1. Academic Validation
  2. Components of the AIN-93 diets as improvements in the AIN-76A diet

Components of the AIN-93 diets as improvements in the AIN-76A diet

  • J Nutr. 1997 May;127(5 Suppl):838S-841S. doi: 10.1093/jn/127.5.838S.
P G Reeves 1
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 U.S. Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service, Grand Forks Human Nutrition Research Center, ND 58202-9034, USA.
Abstract

The AIN-93 rodent diets were formulated to substitute for the previous version (AIN-76A) and to improve the performance of Animals that consume them. They are called AIN-93G, formulated for growth, and AIN-93M, for maintenance. Major changes included substituting cornstarch for sucrose and soybean oil for corn oil and increasing the amount in order to supply both essential fatty acids (linoleic and linolenic). L-Cystine was substituted for DL-methionine to supplement the casein component. The mineral mix was reformulated to lower the amounts of phosphorus, manganese and chromium, to increase the amount of selenium, and to add molybdenum, silicon, fluoride, nickel, boron, lithium and vanadium. The amounts of Vitamins E, K-1 and B-12 were increased over those in the AIN-76A vitamin mix. The AIN-93G diet contains 200 g of casein and 70 g of soybean oil/kg diet. The maintenance diet (AIN-93M) contains 140 g of casein and 40 g of soybean oil/kg diet. The 1993 diets have a better balance of essential nutrients than the 1976 diet and are better choices for studies with laboratory rodents.

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