. The master
-words which promise help in the carrying out of an intelligent
-plan of living are moderation and simplicity; moderation in
-the amount of food consumed daily, simplicity in the character
-of the dietary, in harmony with the old saying that man <i>eats
-to live</i> and not lives to eat. In so doing there is promise of
-health, strength, and longevity, with increased efficiency, as
-the reward of obedience to Nature’s laws.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_303">303</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="INDEX">INDEX</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div>
-<div class="center">
-<p class="hide"><a id="alpha-table"></a>alpha-table</p>
-<table width="400" class="mb1em" border="1" summary="alpha jump table">
-<col width="5%" /><col width="5%" /><col width="5%" /><col width="5%" /><col width="5%" /><col width="5%" /><col width="5%" /><col width="5%" /><col width="5%" /><col width="5%" /><col width="5%" /><col width="5%" /><col width="5%" />
-<tr class="center">
- <td class="tac"><div><a href="#IX_A">A</a></div></td>
- <td class="tac"><div><a href="#IX_B">B</a></div></td>
- <td class="tac"><div><a href="#IX_C">C</a></div></td>
- <td class="tac"><div><a href="#IX_D">D</a></div></td>
- <td class="tac"><div><a href="#IX_E">E</a></div></td>
- <td class="tac"><div><a href="#IX_F">F</a></div></td>
- <td class="tac"><div><a href="#IX_G">G</a></div></td>
- <td class="tac"><div><a href="#IX_H">H</a></div></td>
- <td class="tac"><div><a href="#IX_I">I</a></div></td>
- <td class="tac"><div><a href="#IX_J">J</a></div></td>
- <td class="tac"><div><a href="#IX_K">K</a></div></td>
- <td class="tac"><div><a href="#IX_L">L</a></div></td>
- <td class="tac"><div><a href="#IX_M">M</a></div></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="center">
- <td class="tac"><div><a href="#IX_N">N</a></div></td>
- <td class="tac"><div><a href="#IX_O">O</a></div></td>
- <td class="tac"><div><a href="#IX_P">P</a></div></td>
- <td class="tac"><div>Q</div></td>
- <td class="tac"><div><a href="#IX_R">R</a></div></td>
- <td class="tac"><div><a href="#IX_S">S</a></div></td>
- <td class="tac"><div><a href="#IX_T">T</a></div></td>
- <td class="tac"><div><a href="#IX_U">U</a></div></td>
- <td class="tac"><div><a href="#IX_V">V</a></div></td>
- <td class="tac"><div><a href="#IX_W">W</a></div></td>
- <td class="tac"><div><a href="#IX_X">X</a></div></td>
- <td class="tac"><div>Y</div></td>
- <td class="tac"><div>Z</div></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<p class="ind0"><span class="alpha"><a id="IX_A"></a><a href="#alpha-table">A</a></span></p>
-<p class="ind1">Abderhalden, Emil, <a href="#Page_35">35</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Absorption, a physiological process, <a href="#Page_41">41</a></p>
-<p class="ind55">diffusion as a factor in, <a href="#Page_41">41</a></p>
-<p class="ind55">from the stomach, <a href="#Page_31">31</a></p>
-<p class="ind55">in intestine, <a href="#Page_37">37</a></p>
-<p class="ind55">of fats, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>, <a href="#Page_49">49</a></p>
-<p class="ind55">of fats, in dogs on low proteid diet, <a href="#Page_233">233</a>, <a href="#Page_261">261</a></p>
-<p class="ind55">of food products, by blood, <a href="#Page_44">44</a></p>
-<p class="ind55">of peptones, <a href="#Page_41">41</a></p>
-<p class="ind55">of proteid in dogs on low proteid diet, <a href="#Page_233">233</a>, <a href="#Page_262">262</a></p>
-<p class="ind55">of proteid products, <a href="#Page_47">47</a></p>
-<p class="ind55">of proteoses, <a href="#Page_41">41</a></p>
-<p class="ind55">osmosis, as factor in, <a href="#Page_41">41</a></p>
-<p class="ind55">paths of, <a href="#Page_44">44</a></p>
-<p class="ind55">reconstruction of proteid during, <a href="#Page_42">42</a></p>
-<p class="ind55">selective action, of sugars, <a href="#Page_47">47</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Acid, aspartic, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>, <a href="#Page_259">259</a></p>
-<p class="ind3">glutaminic, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>, <a href="#Page_259">259</a></p>
-<p class="ind3">hydrochloric, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>, <a href="#Page_26">26</a></p>
-<p class="ind3">uric, <a href="#Page_73">73</a></p>
-<p class="ind3">uric, excretion of, as influenced by diet, <a href="#Page_144">144</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Acids, amino, <a href="#Page_34">34</a></p>
-<p class="ind3">diamino, <a href="#Page_34">34</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Adenase, <a href="#Page_71">71</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Adenin, <a href="#Page_72">72</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Aldehydase, <a href="#Page_64">64</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Amino acids, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>, <a href="#Page_67">67</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Ammonia, <a href="#Page_70">70</a>, <a href="#Page_259">259</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Amylopsin, <a href="#Page_32">32</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Anabolism, <a href="#Page_50">50</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Animals, influence of low proteid diet on high proteid, <a href="#Page_231">231</a>, <a href="#Page_233">233</a>, <a href="#Page_243">243</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Animal starch, <i>see</i> <a href="#Glycogen">Glycogen</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Appetite, in relation to food requirements, <a href="#Page_162">162</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Arginin, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>, <a href="#Page_68">68</a>, <a href="#Page_70">70</a>, <a href="#Page_259">259</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Argutinsky, views on muscle work, <a href="#Page_123">123</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Aspartic acid, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>, <a href="#Page_259">259</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Assimilation limits of sugars, <a href="#Page_47">47</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Athlete, photograph of, <a href="#Page_190">190</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Athletes, fuel value of food of, on low proteid diet, <a href="#Page_198">198</a></p>
-<p class="ind425">strength tests of, on low proteid diet, <a href="#Page_206">206</a><span class="pagenum" id="Page_304">304</span></p>
-<p class="ind425">true proteid requirement of, <a href="#Page_186">186</a></p>
-<p class="ind1"><a id="Atwater_and_Benedict"></a>Atwater and Benedict, <a href="#Page_109">109</a>, <a href="#Page_111">111</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Autodigestion (<i>see</i> <a href="#Autolysis">Autolysis</a>), <a href="#Page_63">63</a></p>
-<p class="ind1"><a id="Autolysis"></a>Autolysis, <a href="#Page_12">12</a></p>
-<p class="ind1"><a id="Availability"></a>Availability, of foods, <a href="#Page_12">12</a></p>
-<p class="ind55">of carbohydrates, as source of energy, <a href="#Page_45">45</a></p>
-
-<p class="ind0"><span class="alpha"><a id="IX_B"></a><a href="#alpha-table">B</a></span></p>
-<p class="ind1">Bacterial flora in intestine, of carnivora, <a href="#Page_292">292</a></p>
-<p class="ind12">of herbivora, <a href="#Page_292">292</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Bacterial processes in intestine, in relation to food, <a href="#Page_292">292</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Balance, nutritive, as affected by various factors, <a href="#Page_117">117</a>, <a href="#Page_118">118</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Basal energy exchange, <a href="#Page_104">104</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Beaumont, William, on movements of stomach, <a href="#Page_27">27</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Benedict, F. G., <i>see</i> <a href="#Atwater_and_Benedict">Atwater and Benedict</a></p>
-<p class="ind1"><a id="Bergell_and_Lewin"></a>Bergell and Lewin, <a href="#Page_36">36</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Beriberi, and diet, <a href="#Page_224">224</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Blood, absorption of food products by, <a href="#Page_44">44</a></p>
-<p class="ind325">behavior of disaccharides when introduced into, <a href="#Page_39">39</a></p>
-<p class="ind325">effects of injection of proteoses and peptones into, <a href="#Page_41">41</a></p>
-<p class="ind325">relation of sugar in, to glycogen, <a href="#Page_46">46</a></p>
-<p class="ind325">sugar in, <a href="#Page_45">45</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Body, amounts of food required to furnish proteid needs of, <a href="#Page_274">274</a></p>
-<p class="ind3">efficiency of, as a machine, <a href="#Page_111">111</a></p>
-<p class="ind3">equilibrium, <a href="#Page_78">78</a></p>
-<p class="ind3">nature of oxidation in the, <a href="#Page_60">60</a></p>
-<p class="ind3">needs of nitrogen by, <a href="#Page_4">4</a></p>
-<p class="ind3">needs for food by, <a href="#Page_169">169</a></p>
-<p class="ind3">needs and dietary habits, <a href="#Page_268">268</a></p>
-<p class="ind3">needs of proteid by, <a href="#Page_268">268</a>, <a href="#Page_272">272</a></p>
-<p class="ind3">relation of oxygen to decompositions in, <a href="#Page_61">61</a></p>
-<p class="ind3">resistance, <i>see</i> <a href="#Resistance">Resistance</a></p>
-<p class="ind3">sample dietary supplying needs of, <a href="#Page_280">280</a></p>
-<p class="ind3">site of oxidation in, <a href="#Page_62">62</a></p>
-<p class="ind3">surface, relation to energy exchange, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>, <a href="#Page_105">105</a></p>
-<p class="ind3">surface, relation to nitrogen requirement in dogs, <a href="#Page_248">248</a></p>
-<p class="ind1"><a id="Body-weight"></a>Body-weight, on low proteid diet, <a href="#Page_175">175</a>, <a href="#Page_181">181</a>, <a href="#Page_185">185</a>, <a href="#Page_190">190</a>, <a href="#Page_199">199</a>, <a href="#Page_245">245–255</a></p>
-<p class="ind625">relation to proteid requirement, <a href="#Page_184">184</a>, <a href="#Page_188">188</a>, <a href="#Page_198">198</a>, <a href="#Page_227">227</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Bright’s disease, <i>see</i> <a href="#Nephritis">Nephritis</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Breisacher, L., on minimum proteid requirement, <a href="#Page_172">172</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Bunge, <a href="#Page_124">124</a></p>
-
-<p class="ind0"><span class="alpha"><a id="IX_C"></a><a href="#alpha-table">C</a></span></p>
-<p class="ind1">Calorie, <a href="#Page_14">14</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Calorimeter, respiration, <a href="#Page_102">102</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Cane sugar, assimilation limit of, <a href="#Page_47">47</a></p>
-<p class="ind55">behavior when introduced into blood, <a href="#Page_39">39</a></p>
-<p class="ind55">utilization of, <a href="#Page_40">40</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Cannon, W. B., on muscular movements of stomach, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>, <a href="#Page_29">29</a><span class="pagenum" id="Page_305">305</span></p>
-<p class="ind1">Carbon dioxide, output in rest, <a href="#Page_111">111</a>, <a href="#Page_112">112</a></p>
-<p class="ind35">dioxide, output during work, <a href="#Page_111">111</a>, <a href="#Page_123">123</a></p>
-<p class="ind35">equilibrium, <a href="#Page_84">84</a></p>
-<p class="ind35">excretion, during fasting, <a href="#Page_84">84</a></p>
-<p class="ind35">moiety of proteid, <a href="#Page_129">129</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Carnivora, bacterial flora in intestine of, <a href="#Page_292">292</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Carbohydrates, as food, <a href="#Page_6">6</a></p>
-<p class="ind7">as fuel, <a href="#Page_6">6</a></p>
-<p class="ind7">as heat producers, <a href="#Page_58">58</a></p>
-<p class="ind7">as proteid sparers, <a href="#Page_92">92</a></p>
-<p class="ind7">as source of energy, <a href="#Page_128">128</a></p>
-<p class="ind7">as source of energy in fasting, <a href="#Page_81">81</a></p>
-<p class="ind7">as source of energy in work, <a href="#Page_58">58</a></p>
-<p class="ind7">availability of, <a href="#Page_13">13</a></p>
-<p class="ind7">availability of, as source of energy, <a href="#Page_45">45</a></p>
-<p class="ind7">composition of, <a href="#Page_5">5</a></p>
-<p class="ind7">formation from proteid, <a href="#Page_129">129</a></p>
-<p class="ind7">fuel value of, <a href="#Page_15">15</a></p>
