Cavies should have plain, high - quality guinea pig pellets (mixes with nuts and seeds are too rich), fortified with vitamin C. Guinea pigs need about 10 to 30 milligrams per
kilogram of body weight daily.
Safely eat up to 2.5 grams of protein per
kilogram of your body weight daily, suggest authors of a review published in 2009 in «Nutrition and Metabolism.»
Lysine from protein foods should include eating 1.0 to 1.1 grams /
kilogram of body weight daily (for adults).
In this study, he exposed lean, brown - furred female mice to 50 milligrams of BPA per
kilogram of body weight daily, and the next generation was transformed: More of them were fat, with blond fur.
Not exact matches
The World Health Organization's Joint Experts Committee on Food Additives has approved an acceptable
daily intake
of steviol glycoside (stevioside or reb A)
of up to 4 mg per
Kilogram of body weight.
While the suggested
daily feeding volume at 5 days old to 3 months is 150 ml /
kilogram of body weight, do not worry if your child consumes more or less than this.
While the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) offered a tolerable
daily intake — TDI —
of 50 micrograms
of BPA per
kilogram of body weight each day, new studies suggest that we are exposed to at least eight times that amount every day, said Vanamala, who is also a faculty member at the Penn State Hershey Cancer Institute.
To confirm that their findings are relevant to humans as well, the researchers followed seven individuals given a high dose
of saccharin — 5 milligrams per
kilogram of body weight, the Food and Drug Administration's maximum acceptable
daily intake — on 6 consecutive days.
Where the EPA safety level for
daily exposure is 0.1 microgram per
kilogram (about 2.2 pounds)
of body weight, the FDA's standard is about 0.4 microgram per
kilogram per day.
The acceptable
daily intake set by the Food and Drug Administration is 50 milligrams per
kilogram body weight (mg / kg) per day, the equivalent
of about 20 cans
of diet soda.
Some
of the mice received 250 nanograms
of bisphenol - A
daily per
kilogram of body weight (ng / kg / day); others received 25 ng / kg / day.
However, according to a new Canadian study, you might still be not getting enough proteins, if your
daily intake is at the low end
of the recommended
daily allowance
of 0.8 grams per
kilogram of body weight.
This study adds to a growing
body of evidence that the standard recommendation
of 0.8 grams per
kilogram of body weight protein
daily may not be enough to maintain lean
body mass in people over the age
of 50, especially when research suggests older adults experience some degree
of «anabolic resistance,» the reduced ability to respond to anabolic stimuli that promote muscle growth.
A
daily intake is proposed
of 1.0 to 1.2 grams
of protein per
kilogram of body weight as optimal for bone health and skeletal muscle in older individuals not having impaired renal function.
One
of the biggest arguments against protein supplementation is that, in theory, it's easy for people to consume enough protein in their diets to meet the Recommended
Daily Allowance (RDA)
of.8 grams per
kilogram body weight.
Per
kilogram of body weight for an adult, the recommended protein intake is 0.8 g
daily.
The recommended
daily allowance
of protein for the average adult is 0.8 grams per
kilogram of body weight, according to the USDA.
Both the American College
of Sports Medicine and Academy
of Dietetics and Nutrition advises endurance athletes, like marathoners, bump up their
daily protein intake from 0.8 grams to 1.4 grams per
kilogram of body weight.
Authors
of this review suggest it's unsafe to consume more than 2.5 grams
of protein per
kilogram of body weight — more than 1.14 grams per pound
of body weight —
daily.
In general, the recommendation is between 1.5 and 2 grams
of protein per
kilogram body weight daily intake for fairly active people.
30 patients with bipolar disorder supplemented with 6.8 mg
of L - carnitine per pound (15 mg per
kilogram)
of body weight daily for 26 weeks while following a moderately calorie - reduced diet.
The
daily allowance
of protein for adults is 0.8 grams per
kilogram of body weight, according to the U.S. Institute
of Medicine.
Authors
of this review suggest a maximum safe
daily intake
of protein is 2.5 grams per
kilogram of body weight, or about 1.14 gram
of protein per pound
of body weight each day.
Generally appearing first in grams
of protein recommended for
kilograms of body weight, the mere mathematical dilemma didn't help someone plan their
daily intake.
According to medical research, the human
body can safely tolerate
daily doses
of 1 gram per
kilogram of body weight.
The formula for
daily protein requirements that we've been working with up until now is 0.8 grams
of protein per
kilogram of body weight, with it bumping up to 1.2 grams per
kilogram for serious athletes.
The new publication no longer expresses nutrient requirements as a linear increase per
kilogram of body weight, but in a curve based on total
body weight and as minimal requirements as well as
daily recommended allowances.
The recommended
daily dosage is around 65 mg per
kilogram of body weight with an appropriate distribution
of eicosapentanoic acid (EPA, 40mg / kg) and docosahexanoic acid (DHA, 25 mg / kg).
This should equate to a
daily dose
of around 210mg - 540 mg calcium per
kilogram of dog's
body weight.