4.1. Product Characteristics
Vietnamese patients may find the developed liquid product for tube feeding familiar because the product is based on locally available food and ingredients, which may facilitate its acceptance. Currently, in most hospitals in Vietnam, the enteral feedings are either blenderized diets prepared by caretakers or formulas unreliably prepared by hospitals from various types of foods such as milk, meat, rice, and vegetables. As a result, requirements of essential nutrients, energy and protein might not be fulfilled. This could influence mortality, morbidity as well as the length of hospital stay of patients. On the other hand, homemade food also faces the risk of poor hygiene, microbial contamination and inadequate nutritional value. Our manufactured feeding product satisfies RDA requirements in terms of nutrients and contemplates the conditionally essential nutrients. Further calculation from
Table 1 revealed that the caloric density of the product reached approximately 1 kcal/mL, 52% of which is provided by carbohydrates. The product also provided 1.48 g of dietary fibers per 100 mL.
Another important characteristic of enteral formulas is viscosity. The manufactured product achieved the relatively low viscosity of 83 cP, allowing easy adjustment of flow rate to the patient’s condition and preventing tube clogging [
34]. The viscosity of a product is determined by various factors such as nutritional composition, used stabilizers, proteins, and polysaccharides [
35]. In addition, manufacturing parameters that alter interactions among nutrients such as dispersion, pH, homogenization conditions, and temperature are also important contributors [
34]. Therefore, products with similar caloric densities and nutritional compositions may have different viscosities. For comparison, milk has a viscosity of approximately 13 cP; viscosity of soup may vary from 90 to 352; other standardized enteral formulas have viscosities ranging from 53 to 85 [
36].
The product is also rich in branched chain amino acids (BCAAs), which are considered ‘immune-enhancers’ and an important contributor to nutritional values of enteral feeding. To be specific, amino acids found in our product were leucine of 0.26/100 g, isoleucine of 0.17/100 g, and valine of 0.17/100 g, corresponding to the leucine: isoleucine: valine ratio of approximately 2:1:1. Those compounds mainly came from loin pork and soybeans and have been reported to exhibit anti-liver cancer property and are suitable for applications in nutritional supplementation. In addition, The BCAAs could irreversibly degrade by donating their amino-nitrogen in the Krebs cycle, yielding glutamine and alanine which are crucial for the activation of immune cells in liver and spleen [
37]. Other discovered functions of BCAA included enhancing ammonia detoxification to glutamine [
38], improving mental state in patients with hepatic encephalopathy, preventing cardiac muscle atrophy induced by physical inactivity, stimulating protein synthesis, and reducing protein breakdown and nitrogen loss, both in skeletal muscle and in the myocardium [
39].
Regarding the BCAA ratio, the manufactured product had the ratio of BCAA of approximately 2:1:1. This BCAA ratio was demonstrated to be beneficial, as implied by a previous in vivo experiment [
35] where pigs were exposed to leucine, isoleucine, and valine at different ratios in 17% crude protein (CP) diets. The results pointed out that a suitable BCAA ratio (in vivo = 1:0.75:0.75; in vitro = 1:0.25:0.25) could offer several benefits including improvements in intestinal morphology, cell proliferation, intestinal AA absorption, and intestinal protein turnover [
40]. Our results are also in line with another study where four different BCAA ratios (leucine:isoleucine:valine), including 0.5:1:1, 1:1:1, 1.5:1:1; 2:1:1 and 4:1:1, were tested. The results revealed that the optimal BCAA ratio should vary between 1:1:1 and 2:1:1 [
41]. A higher proportion of BCAAs was demonstrated to be suitable for hepatic failure and hepatic encephalopathy patients. In addition, enhanced nitrogen accretion and liver function were found to be positively correlated with BCAA intake in an extended period of time [
42]. In a recent study, BCAA catabolism may be shunted to skeletal muscle, where it indirectly leads to FA accumulation and insulin resistance [
43].
Molecules in the produced enteral food were below 8.5 kDa, averaging at 1.52 kDa, suggesting the product’s suitability for patients with food intolerance to polymeric feeds or with severe impairment of intestinal absorption. This is consistent with a previous study which also reported diarrhea-reducing effects of diets containing peptides in patients with traumatic brain injury [
44].