-<p class="ind7">in foodstuffs, <a href="#Page_7">7</a></p>
-<p class="ind7">liver as regulator of, <a href="#Page_45">45</a></p>
-<p class="ind7">respiratory quotient of, <a href="#Page_107">107</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Casein, cleavage products of, <a href="#Page_70">70</a></p>
-<p class="ind1"><a id="Caspari_and_Glassner"></a>Caspari and Glässner, on minimum proteid requirement in man, <a href="#Page_172">172</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Cellulose, in vegetables, influence on digestion, <a href="#Page_263">263</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Chemical character of proteid, influence on nutrition, <a href="#Page_256">256</a></p>
-<p class="ind45">composition of foodstuffs, <a href="#Page_7">7</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Circulating proteid, <a href="#Page_134">134</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Clapp, S. H. (<i>see</i> <a href="#Osborne_and_Clapp">Osborne and Clapp</a>, on proteid cleavage products), <a href="#Page_258">258</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Cleavage, oxidative, <a href="#Page_61">61</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Climbing, oxygen consumption in, <a href="#Page_116">116</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Cogan, Thomas, on temperance in food, <a href="#Page_166">166</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Cohnheim, Otto, on proteid decomposition, <a href="#Page_36">36</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Composition, of proteid, <a href="#Page_3">3</a></p>
-<p class="ind65">of carbohydrate, <a href="#Page_5">5</a></p>
-<p class="ind65">of fat, <a href="#Page_6">6</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Cornaro, Louis, on temperance in food, <a href="#Page_168">168</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Cost of foods in relation to nutritive value, <a href="#Page_277">277</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Creatin, <a href="#Page_74">74</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Creatinin, <a href="#Page_74">74</a></p>
-<p class="ind45">excretion, as influenced by diet, <a href="#Page_144">144</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Curtis, Edward, Nature and Health, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>, <a href="#Page_214">214</a></p>
-
-<p class="ind0"><span class="alpha"><a id="IX_D"></a><a href="#alpha-table">D</a></span></p>
-<p class="ind1">Dapper, Max, <a href="#Page_99">99</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Dangers of underfeeding, <a href="#Page_214">214</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Degeneration, fatty, <a href="#Page_270">270</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Deuteroproteose, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>, <a href="#Page_69">69</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Dextrins, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>, <a href="#Page_37">37</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Dextrose, <a href="#Page_37">37</a><span class="pagenum" id="Page_306">306</span></p>
-<p class="ind45">assimilation, limit of, <a href="#Page_47">47</a></p>
-<p class="ind45">utilization of, <a href="#Page_40">40</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Diabetes, phloridzin, <a href="#Page_130">130</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Diamino acids, <a href="#Page_34">34</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Diet, and beriberi, <a href="#Page_224">224</a></p>
-<p class="ind25">and renal activity, <a href="#Page_297">297</a></p>
-<p class="ind25">effects of exclusive proteid, upon rats, <a href="#Page_239">239</a></p>
-<p class="ind25">effects of intemperance in, <a href="#Page_270">270</a></p>
-<p class="ind25">effects of rice, on rats, <a href="#Page_240">240</a></p>
-<p class="ind25">fat absorption in dogs on low proteid, <a href="#Page_233">233</a>, <a href="#Page_261">261</a></p>
-<p class="ind25">influence of, on creatin in excretion, <a href="#Page_144">144</a></p>
-<p class="ind825">exclusive proteid, on progeny in rats, <a href="#Page_240">240</a></p>
-<p class="ind825">on growth in rats, <a href="#Page_239">239</a></p>
-<p class="ind825">monotony in, <a href="#Page_242">242</a></p>
-<p class="ind825">on oxygen consumption in man at rest, <a href="#Page_126">126</a></p>
-<p class="ind825">on oxygen consumption in man at work, <a href="#Page_126">126</a></p>
-<p class="ind825">on respiratory quotient in man at rest, <a href="#Page_126">126</a></p>
-<p class="ind825">on respiratory quotient in man at work, <a href="#Page_126">126</a></p>
-<p class="ind825">rice, on growth in rats, <a href="#Page_240">240</a></p>
-<p class="ind825">on urea excretion, <a href="#Page_144">144</a></p>
-<p class="ind825">on uric acid excretion, <a href="#Page_144">144</a></p>
-<p class="ind825">vegetable, upon dogs, <a href="#Page_254">254</a>, <a href="#Page_256">256</a></p>
-<p class="ind25">in relation to nephritis, <a href="#Page_297">297</a></p>
-<p class="ind25">in relation to nitrogen distribution in urine, <a href="#Page_144">144</a></p>
-<p class="ind25">in relation to seasons of the year, <a href="#Page_296">296</a></p>
-<p class="ind25">of Highlanders, <a href="#Page_279">279</a></p>
-<p class="ind25">low proteid, influence on body-weight in dogs, <a href="#Page_245">245</a>, <a href="#Page_249">249</a>, <a href="#Page_250">250</a>, <a href="#Page_251">251</a>, <a href="#Page_252">252</a>, <a href="#Page_255">255</a></p>
-<p class="ind25">nitrogen excretion during severe work on exclusive proteid, <a href="#Page_123">123</a>, <a href="#Page_124">124</a></p>
-<p class="ind25">philosophy of a mixed, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>, <a href="#Page_276">276</a></p>
-<p class="ind25">relation of endurance to low proteid, <a href="#Page_210">210</a>, <a href="#Page_212">212</a></p>
-<p class="ind25">relation of inorganic salts to, <a href="#Page_299">299</a>, <a href="#Page_300">300</a></p>
-<p class="ind25">relation of work to, <a href="#Page_126">126</a></p>
-<p class="ind25">relation of vegetable food to low proteid, <a href="#Page_291">291</a></p>
-<p class="ind25">sample, of soldiers, <a href="#Page_194">194</a></p>
-<p class="ind25">sample, in experiments on true proteid requirement in man, <a href="#Page_178">178</a>, <a href="#Page_182">182</a>, <a href="#Page_189">189</a>, <a href="#Page_195">195</a></p>
-<p class="ind25">simplicity in, advantages of, <a href="#Page_279">279</a>, <a href="#Page_293">293</a></p>
-<p class="ind25">temperance in, <a href="#Page_270">270</a></p>
-<p class="ind25">utilization of fat in dogs on low proteid, <a href="#Page_261">261</a></p>
-<p class="ind25">utilization of nitrogen in dogs on low proteid, <a href="#Page_262">262</a></p>
-<p class="ind25">variety in, <a href="#Page_229">229</a>, <a href="#Page_242">242</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Diets, normal, <i>see</i> <a href="#Standard_diets">Standard diets</a></p>
-<p class="ind3">standard, <a href="#Page_155">155</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Dietary habits, in relation to needs of body, <a href="#Page_268">268</a></p>
-<p class="ind675">of fruitarians, <a href="#Page_215">215</a></p>
-<p class="ind675">of Japanese, <a href="#Page_225">225</a></p>
-<p class="ind675">sample, supplying needs of body, <a href="#Page_280">280</a></p>
-<p class="ind675">standards, use of the term, <a href="#Page_272">272</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Dietetic customs of mankind, <a href="#Page_154">154</a><span class="pagenum" id="Page_307">307</span></p>
-<p class="ind1">Dietetics, habit in, <a href="#Page_159">159</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Diffusion, as factor in absorption, <a href="#Page_41">41</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Digestibility, <i>see</i> <a href="#Availability">Availability</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Digestion, gastric, of proteids, <a href="#Page_26">26</a></p>
-<p class="ind475">importance of gastric, <a href="#Page_30">30</a></p>
-<p class="ind475">influence of cellulose in vegetables on, <a href="#Page_263">263</a></p>
-<p class="ind475">in the stomach, <a href="#Page_25">25</a></p>
-<p class="ind475">object of gastric, <a href="#Page_30">30</a></p>
-<p class="ind475">of fat, in intestine, <a href="#Page_36">36</a></p>
-<p class="ind475">of fat, in stomach, <a href="#Page_36">36</a></p>
-<p class="ind475">of starch, <a href="#Page_21">21</a></p>
-<p class="ind475">products of pancreatic, of fats, <a href="#Page_36">36</a></p>
-<p class="ind475">products of pancreatic, of proteids, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>, <a href="#Page_67">67</a></p>
-<p class="ind475">products of pancreatic, of starch, <a href="#Page_37">37</a></p>
-<p class="ind475">products of salivary, <a href="#Page_21">21</a></p>
-<p class="ind475">salivary, in stomach, <a href="#Page_23">23</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Digestive products, reconstruction of proteid from, <a href="#Page_42">42</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Disease, relation of excessive proteid consumption to, <a href="#Page_269">269</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Dogs, effects of low proteid diet on, <a href="#Page_232">232–236</a>, <a href="#Page_245">245–255</a></p>
-<p class="ind275">fasting experiments on, <a href="#Page_82">82</a></p>
-<p class="ind275">fat absorption in, on low proteid diet, <a href="#Page_233">233</a>, <a href="#Page_261">261</a></p>
-<p class="ind275">fuel value requirement of, <a href="#Page_234">234</a>, <a href="#Page_236">236</a>, <a href="#Page_245">245–255</a></p>
-<p class="ind275">influence of low proteid diet upon body-weight in, <a href="#Page_245">245–255</a></p>
-<p class="ind275">influence of vegetable diet on, <a href="#Page_254">254</a>, <a href="#Page_256">256</a></p>
-<p class="ind275">nitrogen requirement of, <a href="#Page_234">234</a>, <a href="#Page_235">235</a>, <a href="#Page_236">236</a>, <a href="#Page_245">245–255</a></p>
-<p class="ind275">photographs of, <a href="#Page_248">248</a></p>
-<p class="ind275">proteid absorption in, on low proteid diet, <a href="#Page_233">233</a>, <a href="#Page_262">262</a></p>
-<p class="ind275">proteid requirement, experiments by Munk, <a href="#Page_232">232</a></p>
-<p class="ind275">proteid requirement, experiments by Rosenheim, <a href="#Page_234">234</a></p>
-<p class="ind275">proteid requirement, experiments by Jägerroos, <a href="#Page_236">236</a></p>
-<p class="ind275">proteid requirement, experiments by author, <a href="#Page_243">243</a></p>
-<p class="ind275">utilization of fat in, on low proteid diet, <a href="#Page_261">261</a></p>
-<p class="ind275">utilization of nitrogen in, on low proteid diet, <a href="#Page_262">262</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Disaccharides, utilization of, <a href="#Page_40">40</a></p>
-
-<p class="ind0"><span class="alpha"><a id="IX_E"></a><a href="#alpha-table">E</a></span></p>
-<p class="ind1">Edestin, cleavage products of, <a href="#Page_70">70</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Efficiency of body, as a machine, <a href="#Page_111">111</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Egg albumin, cleavage products of, <a href="#Page_70">70</a></p>
-<p class="ind1"><a id="Endogenous_metabolism"></a>Endogenous metabolism, <a href="#Page_145">145</a>, <a href="#Page_146">146</a></p>
-<p class="ind1"><a id="Endurance"></a>Endurance, relation of, to low proteid diet, <a href="#Page_210">210</a>, <a href="#Page_212">212</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Energy, availability of carbohydrates, as source of, <a href="#Page_45">45</a></p>
-<p class="ind375">basal exchange, <a href="#Page_104">104</a></p>
-<p class="ind375">carbohydrate as source of, <a href="#Page_128">128</a></p>
-<p class="ind375">carbohydrate as source of, in fasting, <a href="#Page_81">81</a></p>
-<p class="ind375">conservation of, in man, <a href="#Page_103">103</a></p>
-<p class="ind375">exchange, effect of muscular work, <a href="#Page_109">109</a>, <a href="#Page_110">110</a>, <a href="#Page_113">113</a>, <a href="#Page_115">115</a></p>
-<p class="ind375">exchange, factors modifying, <a href="#Page_105">105</a>, <a href="#Page_106">106</a><span class="pagenum" id="Page_308">308</span></p>
-<p class="ind375">exchange, in relation to work, <a href="#Page_119">119</a></p>
-<p class="ind375">exchange proportional to body surface, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>, <a href="#Page_105">105</a></p>
-<p class="ind375">fat as source of, <a href="#Page_128">128</a></p>
-<p class="ind375">fat as source of, in fasting, <a href="#Page_81">81</a></p>
-<p class="ind375">foods as source of, <a href="#Page_15">15</a></p>
