“…Although published guidelines suggest that the Ca and P composition of parenteral nutrition mixtures should be 12.5-15 and 12.9-14.5mM, respectively, recent studies indicate that concentrations of Ca and P, 20 mM each, are achievable and potentially beneficial for bone mineralization (8, 9,13). These newer approaches are practical only under conditions in which the constituents of the parenteral nutrition solutions are controlled to allow solubility of Ca and P. For example, the total quantity of amino acids (>2.2 g%, as TrophAmine, Kendall-McGaw Laboratories, Irvine, CA, USA and Aminosyn-PF, Abbott Laboratories, Chicago, IL, USA) with the addition of cysteine hydrochloride (added as 30-40 mg/g amino acids) promote greater solubility of Ca and P, principally because of a lowered pH (8, 9,15). Storage time and temperature, type and concentration of mineral salts, and the order in which the salts are mixed, are important factors that affect the solubility of parenteral Ca and P (12,(15)(16)(17).…”