Got my Urine Amino Acid test results back attached bellow , Carnosine and Beta Alanine are crazy elevated indicating gut dysboisis, I will now run a 360 GI stool test and a h pylori test.
I guess these are why meat was causing me so much issues and not the phenylalanine...
Beta-alanine (high)
Beta-alanine, a nonessential intermediary amino acid, is abnormally elevated in this urine
specimen. Normally beta-alanine is near completely deaminated to alpha-ketoglutarate
(B-6 dependent). Beta-alanine is derived from: (1) the breakdown of DNA/RNA (yeast,
pyrimidine, uracil), (2) activity of unusual bacteria on aspartic acid and, (3) the
hydrolysis of anserine and carnosine, which are peptides found in beef, pork, poultry,
salmon, and tuna. Elevated beta-alanine inhibits the breakdown of anserine and carnosine,
and impairs the renal conservation of taurine and beta-aminoisobutyric acid; taurine is an
important antioxidant, neurotransmitter and essential for the retention and homeostasis of
intracellular magnesium and potassium. Beta-alanine is a neurotoxic substance that
suppresses development in the brain and spinal cord. Beta-alanine also interferes with the
metabolism of the neuroinhibitory neurotransmitter gamma-aminobutyric acid.
Hyper-B- alaninurea has been associated with seizures and somnolence.Patients exhibiting
elevated urinary B-alanine should be retested after given a trial on a low-protein,
low-pyrimidine diet and high B-6 (P-5-P). Elevated levels of B-alanine are highly correlated
with gastrointestinal and genitourinary infections in patients with Chronic Fatigue
Syndrome. Intestinal dysbiosis, especially candidiasis, should be evaluated via a
Comprehensive Stool Analysis.
The levels of one or both dietary peptides anserine and/or carnosine are markedly elevated in this urine specimen, indicating incomplete digestion of anserine-containing meats(chicken, turkey, duck, rabbit, tuna and salmon) and/or carnosine-containing meats (beef, pork, tuna and salmon).
Zinc status should be checked (RBC Elements) since the peptidase activity is zinc dependent. The peptidase activity can also be inhibited by high levels of Beta-alanine, which can result from B-6 insufficiency, or abnormal intestinal flora.
Carnosine (high)
Carnosine, a dietary peptide, is high in this urine specimen. Carnosine is an incompletely
digested peptide that is derived primarily from beef and pork. Carnosine consists of
histidine and beta-alanine. Breakdown of the peptide requires a zinc dependent
peptidase, which can be inhibited by high levels of the ”end product” beta-alanine. Betaalanine can accumulate if deamination of beta-alanine to alpha-ketoglutarate is impaired
due to B-6 insufficiency. Therefore, carnosine can accumulate as a result of high intake
of carnosine containing meats with insufficient zinc and/or B-6 availability. Beta-alanine
can also be elevated as a product of gastrointestinal bacterial conversion of aspartate
and/or breakdown of pyrimidines that are high in yeast. Thus beta-alanine can
accumulate and inhibit hydrolysis of carnosine as a result of significant dysbiosis, or
deficiencies of B-6 and/or zinc. Beta-alanine can have adverse effects in the central
nervous system, but more commonly elevated levels of beta-alanine inhibit renal
conservation of the amino acid taurine which is an important antioxidant,
neurotransmitter and essential for the retention and metabolism of intracellular
magnesium and potassium. If urinary taurine is either low or high, magnesium deficiency
is likely or pending. Comprehensive Stool Analysis (yeast/bacteria), Red Blood Cell
Elements Analysis (zinc, potassium, and magnesium) and assessment of B-6 status are
useful to identify the cause and potential consequences of the inability to break down this
dietary peptide.