-<p class="ind375">metabolism of, in man, <a href="#Page_103">103</a></p>
-<p class="ind375">of muscle contraction, <a href="#Page_121">121</a></p>
-<p class="ind375">origin of, in fasting, <a href="#Page_81">81</a></p>
-<p class="ind375">output, in man, <a href="#Page_103">103</a></p>
-<p class="ind375">produced by man, <a href="#Page_106">106</a></p>
-<p class="ind375">proteid as source of, <a href="#Page_122">122</a>, <a href="#Page_123">123</a>, <a href="#Page_124">124</a>, <a href="#Page_129">129</a></p>
-<p class="ind375">proteid as source of, in fasting, <a href="#Page_81">81</a></p>
-<p class="ind375">source of, in body, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>, <a href="#Page_121">121</a></p>
-<p class="ind375">source of, during fasting, in work, <a href="#Page_125">125</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Enterokinase, <a href="#Page_33">33</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Enzymes, deamidizing, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>, <a href="#Page_72">72</a></p>
-<p class="ind45">in gastric juice, <a href="#Page_25">25</a></p>
-<p class="ind45">in pancreatic juice, <a href="#Page_32">32</a></p>
-<p class="ind45">in saliva, <a href="#Page_20">20</a></p>
-<p class="ind45">intracellular, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>, <a href="#Page_72">72</a>, <a href="#Page_75">75</a></p>
-<p class="ind45">reversible action of, <a href="#Page_21">21</a></p>
-<p class="ind45">specificity of, <a href="#Page_21">21</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Equilibrium, carbon, <a href="#Page_84">84</a></p>
-<p class="ind6">nitrogenous, <a href="#Page_78">78</a></p>
-<p class="ind6">of body, <a href="#Page_78">78</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Erepsin, <a href="#Page_34">34</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Exchange, basal energy, <a href="#Page_104">104</a></p>
-<p class="ind475">of energy, as affected by work, <a href="#Page_109">109</a>, <a href="#Page_110">110</a>, <a href="#Page_113">113</a>, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>, <a href="#Page_119">119</a></p>
-<p class="ind475">of energy, factors modifying, <a href="#Page_105">105</a>, <a href="#Page_106">106</a></p>
-<p class="ind475">of energy, relation to body surface, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>, <a href="#Page_105">105</a></p>
-<p class="ind1"><a id="Exogenous_metabolism"></a>Exogenous metabolism, <a href="#Page_145">145</a>, <a href="#Page_146">146</a></p>
-
-<p class="ind0"><span class="alpha"><a id="IX_F"></a><a href="#alpha-table">F</a></span></p>
-<p class="ind1">Fasting, carbohydrates as source of energy in, <a href="#Page_81">81</a></p>
-<p class="ind375">excretion of carbon during, <a href="#Page_84">84</a></p>
-<p class="ind375">excretion of nitrogen during, <a href="#Page_80">80</a>, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>, <a href="#Page_84">84</a></p>
-<p class="ind375">experiments on dogs, <a href="#Page_82">82</a></p>
-<p class="ind375">experiments on man, <a href="#Page_80">80</a>, <a href="#Page_84">84</a></p>
-<p class="ind375">fat as source of energy in, <a href="#Page_81">81</a></p>
-<p class="ind375">fuel value during, <a href="#Page_86">86</a></p>
-<p class="ind375">fuel value of fat, metabolized during, <a href="#Page_86">86</a></p>
-<p class="ind375">metabolism of fat during, <a href="#Page_84">84</a></p>
-<p class="ind375">nitrogen excretion during, <a href="#Page_80">80</a>, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>, <a href="#Page_84">84</a></p>
-<p class="ind375">origin of energy in, <a href="#Page_81">81</a></p>
-<p class="ind375">proteid as source of energy in, <a href="#Page_81">81</a></p>
-<p class="ind375">proteid metabolism during, <a href="#Page_83">83</a></p>
-<p class="ind375">relation of nitrogen excretion to work during, <a href="#Page_125">125</a></p>
-<p class="ind375">source of energy for work during, <a href="#Page_125">125</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Fat, absorption, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>, <a href="#Page_49">49</a><span class="pagenum" id="Page_309">309</span></p>
-<p class="ind2">absorption in dogs on low proteid diet, <a href="#Page_233">233</a>, <a href="#Page_261">261</a></p>
-<p class="ind2">as food, <a href="#Page_6">6</a></p>
-<p class="ind2">as fuel, <a href="#Page_6">6</a></p>
-<p class="ind2">as source of energy, <a href="#Page_128">128</a></p>
-<p class="ind2">as source of energy during work, <a href="#Page_58">58</a></p>
-<p class="ind2">as source of energy in fasting, <a href="#Page_81">81</a></p>
-<p class="ind2">composition of, <a href="#Page_6">6</a></p>
-<p class="ind2">digestion of, in intestine, <a href="#Page_36">36</a></p>
-<p class="ind2">digestion of, in stomach, <a href="#Page_36">36</a></p>
-<p class="ind2">fuel value of, <a href="#Page_15">15</a></p>
-<p class="ind2">fuel value of, metabolized during fasting, <a href="#Page_86">86</a></p>
-<p class="ind2">hydrolysis of, <a href="#Page_36">36</a></p>
-<p class="ind2">influence of feeding, on body fat, <a href="#Page_44">44</a></p>
-<p class="ind2">in foodstuffs, <a href="#Page_7">7</a></p>
-<p class="ind2">laying on of, from overfeeding, <a href="#Page_98">98</a>, <a href="#Page_99">99</a></p>
-<p class="ind2">metabolism during fasting, <a href="#Page_84">84</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a></p>
-<p class="ind2">respiratory quotient of, <a href="#Page_107">107</a></p>
-<p class="ind2">saponification of, <a href="#Page_36">36</a></p>
-<p class="ind2">specificity of body, <a href="#Page_44">44</a></p>
-<p class="ind2">synthesis of, <a href="#Page_43">43</a></p>
-<p class="ind2">utilization of, in dogs on low proteid diet, <a href="#Page_261">261</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Fats, availability of, <a href="#Page_13">13</a></p>
-<p class="ind25">as heat producers, <a href="#Page_58">58</a></p>
-<p class="ind25">as proteid sparers, <a href="#Page_92">92</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Fatty degeneration, <a href="#Page_270">270</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Fatigue, relation to low proteid diet, <a href="#Page_208">208</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Fenger, S., <a href="#Page_293">293</a></p>
-<p class="ind1"><a id="Fick_and_Wislicenus"></a>Fick and Wislicenus, on source of muscular energy, <a href="#Page_121">121</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Fischer, Emil, <a href="#Page_21">21</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Fisher, Irving, on endurance and low proteid diet, <a href="#Page_210">210</a></p>
-<p class="ind65">on method of indicating food values, <a href="#Page_283">283</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Folin, Otto, theory of proteid metabolism, <a href="#Page_144">144</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Food, absorption and utilization of, in dogs on low proteid diet, <a href="#Page_261">261</a>, <a href="#Page_262">262</a></p>
-<p class="ind275">amounts, required for proteid needs of body, <a href="#Page_274">274</a></p>
-<p class="ind275">as fuel, <a href="#Page_6">6</a></p>
-<p class="ind275">as source of energy, <a href="#Page_15">15</a></p>
-<p class="ind275">availability of, <a href="#Page_12">12</a></p>
-<p class="ind275">carbohydrates as, <a href="#Page_6">6</a></p>
-<p class="ind275">character of, in relation to bacterial processes in intestine, <a href="#Page_292">292</a></p>
-<p class="ind275">consumption and obesity, <a href="#Page_270">270</a></p>
-<p class="ind275">consumption, relation to prosperity, <a href="#Page_160">160</a></p>
-<p class="ind275">fats as, <a href="#Page_6">6</a></p>
-<p class="ind275">fuel value of, <a href="#Page_274">274</a></p>
-<p class="ind875">of fruitarians, <a href="#Page_217">217</a></p>
-<p class="ind875">in experiments on proteid requirement, athletes, <a href="#Page_198">198</a></p>
-<p class="ind875">in experiments on proteid requirement, professional men, <a href="#Page_178">178</a>, <a href="#Page_180">180</a>, <a href="#Page_185">185</a></p>
-<p class="ind875">in experiments on proteid requirement, soldiers, <a href="#Page_198">198</a></p>
-<p class="ind875">of Japanese, <a href="#Page_219">219</a>, <a href="#Page_221">221</a></p>
-<p class="ind275">fuel value requirement of, in dogs, <a href="#Page_234">234</a>, <a href="#Page_236">236</a>, <a href="#Page_245">245–255</a><span class="pagenum" id="Page_310">310</span></p>
-<p class="ind275">influence of, on respiratory quotient, <a href="#Page_107">107</a></p>
-<p class="ind275">needs of body for, <a href="#Page_169">169</a></p>
-<p class="ind275">of man, <a href="#Page_2">2</a></p>
-<p class="ind275">proteids as, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>, <a href="#Page_5">5</a></p>
-<p class="ind275">real need of body for proteid, <a href="#Page_272">272</a></p>
-<p class="ind275">relation of appetite to, <a href="#Page_162">162</a></p>
-<p class="ind275">relation of nutritive value and cost of, <a href="#Page_277">277</a></p>
-<p class="ind275">requirements, factors modifying, <a href="#Page_165">165</a></p>
-<p class="ind275">temperance in, <a href="#Page_166">166</a>, <a href="#Page_168">168</a></p>
-<p class="ind275">value of fruits as, <a href="#Page_290">290</a></p>
-<p class="ind275">values of, method of indicating, <a href="#Page_283">283</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Foods, respiratory, <a href="#Page_58">58</a></p>
-<p class="ind325">time, remain in stomach, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>, <a href="#Page_30">30</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Foodstuffs, carbohydrate in, <a href="#Page_7">7</a></p>
-<p class="ind525">composition of, <a href="#Page_7">7</a></p>
-<p class="ind525">fat in, <a href="#Page_7">7</a></p>
-<p class="ind525">fuel value of, <a href="#Page_7">7</a></p>
-<p class="ind525">inorganic salts in, <a href="#Page_7">7</a></p>
-<p class="ind525">organic, <a href="#Page_3">3</a></p>
-<p class="ind525">plastic, <a href="#Page_58">58</a></p>
-<p class="ind525">proteid in, <a href="#Page_7">7</a></p>
-<p class="ind525">water in, <a href="#Page_7">7</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Fritz, photograph of, <a href="#Page_199">199</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Fruitarians, dietary of, <a href="#Page_215">215</a></p>
-<p class="ind55">fuel value of food of, <a href="#Page_217">217</a></p>
-<p class="ind55">proteid consumption of, <a href="#Page_217">217</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Fruits, value of, as food, <a href="#Page_290">290</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Fuel, carbohydrate as, <a href="#Page_6">6</a></p>
-<p class="ind25">fat as, <a href="#Page_6">6</a></p>
-<p class="ind25">proteid as, <a href="#Page_6">6</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Fuel value, in fasting, <a href="#Page_86">86</a></p>
-<p class="ind525">of carbohydrate, <a href="#Page_15">15</a></p>
-<p class="ind525">of fat, <a href="#Page_15">15</a></p>
-<p class="ind525">of fat metabolized during fasting, <a href="#Page_86">86</a></p>
-<p class="ind525">of food, in experiments on proteid requirement, athletes, <a href="#Page_188">188</a></p>
-<p class="ind525">of food, in experiments on proteid requirement, professional men, <a href="#Page_178">178</a>, <a href="#Page_180">180</a>, <a href="#Page_185">185</a></p>
-<p class="ind525">of food, in experiments on proteid requirement, soldiers, <a href="#Page_198">198</a></p>
-<p class="ind525">of food of fruitarians, <a href="#Page_217">217</a></p>
-<p class="ind525">of food of Japanese, <a href="#Page_219">219</a>, <a href="#Page_221">221</a></p>
-<p class="ind525">of foods, <a href="#Page_274">274</a></p>
-<p class="ind525">of foodstuffs, <a href="#Page_7">7</a></p>
-<p class="ind525">of proteid, <a href="#Page_15">15</a></p>
-<p class="ind525">of proteid metabolized during fasting, <a href="#Page_86">86</a></p>
-<p class="ind525">requirement in the dog, experiments by Munk, <a href="#Page_234">234</a></p>
-<p class="ind525">requirement in the dog, experiments by Rosenheim, <a href="#Page_236">236</a></p>
-<p class="ind525">requirement in the dog, experiments by Jägerroos, <a href="#Page_236">236</a></p>
-<p class="ind525">requirement in the dog, experiments by author, <a href="#Page_245">245–255</a><span class="pagenum" id="Page_311">311</span></p>
-
-<p class="ind0"><span class="alpha"><a id="IX_G"></a><a href="#alpha-table">G</a></span></p>
-<p class="ind1">Gastric digestion, importance of, <a href="#Page_30">30</a></p>
-<p class="ind8">object of, <a href="#Page_30">30</a></p>
-<p class="ind8">products of, <a href="#Page_26">26</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Gastric juice, action on milk, <a href="#Page_26">26</a></p>
