Artigo Revisado por pares

VITAMIN E REQUIREMENTS OF PRETERM INFANTS

1978; Wiley; Volume: 67; Issue: 4 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1111/j.1651-2227.1978.tb16354.x

ISSN

1651-2227

Autores

Linda Jansson, Lars Holmberg, Bo Nilsson, Benny Johansson,

Tópico(s)

Selenium in Biological Systems

Resumo

Differences between feeding practices in earlier investigations prompted the present study of iron and vitamin E supplementation in breast milk fed preterm infants. A new and highly sensitive technique for quantitation of alpha-tocopherol in serum was used. Studies on 34 infants with a birth weight below 2000 g or gestational age less than or equal to 35 weeks showed that supplementation with 16.5 mg tocopheryl acetate/day from 10 days of age resulted in a significantly higher haemoglobin concentration and lower reticulocyte count at 8-10 weeks than supplementation with 1.5 mg/day (p is less than 0.05). Studies on 23 infants with a birth weight of 2000-2499 g revealed subnormal alpha-tocopherol levels in 2 of the infants given 1.5 mg tocopheryl acetate/day but there was no effect on the haemoglobin concentration at 8-10 weeks. There were no untoward effects of an early iron supplementation with 2-3 mg Fe++ (as ferrous succinate)/kg/day. It is concluded that extra supplementation with vitamin E is advisable also in breast milk fed preterm infants. A low dosage iron supplementation from 3 weeks of age is safe.

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