Bioactive proteins are peptides with relatively small molecular sizes and are classified as special protein fractions exerting positive impacts on the conditions on the human body [
45,
46]. Short peptides entering the human body can be easily metabolized, taking various physiological roles including the ability to control hypertension, antioxidant function, anti-clotting ability, ability connectivity mineral bacteria, and reducing the risk of cardiovascular diseases [
47]. The health benefits of bioactive peptides have been reaffirmed by several studies. Specifically, bioactive peptides from soybean protein were shown to aid in the treatment of cancer [
48]. In the manufacturing process of the feeding product, the purpose of hydrolyzing soybean and pork with enzymes is two-fold. First, the hydrolysis could facilitate digestibility and enhance nutrient absorption through fragmentation of proteins into products consisting of short, low molecular weight, and soluble peptides. Second, the fragmentation also in turn releases free peptides, allowing them to demonstrate their inherent activities [
49]. Taken together, the nutrients in our product were shown to possess the average molecular weight similar to that of the short peptide, thus inducing easier digestion and making the product suitable for patients to recover gastrointestinal function.
4.2. Tests of Digestibility In Vitro and In Vivo
There are two common methods to measure the digestibility in vitro including the pH-drop method and the pH-stat. The advantages of the pH-stat method over the pH-drop method include the insensitivity of the test material against varying buffer capacity, improved prediction accuracy for protein digestibility, and better applicability to different materials. In addition, the reproducibility of the pH-stat method was also demonstrated to be consistent in different studies. For in vivo assessment of digestibility, it is methodologically conventional to analyze the food intake and fecal data of the experimental animals. However, this method is disadvantageous in terms of cost, time and labor.
Overall, the in vitro results showed higher digestibility on the pure protein samples in comparison with results derived from the combined protein sample. This is due to the presence of plant protein in the product. Therefore, improved in vitro digestibility could be observed in samples that are fully made up of animal protein compared to samples mixed by vegetable or plant protein as well as animal protein. On the other hand, results of digestion in vivo showed that the protein powder exhibits very good digestibility in animal subjects, at approximately 89.70%. This is because protein was cleaved to form the circuit with a low molecular weight peptide (about 8.5 kDa). As a result, animal body could digest and absorb more easily in comparison with the use of non-hydrolyzed materials. For comparison, previous studies involving soy protein, fish meal, and crab powder all demonstrated the high protein digestibility of 90.9%, 86.6%, and 66.4% respectively [
26,
50,
51]. Furthermore, digestibility values of various samples from a previous study by Akiyama et al. [
52] indicated that casein (99.1%) exhibited the highest digestibility, followed by wheat gluten (98%), gelatin (97.3%), rice (76.4%), and shrimp paste (74.6%) [
5]. Therefore, protein digestibility of the produced enteral food is comparable to that of soy protein and fishmeal, and is only surpassed by those of casein, wheat gluten and gelatin.
By comparing the results of protein uptake of the two methods, it is evident that the in vitro method yielded a higher result than the in vivo method because the proteolytic enzyme activity is largely unaffected by in vitro proteolysis and is responsive to environmental factors such as temperature, pH, intestinal microorganisms, and other enzymes in the digestive system. The in vitro RPD of the enteral feeding product was 83.5%, indicating a high rate of protein digestion when tested with the pH drop method with three enzymes. This result is in line with a previous study which revealed that RPDs of meals made from fish, meat and soybean were 78.08, 72.82 and 76.08% respectively [
53]. The present result also showed that protein digestibility evaluated by pH-drop method was lower than that in in vivo Swiss mice experiments, contrasting with the expectation prior to the study on mice. This can be explained by the inverse correlation of the pH drop with regards to the ash content in the sample. As a result, it is suggested that the higher mineral content is associated with greater buffer capacity of the sample.
The ability to digest food is also dependent on the characteristics of the experimental animal [
13]. In vitro and in vivo tests revealed that the protein digestibility of our enteral food was relatively high. In addition, experiments on animals revealed that the enteral food protein were safe and of good quality. Our study suggested that rice and legumes (carrots, potatoes, pumpkin) along with pork meat, soy and vegetable oils can be utilized to manufacture nutritionally adequate and tailorable enteral feeding food. This has a special implication for the developing and under-developed countries where enormous benefits may be realized with an inexpensive technology for enteral feeding food prepared from locally available ingredients.