-<p class="ind6">composition of, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>, <a href="#Page_26">26</a></p>
-<p class="ind6">functions of, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>, <a href="#Page_27">27</a></p>
-<p class="ind6">hydrochloric acid in, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>, <a href="#Page_26">26</a></p>
-<p class="ind6">influence of diet upon flow of, <a href="#Page_25">25</a></p>
-<p class="ind6">pepsin in, <a href="#Page_25">25</a></p>
-<p class="ind6">psychical stimulation of, <a href="#Page_24">24</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Gastric secretion, <a href="#Page_24">24</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Gelatin, as food, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>, <a href="#Page_5">5</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Glässner, <i>see</i> <a href="#Caspari_and_Glassner">Caspari and Glässner</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Gliadin, cleavage products of, <a href="#Page_70">70</a>, <a href="#Page_259">259</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Glutaminic acid, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>, <a href="#Page_70">70</a>, <a href="#Page_259">259</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Glutenin, cleavage products of, <a href="#Page_259">259</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Glycerin, <a href="#Page_36">36</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Glycocoll, <a href="#Page_67">67</a></p>
-<p class="ind1"><a id="Glycogen"></a>Glycogen, formation from proteid, <a href="#Page_130">130</a></p>
-<p class="ind45">in liver, <a href="#Page_46">46</a></p>
-<p class="ind45">relation to sugar of blood, <a href="#Page_46">46</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Growth, influence of diet on, in rats, <a href="#Page_239">239</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Guanase, <a href="#Page_71">71</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Guanin, <a href="#Page_72">72</a></p>
-
-<p class="ind0"><span class="alpha"><a id="IX_H"></a><a href="#alpha-table">H</a></span></p>
-<p class="ind1">Habit, in dietetics, <a href="#Page_159">159</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Heat, furnished by fats and carbohydrates, <a href="#Page_58">58</a></p>
-<p class="ind275">production during sleep, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>, <a href="#Page_105">105</a></p>
-<p class="ind275">production in work, <a href="#Page_110">110</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Herbivora, bacterial flora in intestine of, <a href="#Page_292">292</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Herter, C. A., on bacterial flora, <a href="#Page_292">292</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Hirschfeld, Felix, on minimum proteid requirement, <a href="#Page_170">170</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Histidin, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>, <a href="#Page_68">68</a>, <a href="#Page_70">70</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Hofmeister, Franz, on sugar assimilation, <a href="#Page_47">47</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Hunt, Reid, on low proteid diet and body resistance, <a href="#Page_226">226</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Hunter, Andrew, <i>see</i> <a href="#Watson_and_Hunter">Watson and Hunter</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Hydrochloric acid, in gastric juice, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>, <a href="#Page_26">26</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Hydrolysis, of fats, <a href="#Page_36">36</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Hypoxanthin, <a href="#Page_72">72</a></p>
-
-<p class="ind0"><span class="alpha"><a id="IX_I"></a><a href="#alpha-table">I</a></span></p>
-<p class="ind1">Indol, <a href="#Page_37">37</a></p>
-<p class="ind1"><a id="Inorganic_salts"></a>Inorganic salts, and renal activity, <a href="#Page_298">298</a>, <a href="#Page_300">300</a></p>
-<p class="ind7">in foodstuffs, <a href="#Page_7">7</a></p>
-<p class="ind7">in nutrition, <a href="#Page_2">2</a></p>
-<p class="ind7">relation to diet, <a href="#Page_299">299</a>, <a href="#Page_300">300</a><span class="pagenum" id="Page_312">312</span></p>
-<p class="ind1">Intemperance in diet, effects of, <a href="#Page_270">270</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Intermediary metabolism, <i>see</i> <a href="#Exogenous_metabolism">Exogenous metabolism</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Intestine, absorption in, <a href="#Page_37">37</a></p>
-<p class="ind45">chemical changes in, <a href="#Page_33">33</a></p>
-<p class="ind45">putrefaction in, <a href="#Page_37">37</a></p>
-<p class="ind45">bacterial flora of, <a href="#Page_292">292</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Invertase, <a href="#Page_40">40</a></p>
-
-<p class="ind0"><span class="alpha"><a id="IX_J"></a><a href="#alpha-table">J</a></span></p>
-<p class="ind1">Jägerroos, B. H., on proteid requirement in the dog, <a href="#Page_236">236</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Japanese Army and Navy, rations of, <a href="#Page_224">224</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Japanese, dietary of, <a href="#Page_225">225</a></p>
-<p class="ind475">fuel value of food of, <a href="#Page_219">219</a>, <a href="#Page_221">221</a></p>
-<p class="ind475">proteid consumption by, <a href="#Page_219">219</a>, <a href="#Page_221">221</a></p>
-
-<p class="ind0"><span class="alpha"><a id="IX_K"></a><a href="#alpha-table">K</a></span></p>
-<p class="ind1">Katabolism, <a href="#Page_50">50</a></p>
-<p class="ind55">nature of proteid, <a href="#Page_75">75</a></p>
-<p class="ind55">oxygen in, <a href="#Page_62">62</a></p>
-<p class="ind55">relation to intracellular enzymes, <a href="#Page_75">75</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Klemperer, on proteid requirement, <a href="#Page_171">171</a></p>
-
-<p class="ind0"><span class="alpha"><a id="IX_L"></a><a href="#alpha-table">L</a></span></p>
-<p class="ind1">Lactase, <a href="#Page_40">40</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Lavoisier, views on oxidation, <a href="#Page_56">56</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Leucin, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>, <a href="#Page_70">70</a>, <a href="#Page_259">259</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Leucosin, cleavage products of, <a href="#Page_259">259</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Levulose, assimilation limits of, <a href="#Page_47">47</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Lewin, <i>see</i> <a href="#Bergell_and_Lewin">Bergell and Lewin</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Liebig, views on oxidation, <a href="#Page_57">57</a>, <a href="#Page_120">120</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Lipase, <a href="#Page_32">32</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Lipolysis, by pancreatic juice, <a href="#Page_36">36</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Liver, function of, as regulator of carbohydrate, <a href="#Page_45">45</a></p>
-<p class="ind3">glycogen in, <a href="#Page_46">46</a></p>
-<p class="ind3">synthesis of proteid by, <a href="#Page_48">48</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Luxus consumption, of proteid, <a href="#Page_59">59</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Lüthje, <a href="#Page_101">101</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Lymphatics, absorption of food products by, <a href="#Page_44">44</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Lysin, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>, <a href="#Page_68">68</a>, <a href="#Page_70">70</a>, <a href="#Page_259">259</a></p>
-
-<p class="ind0"><span class="alpha"><a id="IX_M"></a><a href="#alpha-table">M</a></span></p>
-<p class="ind1">Maltose, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>, <a href="#Page_37">37</a></p>
-<p class="ind425">behavior when introduced into blood, <a href="#Page_39">39</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Man, conservation of energy in, <a href="#Page_103">103</a></p>
-<p class="ind275">energy produced by, <a href="#Page_106">106</a></p>
-<p class="ind275">experiments on oxygen consumption in, <a href="#Page_126">126</a></p>
-<p class="ind275">fasting experiments on, <a href="#Page_80">80</a>, <a href="#Page_84">84</a><span class="pagenum" id="Page_313">313</span></p>
-<p class="ind275">food of, <a href="#Page_2">2</a></p>
-<p class="ind275">metabolism of energy in, <a href="#Page_103">103</a></p>
-<p class="ind275">minimum proteid requirement in, <a href="#Page_170">170</a>, <a href="#Page_171">171</a>, <a href="#Page_172">172</a>, <a href="#Page_174">174–208</a></p>
-<p class="ind275">work experiments on, <a href="#Page_110">110–116</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Mastication, importance of, <a href="#Page_23">23</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Meat, influence on growth in rats, <a href="#Page_239">239</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Metabolic changes as influencing respiratory quotient, <a href="#Page_108">108</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Metabolism, <a href="#Page_51">51</a></p>
-<p class="ind575">and old age, <a href="#Page_296">296</a></p>
-<p class="ind575">endogenous, <a href="#Page_145">145</a></p>
-<p class="ind575">exogenous, <a href="#Page_145">145</a></p>
-<p class="ind575">Folin’s theory of proteid, <a href="#Page_144">144</a></p>
-<p class="ind575">influence of proteid on, <a href="#Page_83">83</a></p>
-<p class="ind575">influence of carbohydrates on proteid, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>, <a href="#Page_94">94</a>, <a href="#Page_95">95</a>, <a href="#Page_96">96</a>, <a href="#Page_97">97</a></p>
-<p class="ind575">influence of fat on proteid, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>, <a href="#Page_93">93</a>, <a href="#Page_96">96</a>, <a href="#Page_97">97</a></p>
-<p class="ind575">influence of proteid on proteid, <a href="#Page_88">88</a></p>
-<p class="ind575">of energy in man, <a href="#Page_103">103</a></p>
-<p class="ind575">of fat during fasting, <a href="#Page_84">84</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a></p>
-<p class="ind575">oxidation in, <a href="#Page_60">60</a></p>
-<p class="ind575">of proteid during fasting, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a></p>
-<p class="ind575">Pflüger’s theory of proteid, <a href="#Page_138">138</a></p>
-<p class="ind575">processes of, <a href="#Page_51">51</a></p>
-<p class="ind575">significance of exogenous and endogenous proteid, <a href="#Page_49">49</a></p>
-<p class="ind575">significance of proteid, <a href="#Page_131">131</a></p>
-<p class="ind575">Voit’s theory of proteid, <a href="#Page_134">134</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Methyl glycocoll, <i>see</i> <a href="#Sarcosin">Sarcosin</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Methyl guanidin, <a href="#Page_74">74</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Milk sugar, assimilation limit of, <a href="#Page_47">47</a></p>
-<p class="ind525">behavior when introduced into blood, <a href="#Page_39">39</a></p>
-<p class="ind525">utilization of, <a href="#Page_40">40</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Mineral matter, <i>see</i> <a href="#Inorganic_salts">Inorganic salts</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Minimum proteid requirement, <a href="#Page_59">59</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Mixed diet, philosophy of a, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>, <a href="#Page_276">276</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Monotony of diet, influence of, <a href="#Page_242">242</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Morphotic proteid, <a href="#Page_134">134</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Munk, Immanuel, on proteid requirement in the dog, <a href="#Page_232">232</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Muscular movements of stomach, <a href="#Page_27">27–30</a></p>
-
-<p class="ind0"><span class="alpha"><a id="IX_N"></a><a href="#alpha-table">N</a></span></p>
-<p class="ind1">Needs of body for food, <a href="#Page_169">169</a></p>
-<p class="ind1"><a id="Nephritis"></a>Nephritis, in relation to diet, <a href="#Page_297">297</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Neumann, R. O., on low proteid diet, <a href="#Page_286">286</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Nitrogen, distribution of, in the urine in relation to diet, <a href="#Page_144">144</a></p>
-<p class="ind45">needs by body, <a href="#Page_4">4</a></p>
-<p class="ind45">utilization of, in dogs on low proteid diet, <a href="#Page_262">262</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Nitrogen excretion, as influenced by proteid, <a href="#Page_59">59</a>, <a href="#Page_87">87</a>, <a href="#Page_90">90</a></p>
-<p class="ind875">during fasting, <a href="#Page_80">80</a>, <a href="#Page_84">84</a></p>
-<p class="ind875">during work in fasting, <a href="#Page_125">125</a></p>
-<p class="ind875">during excessive work, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>, <a href="#Page_127">127</a><span class="pagenum" id="Page_314">314</span></p>
-<p class="ind875">during hard work on proteid diet, <a href="#Page_123">123</a>, <a href="#Page_124">124</a></p>
-<p class="ind875">in experiments on proteid requirement, in dogs, <a href="#Page_245">245</a>, <a href="#Page_249">249</a>, <a href="#Page_250">250</a>, <a href="#Page_251">251</a>, <a href="#Page_252">252</a>, <a href="#Page_255">255</a></p>
-<p class="ind875">in experiments on true proteid requirement, athletes, <a href="#Page_187">187</a>, <a href="#Page_188">188</a></p>
-<p class="ind875">in experiments on true proteid requirement, professional men, <a href="#Page_176">176</a>, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>, <a href="#Page_181">181</a>, <a href="#Page_185">185</a></p>
-<p class="ind875">in experiments on true proteid requirement, soldiers, <a href="#Page_199">199</a>, <a href="#Page_200">200</a>, <a href="#Page_201">201</a></p>
-<p class="ind875">relation to work, <a href="#Page_122">122</a>, <a href="#Page_123">123</a>, <a href="#Page_124">124</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Nitrogen equilibrium, on low proteid diet, <a href="#Page_176">176</a>, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>, <a href="#Page_181">181</a>, <a href="#Page_188">188</a>, <a href="#Page_200">200</a>, <a href="#Page_201">201</a>, <a href="#Page_249">249</a>, <a href="#Page_250">250</a>, <a href="#Page_251">251</a>, <a href="#Page_252">252</a>, <a href="#Page_255">255</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Nitrogen requirement, in dogs, <a href="#Page_234">234–236</a>, <a href="#Page_245">245–255</a></p>
-<p class="ind1025">in man, <a href="#Page_180">180</a>, <a href="#Page_184">184</a>, <a href="#Page_185">185</a>, <a href="#Page_187">187</a>, <a href="#Page_198">198</a>, <a href="#Page_227">227</a></p>
-<p class="ind1025">relation to body-weight, <a href="#Page_184">184</a>, <a href="#Page_248">248</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Nitrogenous equilibrium, <a href="#Page_78">78</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Nitrogenous metabolism, theory of Folin, <a href="#Page_144">144</a></p>
-<p class="ind115">theory of Pflüger, <a href="#Page_138">138</a></p>
-<p class="ind115">theory of Voit, <a href="#Page_134">134</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Normal diets, <a href="#Page_155">155</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Nutrition, factors in, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>, <a href="#Page_17">17</a></p>
-<p class="ind475">influence of chemical character of proteid on, <a href="#Page_256">256</a></p>
-<p class="ind475">inorganic salts, as aids in, <a href="#Page_2">2</a></p>
-<p class="ind475">physiological economy in, <a href="#Page_264">264</a></p>
-<p class="ind475">purpose of, <a href="#Page_2">2</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Nutritive balance, as affected by various factors, <a href="#Page_117">117</a>, <a href="#Page_118">118</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Nuclease, <a href="#Page_71">71</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Nucleoproteid, character of, <a href="#Page_3">3</a></p>
-<p class="ind7">cleavage products of, <a href="#Page_71">71</a></p>
-
-<p class="ind0"><span class="alpha"><a id="IX_O"></a><a href="#alpha-table">O</a></span></p>
-<p class="ind1">Obesity, relation to food consumption, <a href="#Page_270">270</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Old age, metabolism in, <a href="#Page_296">296</a></p>
-<p class="ind1"><a id="Osborne_and_Clapp"></a>Osborne and Clapp, on chemistry of proteids of wheat kernel, <a href="#Page_258">258</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Osmosis, as factor in absorption, <a href="#Page_41">41</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Overeating, evil effects of, <a href="#Page_270">270</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Overfeeding, in laying on of fat, <a href="#Page_98">98</a>, <a href="#Page_99">99</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Oxidase, xanthin, <a href="#Page_73">73</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Oxidases, <a href="#Page_64">64</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Oxidation, in metabolism, <a href="#Page_60">60</a></p>
-<p class="ind5">nature of, in the body, <a href="#Page_60">60</a></p>
-<p class="ind5">older views regarding, <a href="#Page_52">52</a></p>
-<p class="ind5">relation to enzymes, <a href="#Page_75">75</a></p>
-<p class="ind5">site of, in the body, <a href="#Page_62">62</a></p>
-<p class="ind5">value of respiratory quotient in determination of substances undergoing, <a href="#Page_125">125</a></p>
-<p class="ind5">views of Lavoisier on, <a href="#Page_56">56</a></p>
-<p class="ind5">views of Liebig on, <a href="#Page_57">57</a>, <a href="#Page_120">120</a><span class="pagenum" id="Page_315">315</span></p>
-<p class="ind1">Oxidative cleavage, <a href="#Page_61">61</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Oxygen, in katabolism, <a href="#Page_62">62</a></p>
-<p class="ind4">relation to decompositions in the body, <a href="#Page_61">61</a></p>
-<p class="ind4">relation to proteid decomposition, <a href="#Page_59">59</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Oxygen consumption, in climbing, <a href="#Page_116">116</a></p>
-<p class="ind10">in relation to work, <a href="#Page_123">123</a></p>
-<p class="ind10">in standing at rest, <a href="#Page_116">116</a></p>
-<p class="ind10">in walking, <a href="#Page_116">116</a></p>
-
-<p class="ind0"><span class="alpha"><a id="IX_P"></a><a href="#alpha-table">P</a></span></p>
-<p class="ind1">Pancreatic digestion, of proteids, <a href="#Page_34">34</a></p>
-<p class="ind95">products of, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>, <a href="#Page_67">67</a></p>
-<p class="ind95">products of, of starch, <a href="#Page_37">37</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Pancreatic juice, composition of, <a href="#Page_32">32</a></p>
-<p class="ind75">condition of trypsin in, <a href="#Page_33">33</a></p>
-<p class="ind75">enzymes in, <a href="#Page_32">32</a></p>
-<p class="ind75">secretion of, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>, <a href="#Page_32">32</a></p>
-<p class="ind75">sodium carbonate in, <a href="#Page_32">32</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Paths of absorption, <a href="#Page_44">44</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Pawlow, on adaptation of saliva, <a href="#Page_18">18</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Pepsin, in gastric juice, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>, <a href="#Page_26">26</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Peptones, <a href="#Page_67">67</a></p>
-<p class="ind45">absorption of, <a href="#Page_41">41</a></p>
-<p class="ind45">cleavage by erepsin, <a href="#Page_34">34</a></p>
-<p class="ind45">effects when injected into blood, <a href="#Page_41">41</a></p>
-<p class="ind45">formed in gastric digestion, <a href="#Page_26">26</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Pflüger, E., theory of proteid metabolism, <a href="#Page_138">138</a></p>
-<p class="ind525">views on muscle work, <a href="#Page_123">123</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Phenol, <a href="#Page_37">37</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Phloridzin diabetes, <a href="#Page_130">130</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Phosphorus, excretion of, in relation to work, <a href="#Page_123">123</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Photograph, of athlete, <a href="#Page_190">190</a></p>
-<p class="ind575">of Fritz, <a href="#Page_199">199</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Photographs, of dogs, <a href="#Page_248">248</a></p>
-<p class="ind625">of soldiers, <a href="#Page_193">193</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Physical endurance, <i>see</i> <a href="#Endurance">Endurance</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Physiological economy in nutrition, <a href="#Page_264">264</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Plastic foodstuffs, <a href="#Page_58">58</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Poisons, relation of body resistance to, on low proteid diet, <a href="#Page_226">226</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Polypeptid, <a href="#Page_35">35</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Portal vein, absorption of food products by, <a href="#Page_45">45</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Processes of metabolism, <a href="#Page_51">51</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Products, of cleavage of wheat kernel proteids, <a href="#Page_259">259</a></p>
-<p class="ind45">of gastric digestion, <a href="#Page_26">26</a></p>
-<p class="ind45">of pancreatic digestion, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>, <a href="#Page_67">67</a></p>
-<p class="ind45">of proteid cleavage, <a href="#Page_70">70</a></p>
-<p class="ind45">of putrefaction in intestine, <a href="#Page_38">38</a></p>
-<p class="ind45">of salivary digestion, <a href="#Page_21">21</a><span class="pagenum" id="Page_316">316</span></p>
-<p class="ind1">Products of digestion, absorption of, <a href="#Page_44">44</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Professional men, fuel value of food on low proteid diet, <a href="#Page_178">178</a>, <a href="#Page_180">180</a>, <a href="#Page_185">185</a></p>
-<p class="ind825">nitrogen equilibrium of, on low proteid diet, <a href="#Page_176">176</a>, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>, <a href="#Page_181">181</a></p>
-<p class="ind825">true proteid requirement of, <a href="#Page_174">174</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Progeny, influence of meat diet on, in rats, <a href="#Page_240">240</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Prosperity, relation to food consumption, <a href="#Page_160">160</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Proteid, absorption of, in dogs on low proteid diet, <a href="#Page_233">233</a>, <a href="#Page_262">262</a></p>
-<p class="ind375">absorption of cleavage products, <a href="#Page_47">47</a></p>
-<p class="ind375">amounts of food required to supply needs of body for, <a href="#Page_272">272</a></p>
-<p class="ind375">as food, <a href="#Page_3">3</a></p>
-<p class="ind375">as fuel, <a href="#Page_6">6</a></p>
-<p class="ind375">as glycogen former, <a href="#Page_130">130</a></p>
-<p class="ind375">as source of energy, <a href="#Page_122">122</a>, <a href="#Page_123">123</a>, <a href="#Page_124">124</a>, <a href="#Page_129">129</a></p>
-<p class="ind375">as source of energy, in fasting, <a href="#Page_81">81</a></p>
-<p class="ind375">availability of, <a href="#Page_12">12</a></p>
-<p class="ind375">body-weight on diet low in, <a href="#Page_170">170–175</a>, <a href="#Page_181">181</a>, <a href="#Page_185">185</a>, <a href="#Page_190">190</a>, <a href="#Page_199">199</a>, <a href="#Page_245">245</a>, <a href="#Page_249">249</a>, <a href="#Page_250">250</a>, <a href="#Page_251">251</a></p>
-<p class="ind375">carbon moiety of, <a href="#Page_129">129</a></p>
-<p class="ind375">chemical basis of protoplasm, <a href="#Page_51">51</a></p>
-<p class="ind375">circulating, <a href="#Page_134">134</a></p>
-<p class="ind375">cleavage products of, <a href="#Page_70">70</a></p>
-<p class="ind375">composition of, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>, <a href="#Page_69">69</a></p>
-<p class="ind375">consumption by fruitarians, <a href="#Page_217">217</a></p>
-<p class="ind375">consumption by Japanese, <a href="#Page_219">219</a>, <a href="#Page_221">221</a></p>
-<p class="ind375">decomposition by oxygen, <a href="#Page_59">59</a></p>
-<p class="ind375">decomposition in work, <a href="#Page_58">58</a></p>
-<p class="ind375">excessive consumption of, relation to disease, <a href="#Page_269">269</a></p>
-<p class="ind375">effect of diet exclusively of, on rats, <a href="#Page_239">239</a></p>
-<p class="ind375">effect on dogs of diet low in, <a href="#Page_233">233</a>, <a href="#Page_234">234</a>, <a href="#Page_237">237</a>, <a href="#Page_245">245–255</a></p>
-<p class="ind375">fat absorption in dogs on diet low in, <a href="#Page_261">261</a></p>
-<p class="ind375">food, real need of body for, <a href="#Page_272">272</a></p>
-<p class="ind375">formation of carbohydrate from, <a href="#Page_129">129</a></p>
-<p class="ind375">fuel value of, <a href="#Page_15">15</a></p>
-<p class="ind375">fuel value of, metabolized during fasting, <a href="#Page_86">86</a></p>
-<p class="ind375">influence of chemical character of, on nutrition, <a href="#Page_256">256</a></p>
-<p class="ind925">diet exclusively of, upon progeny of rats, <a href="#Page_240">240</a></p>
-<p class="ind925">diet low in, on high proteid animals, <a href="#Page_231">231</a>, <a href="#Page_233">233</a>, <a href="#Page_243">243</a></p>
-<p class="ind925">on excretion of nitrogen, <a href="#Page_59">59</a>, <a href="#Page_87">87</a>, <a href="#Page_90">90</a></p>
-<p class="ind925">on metabolism, <a href="#Page_83">83</a></p>
-<p class="ind925">on metabolism of, <a href="#Page_88">88</a></p>
-<p class="ind375">in foodstuffs, <a href="#Page_7">7</a></p>
-<p class="ind375">katabolism, <a href="#Page_75">75</a></p>
-<p class="ind375">luxus consumption of, <a href="#Page_59">59</a></p>
-<p class="ind375">metabolized during fasting, <a href="#Page_86">86</a></p>
-<p class="ind375">minimum requirement, <a href="#Page_59">59</a></p>
-<p class="ind375">morphotic, <a href="#Page_134">134</a></p>
-<p class="ind375">need of body for, <a href="#Page_268">268</a></p>
-<p class="ind375">nitrogen equilibrium on diet low in, <a href="#Page_176">176</a>, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>, <a href="#Page_181">181</a>, <a href="#Page_200">200</a>, <a href="#Page_201">201</a>, <a href="#Page_245">245</a>, <a href="#Page_249">249</a>, <a href="#Page_250">250</a>, <a href="#Page_251">251</a>, <a href="#Page_252">252</a>, <a href="#Page_255">255</a></p>
-<p class="ind375">overfeeding with, <a href="#Page_98">98</a><span class="pagenum" id="Page_317">317</span></p>
-<p class="ind375">reconstruction of, during absorption, <a href="#Page_42">42</a></p>
-<p class="ind375">relation of endurance to diet low in, <a href="#Page_210">210</a>, <a href="#Page_212">212</a></p>
-<p class="ind375">relation of fatigue to diet low in, <a href="#Page_208">208</a></p>
-<p class="ind375">respiratory quotient of, <a href="#Page_107">107</a></p>
-<p class="ind375">resistance of body to poisons on diet low in, <a href="#Page_226">226</a></p>
-<p class="ind375">safety in relation to diet low in, <a href="#Page_231">231</a></p>
-<p class="ind375">significance of complete cleavage of, <a href="#Page_35">35</a></p>
-<p class="ind375">storing of, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>, <a href="#Page_98">98</a>, <a href="#Page_99">99</a>, <a href="#Page_100">100</a></p>
-<p class="ind375">strength tests on diet low in, <a href="#Page_203">203</a>, <a href="#Page_206">206</a></p>
-<p class="ind375">synthesis, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>, <a href="#Page_49">49</a>, <a href="#Page_68">68</a></p>
-<p class="ind375">utilization of fat in dogs on diet low in, <a href="#Page_261">261</a></p>
-<p class="ind375">utilization of nitrogen in dogs on diet low in, <a href="#Page_262">262</a></p>
-<p class="ind375">work done at expense of, <a href="#Page_58">58</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Proteid diet, experiments of Neumann on low, <a href="#Page_286">286</a></p>
-<p class="ind575">body-weight of dogs on low, <a href="#Page_245">245</a>, <a href="#Page_249">249</a>, <a href="#Page_250">250</a>, <a href="#Page_251">251</a></p>
-<p class="ind575">body-weight of men on low, <a href="#Page_170">170–175</a>, <a href="#Page_181">181</a>, <a href="#Page_185">185</a>, <a href="#Page_190">190</a>, <a href="#Page_199">199</a></p>
-<p class="ind575">in relation to nitrogen excretion during hard work, <a href="#Page_123">123</a>, <a href="#Page_124">124</a></p>
-<p class="ind575">vegetable foods in relation to, <a href="#Page_291">291</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Proteid metabolism, influence of carbohydrate on, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>, <a href="#Page_94">94</a>, <a href="#Page_95">95</a>, <a href="#Page_96">96</a>, <a href="#Page_97">97</a></p>
-<p class="ind925">influence of fat on, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>, <a href="#Page_93">93</a>, <a href="#Page_96">96</a>, <a href="#Page_97">97</a></p>
-<p class="ind925">influence of proteid on, <a href="#Page_59">59</a>, <a href="#Page_87">87</a>, <a href="#Page_90">90</a></p>
-<p class="ind925">Folin’s theory of, <a href="#Page_144">144</a></p>
-<p class="ind925">Pflüger’s theory of, <a href="#Page_138">138</a></p>
-<p class="ind925">significance of, <a href="#Page_131">131</a></p>
-<p class="ind925">Voit’s theory of, <a href="#Page_134">134</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Proteid requirement, fuel value of food in experiments on, athletes, <a href="#Page_188">188</a></p>
-<p class="ind95">fuel value of food in experiments on, professional men, <a href="#Page_178">178</a>, <a href="#Page_180">180</a>, <a href="#Page_185">185</a></p>
-<p class="ind95">fuel value of food in experiments on, soldiers, <a href="#Page_198">198</a></p>
-<p class="ind95">in dogs, experiments of Jägerroos, <a href="#Page_236">236</a></p>
-<p class="ind95">in dogs, experiments of Munk, <a href="#Page_232">232</a></p>
-<p class="ind95">in dogs, experiments of Rosenheim, <a href="#Page_234">234</a></p>
-<p class="ind95">in dogs, experiments of author, <a href="#Page_243">243</a></p>
-<p class="ind95">in man, <a href="#Page_169">169</a>, <a href="#Page_170">170</a>, <a href="#Page_171">171</a>, <a href="#Page_172">172</a>, <a href="#Page_174">174–202</a></p>
-<p class="ind95">nitrogen excretion in experiments on, athletes, <a href="#Page_186">186</a>, <a href="#Page_187">187</a>, <a href="#Page_188">188</a></p>
-<p class="ind95">nitrogen excretion in experiments on, in dogs, <a href="#Page_245">245</a>, <a href="#Page_249">249</a>, <a href="#Page_250">250</a>, <a href="#Page_251">251</a>, <a href="#Page_252">252</a>, <a href="#Page_255">255</a></p>
-<p class="ind95">nitrogen excretion in experiments on, professional men, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>, <a href="#Page_180">180</a>, <a href="#Page_185">185</a></p>
-<p class="ind95">nitrogen excretion in experiments on, soldiers, <a href="#Page_197">197</a>, <a href="#Page_200">200</a>, <a href="#Page_201">201</a></p>
-<p class="ind95">relation to body-weight, <a href="#Page_184">184</a>, <a href="#Page_188">188</a>, <a href="#Page_198">198</a>, <a href="#Page_227">227</a></p>
-<p class="ind95">sample diets in experiments on, <a href="#Page_178">178</a>, <a href="#Page_182">182</a>, <a href="#Page_189">189</a>, <a href="#Page_195">195</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Proteids, as tissue formers, <a href="#Page_58">58</a></p>
-<p class="ind425">of wheat kernel, cleavage products of, <a href="#Page_259">259</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Proteoses, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>, <a href="#Page_69">69</a></p>
-<p class="ind475">absorption of, <a href="#Page_41">41</a></p>
-<p class="ind475">cleavage by erepsin, <a href="#Page_34">34</a></p>
-<p class="ind475">effects when injected into blood, <a href="#Page_41">41</a><span class="pagenum" id="Page_318">318</span></p>
-<p class="ind475">primary, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>, <a href="#Page_69">69</a></p>
-<p class="ind475">secondary, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>, <a href="#Page_69">69</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Protoplasm, <a href="#Page_51">51</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Protoproteose, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>, <a href="#Page_69">69</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Ptyalin, <a href="#Page_20">20</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Purin bases, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>, <a href="#Page_72">72</a></p>
-<p class="ind575">relation to uric acid, <a href="#Page_73">73</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Putrefaction, in intestine, <a href="#Page_37">37</a></p>
-<p class="ind6">products of, <a href="#Page_38">38</a></p>
-
-<p class="ind0"><span class="alpha"><a id="IX_R"></a><a href="#alpha-table">R</a></span></p>
-<p class="ind1">Rats, effects of exclusive proteid diet on, <a href="#Page_239">239</a></p>
-<p class="ind25">effects of rice on, <a href="#Page_240">240</a></p>
-<p class="ind25">influence of meat diet on progeny of, <a href="#Page_240">240</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Renal activity, and diet, <a href="#Page_297">297</a></p>
-<p class="ind65">and inorganic salts, <a href="#Page_298">298</a>, <a href="#Page_299">299</a>, <a href="#Page_300">300</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Rennin, in gastric juice, <a href="#Page_26">26</a></p>
-<p class="ind1"><a id="Resistance"></a>Resistance of body to poisons, relation to low proteid diet, <a href="#Page_226">226</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Respiration calorimeter, <a href="#Page_102">102</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Respiratory foods, <a href="#Page_58">58</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Respiratory quotient, <a href="#Page_107">107</a></p>
-<p class="ind975">influence of foods on, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>, <a href="#Page_126">126</a></p>
-<p class="ind975">influence of metabolic change on, <a href="#Page_108">108</a></p>
-<p class="ind975">of foodstuffs, <a href="#Page_107">107</a></p>
-<p class="ind975">relation to work, <a href="#Page_125">125</a></p>
-<p class="ind975">value of, in determination of substances oxidized, <a href="#Page_125">125</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Rest, carbon dioxide output during, <a href="#Page_111">111</a></p>
-<p class="ind25">influence of, on oxygen consumption, <a href="#Page_126">126</a></p>
-<p class="ind25">influence of, on respiratory quotient, <a href="#Page_126">126</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Rice, influence of, on growth in rats, <a href="#Page_240">240</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Rosenheim, Theodor, on proteid requirement in the dog, <a href="#Page_234">234</a></p>
-
-<p class="ind0"><span class="alpha"><a id="IX_S"></a><a href="#alpha-table">S</a></span></p>
-<p class="ind1">Safety of low proteid standards, <a href="#Page_231">231</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Saliva, adaptation of, <a href="#Page_18">18</a>, <a href="#Page_19">19</a></p>
-<p class="ind325">function of, <a href="#Page_20">20</a></p>
-<p class="ind325">psychical secretion of, <a href="#Page_18">18</a></p>
-<p class="ind325">secretion of, <a href="#Page_17">17</a>, <a href="#Page_18">18</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Salivary digestion, in stomach, <a href="#Page_23">23</a></p>
-<p class="ind85">products of, <a href="#Page_21">21</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Salts, <i>see</i> <a href="#Inorganic_salts">Inorganic salts</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Saponification of fats, <a href="#Page_36">36</a></p>
-<p class="ind1"><a id="Sarcosin"></a>Sarcosin, <a href="#Page_74">74</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Schnyder, <a href="#Page_115">115</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Scientific research and typhoid fever, <a href="#Page_267">267</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Seasons of the year, relation to diet, <a href="#Page_296">296</a><span class="pagenum" id="Page_319">319</span></p>
-<p class="ind1">Secretin, <a href="#Page_32">32</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Secretion, of gastric juice, <a href="#Page_24">24</a></p>
-<p class="ind475">of pancreatic juice, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>, <a href="#Page_32">32</a></p>
-<p class="ind475">of saliva, <a href="#Page_17">17</a>, <a href="#Page_18">18</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Sivén, on proteid requirement, <a href="#Page_89">89</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Skatol, <a href="#Page_38">38</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Sleep, heat production during, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>, <a href="#Page_105">105</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Soaps, <a href="#Page_36">36</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Sodium carbonate, in pancreatic juice, <a href="#Page_32">32</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Soldiers, fuel value of food in experiments on proteid requirement of, <a href="#Page_198">198</a></p>
-<p class="ind425">nitrogen equilibrium in experiments on proteid requirement of, <a href="#Page_200">200</a>, <a href="#Page_201">201</a></p>
-<p class="ind425">photographs of, <a href="#Page_193">193</a></p>
-<p class="ind425">proteid requirement of, <a href="#Page_192">192</a></p>
-<p class="ind425">sample diet in experiments on proteid requirement of, <a href="#Page_195">195</a></p>
-<p class="ind425">strength tests in experiments on proteid requirement of, <a href="#Page_203">203</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Specificity of body fat, <a href="#Page_44">44</a></p>
-<p class="ind1"><a id="Standard_diets"></a>Standard diets, <a href="#Page_155">155</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Standing at rest, oxygen consumption in, <a href="#Page_116">116</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Starch digestion, products of, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>, <a href="#Page_37">37</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Steapsin, <a href="#Page_36">36</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Stomach, absorption from the, <a href="#Page_31">31</a></p>
-<p class="ind425">as a reservoir, <a href="#Page_31">31</a></p>
-<p class="ind425">digestion in the, <a href="#Page_25">25–31</a></p>
-<p class="ind425">fat digestion in the, <a href="#Page_36">36</a></p>
-<p class="ind425">muscular movements of the, <a href="#Page_27">27–30</a></p>
-<p class="ind425">salivary digestion in the, <a href="#Page_23">23</a></p>
-<p class="ind425">time foods remain in the, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>, <a href="#Page_30">30</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Storing of proteid, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>, <a href="#Page_98">98</a>, <a href="#Page_99">99</a>, <a href="#Page_100">100</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Strength tests, on low proteid diet, athletes, <a href="#Page_206">206</a></p>
-<p class="ind65">on low proteid diet, soldiers, <a href="#Page_203">203</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Sugar, in blood, <a href="#Page_45">45</a></p>
-<p class="ind3">in blood, relation to glycogen, <a href="#Page_46">46</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Sugars, behavior when introduced into blood, <a href="#Page_39">39</a></p>
-<p class="ind35">selective action in absorption of, <a href="#Page_47">47</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Sulphur, excretion of, relation to work, <a href="#Page_123">123</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Synthesis, of fat, <a href="#Page_43">43</a></p>
-<p class="ind475">of proteid, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>, <a href="#Page_49">49</a>, <a href="#Page_68">68</a></p>
-
-<p class="ind0"><span class="alpha"><a id="IX_T"></a><a href="#alpha-table">T</a></span></p>
-<p class="ind1">Temperance in diet, <a href="#Page_166">166</a>, <a href="#Page_168">168</a>, <a href="#Page_270">270</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Tissue formers, <a href="#Page_58">58</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Tissue metabolism, <i>see</i> <a href="#Endogenous_metabolism">Endogenous metabolism</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Trypsin, <a href="#Page_32">32</a></p>
-<p class="ind425">condition in pancreatic juice, <a href="#Page_33">33</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Tryptophan, <a href="#Page_67">67</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Typhoid fever and scientific research, <a href="#Page_267">267</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Tyrosin, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>, <a href="#Page_70">70</a>, <a href="#Page_259">259</a><span class="pagenum" id="Page_320">320</span></p>
-
-<p class="ind0"><span class="alpha"><a id="IX_U"></a><a href="#alpha-table">U</a></span></p>
-<p class="ind1">Underfeeding, dangers of, <a href="#Page_214">214</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Urea, <a href="#Page_74">74</a></p>
-<p class="ind275">excretion of, influence of diet on, <a href="#Page_144">144</a></p>
-<p class="ind275">relation of, to creatin and creatinin, <a href="#Page_74">74</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Uric acid, <a href="#Page_73">73</a></p>
-<p class="ind45">excretion of, as influenced by diet, <a href="#Page_144">144</a></p>
-<p class="ind45">relation of, to xanthin bases, <a href="#Page_73">73</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Urine, relation of diet to nitrogen distribution in the, <a href="#Page_144">144</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Utilization, of dextrose, <a href="#Page_40">40</a></p>
-<p class="ind525">of disaccharides, <a href="#Page_40">40</a></p>
-<p class="ind525">of fat in dogs on low proteid diet, <a href="#Page_261">261</a></p>
-<p class="ind525">of nitrogen in dogs on low proteid diet, <a href="#Page_262">262</a></p>
-
-<p class="ind0"><span class="alpha"><a id="IX_V"></a><a href="#alpha-table">V</a></span></p>
-<p class="ind1">Variety in diet, <a href="#Page_229">229</a>, <a href="#Page_242">242</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Vegetable diet, influence upon dogs, <a href="#Page_254">254</a>, <a href="#Page_256">256</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Vegetable foods, relation to low proteid dietary, <a href="#Page_291">291</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Vegetables, cellulose in, influence on digestion, <a href="#Page_263">263</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Voit, Carl, on minimum proteid requirement, <a href="#Page_171">171</a></p>
-<p class="ind475">theory of proteid metabolism, <a href="#Page_59">59</a>, <a href="#Page_134">134</a></p>
-
-<p class="ind0"><span class="alpha"><a id="IX_W"></a><a href="#alpha-table">W</a></span></p>
-<p class="ind1">Walking, oxygen consumption in, <a href="#Page_116">116</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Water in foodstuffs, <a href="#Page_7">7</a></p>
-<p class="ind1"><a id="Watson_and_Hunter"></a>Watson and Hunter, influence of diet on growth in rats, <a href="#Page_239">239</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Wheat kernel proteids, cleavage products of, <a href="#Page_259">259</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Weight, <i>see</i> <a href="#Body-weight">Body-weight</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Wislicenus, <i>see</i> <a href="#Fick_and_Wislicenus">Fick and Wislicenus</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Work, carbon dioxide excretion in relation to, <a href="#Page_123">123</a></p>
-<p class="ind3">carbon dioxide excretion during, <a href="#Page_111">111</a>, <a href="#Page_112">112</a></p>
-<p class="ind3">due to proteid decomposition, <a href="#Page_58">58</a></p>
-<p class="ind3">effect of, on energy exchange, <a href="#Page_109">109</a>, <a href="#Page_110">110</a>, <a href="#Page_113">113</a>, <a href="#Page_115">115</a></p>
-<p class="ind3">experiments on man, <a href="#Page_110">110</a>, <a href="#Page_111">111</a>, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>, <a href="#Page_113">113</a>, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>, <a href="#Page_116">116</a></p>
-<p class="ind3">heat production in, <a href="#Page_110">110</a></p>
-<p class="ind3">influence of, on oxygen consumption, <a href="#Page_126">126</a></p>
-<p class="ind3">influence of, on respiratory quotient, <a href="#Page_126">126</a></p>
-<p class="ind3">nitrogen excretion during excessive, <a href="#Page_127">127</a></p>
-<p class="ind3">nitrogen excretion during fasting in, <a href="#Page_125">125</a></p>
-<p class="ind3">proteid decomposition in, <a href="#Page_58">58</a></p>
-<p class="ind3">relation of diet to, <a href="#Page_126">126</a></p>
-<p class="ind8">to energy exchange, <a href="#Page_119">119</a></p>
-<p class="ind8">fats and carbohydrates to, <a href="#Page_58">58</a></p>
-<p class="ind8">nitrogen excretion on proteid diet to hard, <a href="#Page_123">123</a>, <a href="#Page_124">124</a></p>
-<p class="ind8">nitrogen excretion to proteid diet to hard, <a href="#Page_122">122</a>, <a href="#Page_123">123</a>, <a href="#Page_124">124</a><span class="pagenum" id="Page_321">321</span></p>
-<p class="ind8">relation of oxygen consumption to, <a href="#Page_123">123</a></p>
-<p class="ind8">phosphorus excretion to, <a href="#Page_123">123</a></p>
-<p class="ind8">sulphur excretion to, <a href="#Page_123">123</a></p>
-<p class="ind3">respiratory quotient in relation to, <a href="#Page_125">125</a></p>
-<p class="ind3">source of energy during fasting in, <a href="#Page_125">125</a></p>
-<p class="ind3">views of Argutinsky on muscle, <a href="#Page_123">123</a></p>
-<p class="ind3">views of Pflüger on muscle, <a href="#Page_123">123</a></p>
-<p class="ind3">views of Voit on muscle, <a href="#Page_59">59</a>, <a href="#Page_134">134</a></p>
-
-<p class="ind0"><span class="alpha"><a id="IX_X"></a><a href="#alpha-table">X</a></span></p>
-<p class="ind1">Xanthin, <a href="#Page_72">72</a></p>
-<p class="ind1">Xanthin oxidase, <a href="#Page_73">73</a></p>
-</div>
-
-
-<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1" href="#FNanchor_1" class="label">1</a>
-Edward Curtis, M.D. Nature and Health: Henry Holt &amp; Co., New York.
-1906. p.&nbsp;39.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_2" href="#FNanchor_2" class="label">2</a>
-The data composing this table are taken from Bulletin 28 (Revised
-Edition), United States Department of Agriculture, Office of Experiment
-Stations.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_3" href="#FNanchor_3" class="label">3</a>
-Stohmann: Ueber den Wärmewerth der Bestandtheile der Nahrungsmittel.
-Zeitschr. f. Biol., Band 31, p.&nbsp;373.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_4" href="#FNanchor_4" class="label">4</a>
-See Rubner: Calorimetrische Untersuchungen. Zeitschr. f. Biol., Band 21,
-p. 250. Also, Rubner: Die Quelle der thierischen Wärme. Ibid., Band 30, p.&nbsp;73.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_5" href="#FNanchor_5" class="label">5</a>
-Pawlow: The Work of the Digestive Glands. Translated by Thompson.
-London, 1902.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_6" href="#FNanchor_6" class="label">6</a>
-Emil Fischer: Bedeutung der Stereochemie für die Physiologie. Zeitschr.
-für physiologische Chemie, Band 26, p.&nbsp;60.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_7" href="#FNanchor_7" class="label">7</a>
-The Physiology of Digestion. By William Beaumont, M.D. Second
-Edition, 1847, p.&nbsp;100.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_8" href="#FNanchor_8" class="label">8</a>
-W. B. Cannon: The Movements of the Stomach studied by means of the
-Röntgen Rays. American Journal of Physiology, vol.&nbsp;1, p.&nbsp;359.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_9" href="#FNanchor_9" class="label">9</a>
-W. B. Cannon: The Passage of different Food-stuffs from the Stomach
-and through the Small Intestine. American Journal of Physiology, vol.&nbsp;12,
-p. 387.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_10" href="#FNanchor_10" class="label">10</a>
-Emil Abderhalden: Abbau und Aufbau der Eiweisskörper im thierischen
-Organismus. Zeitschr. f. physiologische Chemie, Band 44, p.&nbsp;27.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_11" href="#FNanchor_11" class="label">11</a>
-Otto Cohnheim: Zur Spaltung des Nahrungseiweisses im Darm. Zeitschrift
-f. physiologische Chemie, Band 49, p.&nbsp;64.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_12" href="#FNanchor_12" class="label">12</a>
-Bergell and Lewin: Zeitschrift für experimentelle Pathologie und Therapie,
-Band 3, p.&nbsp;425.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_13" href="#FNanchor_13" class="label">13</a>
-Franz Hofmeister: Ueber Resorption und Assimilation der Nährstoffe.
-Archiv f. d. exper. Pathol. u. Pharm., Band 25, p.&nbsp;240.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_14" href="#FNanchor_14" class="label">14</a>
-J. B. Leathes: Problems in Animal Metabolism. Blakiston’s Son and Co.,
-1906, p.&nbsp;123.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_15" href="#FNanchor_15" class="label">15</a>
-Taken from Sir Michael Foster’s “Lectures on the History of Physiology
-during the Sixteenth, Seventeenth, and Eighteenth Centuries.” Cambridge,
-1901, p.&nbsp;12.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_16" href="#FNanchor_16" class="label">16</a>
-See Foster’s Lectures, p.&nbsp;136.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_17" href="#FNanchor_17" class="label">17</a>
-Quoted from Foster’s Lectures, p.&nbsp;195.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_18" href="#FNanchor_18" class="label">18</a>
-See C. Voit: Hermann’s Handbuch der physiologie des Gesammt-Stoffwechsels.
-Band 6, Theil 1, p.&nbsp;269, 1881.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_19" href="#FNanchor_19" class="label">19</a>
-Loc. cit., p.&nbsp;270.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_20" href="#FNanchor_20" class="label">20</a>
-See M. Jacoby: Ueber die Bedeutung der intracellulären Fermente für die
-Physiologie und Pathologie. Ergebnisse der Physiologie, Erster Jahrgang,
-1. Abtheilung, p.&nbsp;230.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_21" href="#FNanchor_21" class="label">21</a>
-These data were furnished the writer by Dr. Thomas B Osborne, and
-represent in large measure the results of his own chemical work.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_22" href="#FNanchor_22" class="label">22</a>
-Taken from Landergren: Untersuchungen über die Eiweissumsetzung des
-Menschen. Skandinavisches Archiv für Physiologie, Band 14, p.&nbsp;112; and
-from A Magnus-Levy: v. Noorden’s Handbuch der Pathologie des Stoffwechsels,
-1906, p.&nbsp;312.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_23" href="#FNanchor_23" class="label">23</a>
-Expressed in this form from Voit’s figures by A Magnus-Levy. Loc. cit.,
-p. 311.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_24" href="#FNanchor_24" class="label">24</a>
-Taken from Johansson, Landergren, Sondén, and Tiegerstedt: Beiträge
-zur Kenntniss des Stoffwechsels beim hungernden Menschen. Skandinavisches
-Archiv für Physiologie, Band 7, p.&nbsp;29.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_25" href="#FNanchor_25" class="label">25</a>
-The carbon output represents the total carbon of the expired air, urine, and
-excrement.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_26" href="#FNanchor_26" class="label">26</a>
-Leathes: Problems in Animal Metabolism. Philadelphia, 1906, p.&nbsp;157.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_27" href="#FNanchor_27" class="label">27</a>
-Sivén: Zur Kenntniss des Stoffwechsels beim erwachsenen Menschen, mit
-besonderer Berücksichtigung des Eiweissbedarfs. Skandinavisches Archiv für
-Physiologie, Band 11, p.&nbsp;308.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_28" href="#FNanchor_28" class="label">28</a>
-C. Voit: Hermann’s Handbuch der Physiologie des Gesammtstoffwechsels,
-Band 6, p.&nbsp;130.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_29" href="#FNanchor_29" class="label">29</a>
-Landergren: Untersuchungen über die Eiweissumsetzung des Menschen,
-Skandinavisches Archiv für Physiologie, Band 14, p.&nbsp;114.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_30" href="#FNanchor_30" class="label">30</a>
-An experiment by Miura, quoted from A. Magnus-Levy in v. Noorden’s
-Handbuch der Pathologie des Stoffwechsels, 1906, p.&nbsp;331.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_31" href="#FNanchor_31" class="label">31</a>
-Max Dapper: Ueber Fleischmast beim Menschen. Inaug. Disser. Marburg,
-1902.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_32" href="#FNanchor_32" class="label">32</a>
-Zeitschrift für klinische Medizin, Band 44, p.&nbsp;22.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_33" href="#FNanchor_33" class="label">33</a>
-For an account of the respiration calorimeter and the great diversity of apparatus
-accessory thereto, together with a description of the methods of measurement,
-analysis, etc., see Publication No. 42, Carnegie Institution of Washington,
-“A Respiration Calorimeter with Appliances for the Direct Determination of
-Oxygen.” By W.&nbsp;O. Atwater and F.&nbsp;G. Benedict.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_34" href="#FNanchor_34" class="label">34</a>
-In the experiment, the body lost 29.16 grams of proteid = 165 calories, but
-gained fat and glycogen = 393 calories. Hence, there were 229 calories gained
-from body material.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_35" href="#FNanchor_35" class="label">35</a>
-See Armsby: Principles of Animal Nutrition, p.&nbsp;368.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_36" href="#FNanchor_36" class="label">36</a>
-Taken from Armsby: Principles of Animal Nutrition, p.&nbsp;383.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_37" href="#FNanchor_37" class="label">37</a>
-Atwater and Benedict: Experiments on the Metabolism of Matter and
-Energy in the Human Body 1900–1902. Bulletin No. 136, Office of Experiment
-Stations, U.&nbsp;S. Department of Agriculture, 1903, p.&nbsp;141.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_38" href="#FNanchor_38" class="label">38</a>
-Loc. cit., pp.&nbsp;130 and 131.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_39" href="#FNanchor_39" class="label">39</a>
-See W.&nbsp;O. Atwater and H.&nbsp;C. Sherman: The effect of severe and prolonged
-muscular work on food consumption, digestion, and metabolism. Bulletin No.
-98, Office of Experiment Stations, U.&nbsp;S. Department of Agriculture.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_40" href="#FNanchor_40" class="label">40</a>
-Atwater and Sherman. Loc. cit., p.&nbsp;51.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_41" href="#FNanchor_41" class="label">41</a>
-L. Schnyder: Muskelkraft und Gaswechsel. Zeitschrift für Biologie,
-Band 33, p.&nbsp;289.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_42" href="#FNanchor_42" class="label">42</a>
-G. Katzenstein: Ueber die Einwirkung der Muskelthätigkeit auf den
-Stoffverbrauch des Menschen. Pflüger’s Archiv für die gesammte Physiologie,
-Band 49, p.&nbsp;330. Also Magnus-Levy: v. Noorden’s Handbuch der Pathologie
-der Stoffwechsel, p.&nbsp;233.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_43" href="#FNanchor_43" class="label">43</a>
-See Gesammelte Schriften von Adolf Fick. Ueber die Entstehung der
-Muskelkraft. Band 2, p.&nbsp;85. Würzburg, 1903.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_44" href="#FNanchor_44" class="label">44</a>
-Pflüger: Die Quelle der Muskelkraft. Pflüger’s Archiv für die gesammte
-Physiologie, Band 50, p.&nbsp;98.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_45" href="#FNanchor_45" class="label">45</a>
-Argutinsky: Muskelarbeit und Stickstoffumsatz. Ibid., Band 46, p.&nbsp;552.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_46" href="#FNanchor_46" class="label">46</a>
-Bunge: Textbook of Physiological and Pathological Chemistry. Second
-English Edition, 1902, p.&nbsp;352.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_47" href="#FNanchor_47" class="label">47</a>
-Quoted from Leathes: Problems in Animal Metabolism, p.&nbsp;100.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_48" href="#FNanchor_48" class="label">48</a>
-This and the following account of Weston are taken from Bulletin No. 98,
-U.&nbsp;S. Department of Agriculture, Office of Experiment Stations. The effect of
-severe and prolonged muscular work on food consumption, digestion, and metabolism.
-By W.&nbsp;O. Atwater and H.&nbsp;C. Sherman, p.&nbsp;13.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_49" href="#FNanchor_49" class="label">49</a>
-See Leo Langstein: Die Kohlehydratbildung aus Eiweiss. Ergebnisse der
-Physiologie, Band 3, Erster Theil, p.&nbsp;456.</p>
-
-<p>See also, Lüthje: Zur Frage der Zuckerbildung aus Eiweiss. Archiv für d.
-gesammte Physiologie, Band 106, p.&nbsp;160.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_50" href="#FNanchor_50" class="label">50</a>
-See Voit: Hermann’s Handbuch der Physiologie, Band 6, p.&nbsp;301.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_51" href="#FNanchor_51" class="label">51</a>
-Eduard Pflüger: Ueber einige Gesetze des Eiweissstoffwechsels (mit besonderer
-Berücksichtigung der Lehre vom sogenannten “circulirenden Eiweiss”).
-Archiv f. d. gesammte Physiologie, Band 54, p.&nbsp;333.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_52" href="#FNanchor_52" class="label">52</a>
-Otto Folin: Laws Governing the Chemical Composition of Urine. American
-Journal of Physiology, vol.&nbsp;13, p.&nbsp;66. A theory of Protein Metabolism. Ibid.,
-vol.&nbsp;13, p.&nbsp;117.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_53" href="#FNanchor_53" class="label">53</a>
-Bulletin No. 149. Woods and Mansfield. Studies of the Food of Maine
-Lumbermen. U.&nbsp;S. Department of Agriculture, 1904.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_54" href="#FNanchor_54" class="label">54</a>
-Bulletin No. 75. Atwater and Bryant. Office of Experiment Stations,
-U.&nbsp;S. Department of Agriculture, 1900.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_55" href="#FNanchor_55" class="label">55</a>
-Felix Hirschfeld: Untersuchungen über den Eiweissbedarf des Menschen.
-Pflüger’s Archiv f. d. gesammte Physiologie, Band 41, p.&nbsp;533.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_56" href="#FNanchor_56" class="label">56</a>
-Carl Voit: Ueber die Kost eines Vegetariers. Zeitschrift für Biologie,
-Band 25, p.&nbsp;232.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_57" href="#FNanchor_57" class="label">57</a>
-Klemperer: Untersuchungen über Stoffwechsel und Ernährung in Krankheiten.
-Zeitschrift für klin. Medizin, Band 16, p.&nbsp;550.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_58" href="#FNanchor_58" class="label">58</a>
-L. Breisacher: Ueber die Grösse des Eiweissbedarfs beim Menschen.
-Deutsche med. Wochenschrift. 1891. No. 48.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_59" href="#FNanchor_59" class="label">59</a>
-W. Caspari: Physiologische Studien über Vegetarianismus. Bonn. 1905.
-p. 13.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_60" href="#FNanchor_60" class="label">60</a>
-In presenting the general results of these experiments, the writer has
-drawn freely from his book, “Physiological Economy in Nutrition,” published
-by the Frederick A. Stokes Company, New York, 1904.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_61" href="#FNanchor_61" class="label">61</a>
-In presenting the general results of these experiments, the writer has
-drawn freely from his book, “Physiological Economy in Nutrition,” published
-by the Frederick A. Stokes Company, New York, 1904.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_62" href="#FNanchor_62" class="label">62</a>
-The coffee was prepared with milk and sugar.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_63" href="#FNanchor_63" class="label">63</a>
-Through the kindness of Professor Fisher, the writer has had the opportunity
-of reading the report of this work, which at this writing is not published,
-and he has drawn upon it freely for the following statements of fact.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_64" href="#FNanchor_64" class="label">64</a>
-Edward Curtis, M.&nbsp;D.: Nature and Health. New York, Henry Holt &amp; Co.
-1906. p.&nbsp;71.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_65" href="#FNanchor_65" class="label">65</a>
-Bulletin No. 107, Office of Experiment Stations, U.&nbsp;S. Department of Agriculture,
-1901, from which the descriptions given have been taken.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_66" href="#FNanchor_66" class="label">66</a>
-A Digest of Japanese Investigations on the Nutrition of Man. Bulletin
-No. 159, Office of Experiment Stations, U.&nbsp;S. Department of Agriculture, 1905.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_67" href="#FNanchor_67" class="label">67</a>
-Ueber die Folgen einer ausreichenden, aber eiweissarmen Nahrung. Ein
-Beitrag zur Lehre vom Eiweissbedarf. Virchow’s Archiv für pathologische
-Anatomie und Physiologie, Band 132, p.&nbsp;91.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_68" href="#FNanchor_68" class="label">68</a>
-Theodor Rosenheim: Ueber den Gesundheitsschädigenden Einfluss eiweissarmer
-Nahrung. DuBois-Reymond’s Archiv für Physiologie, 1891, p.&nbsp;341.
-Also, Weiterer Untersuchungen über die Schädlichkeit eiweissarmer Nahrung.
-Pflüger’s Archiv f. d. gesammte Physiologie, Band 54, p.&nbsp;61, 1893.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_69" href="#FNanchor_69" class="label">69</a>
-B. H. Jägerroos: Ueber die Folgen einer ausreichenden, aber eiweissarmen
-Nahrung. Skandinavisches Archiv für Physiologie, Band 13, p.&nbsp;375, 1902.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_70" href="#FNanchor_70" class="label">70</a>
-Chalmers Watson, M.D., and Andrew Hunter, M.B.: Observations on
-Diet. The Influence of Diet on Growth and Nutrition. Journal of Physiology,
-Vol.&nbsp;XXXIV, p.&nbsp;112, 1906.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_71" href="#FNanchor_71" class="label">71</a>
-The fuel value of the food was calculated from the data given in Bulletin
-No. 28, U.&nbsp;S. Department of Agriculture. All figures for nitrogen were obtained
-by exact chemical analysis.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_72" href="#FNanchor_72" class="label">72</a>
-All through the balance periods the dogs were catheterized each morning
-to insure complete collection of the twenty-four hours’ urine.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_73" href="#FNanchor_73" class="label">73</a>
-See Osborne and Clapp: The Chemistry of the Protein Bodies of the
-Wheat Kernel. American Journal of Physiology, vol.&nbsp;17, p.&nbsp;231.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_74" href="#FNanchor_74" class="label">74</a>
-There is an unavoidable error here, since the excrement contains not only
-undigested food, but also contains some nitrogenous matter derived from the
-secretions of the intestine, etc.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_75" href="#FNanchor_75" class="label">75</a>
-Edward Curtis, M.D.: Nature and Health, p.&nbsp;70. Henry Holt &amp; Company,
-New York, 1906.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_76" href="#FNanchor_76" class="label">76</a>
-Aran Coirce: British Medical Journal, April 7, 1906, p.&nbsp;829.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_77" href="#FNanchor_77" class="label">77</a>
-Irving Fisher: A new method for indicating food values. American
-Journal of Physiology, vol.&nbsp;15, p.&nbsp;417, 1906.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_78" href="#FNanchor_78" class="label">78</a>
-Aran Coirce: British Medical Journal, April 7, 1906, p.&nbsp;829.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_79" href="#FNanchor_79" class="label">79</a>
-Dr. med. et phil. R.&nbsp;O. Neumann: Experimentelle Beiträge zur Lehre von
-dem täglichen Nahrungsbedarf des Menschen unter besonderer Berücksichtigung
-der notwendigen Eiweissmenge. Archiv für Hygiene, Band 45, p.&nbsp;1, 1902.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_80" href="#FNanchor_80" class="label">80</a>
-C.&nbsp;A. Herter: Character of the Bacterial Flora of Carnivorous and Herbivorous
-Animals. Science, December 28, 1906, p.&nbsp;859.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_81" href="#FNanchor_81" class="label">81</a>
-Dr. S. Fenger: Beiträge zur Kenntniss des Stoffwechsels im Greisenalter.
-Skandinavisches Archiv für Physiologie, Band 16, p.&nbsp;222, 1904.</p>
-
-</div>
-</div>
-
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