Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

Vitamin E bioavailability from fortified breakfast cereal is greater than that from encapsulated supplements

2004; Elsevier BV; Volume: 79; Issue: 1 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1093/ajcn/79.1.86

ISSN

1938-3207

Autores

Scott W. Leonard, Carolyn K. Good, Eric T. Gugger, Maret G. Traber,

Tópico(s)

Consumer Attitudes and Food Labeling

Resumo

Conflicting results from vitamin E intervention studies suggest supplemental vitamin E malabsorption. We compared vitamin E bioavailability from a supplement with that from a fortified breakfast cereal. Vitamin E bioavailability was evaluated by using deuterium-labeled all-rac-α-tocopherol in three 4-d trials (2 wk apart). Five fasting subjects sequentially consumed the following (with 236 mL fat-free milk): 400 IU d9-α-tocopheryl acetate (400-IU capsule), 41 g ready-to-eat wheat cereal containing 30 IU d9-α-tocopheryl acetate (30-IU cereal), and 45 g cereal containing 400 IU d9-α-tocopheryl acetate (400-IU cereal). Five months later (trial 4), they consumed a 400-IU capsule with 41 g vitamin E–free cereal. Blood was obtained up to 72 h after the start of each trial. The mean (±SD) vitamin E bioavailabilities of the 30-IU cereal and the 400-IU cereal were 6 ± 2 and 26 ± 8 times, respectively, the vitamin E bioavailability of the 400-IU capsule. The areas under the 0–72-h d9-α-tocopherol curves for the 400-IU capsule, the 30-IU cereal, and the 400-IU cereal were 30 ± 7, 153 ± 43, and 765 ± 164 μmol · h/L (all trial comparisons, P < 0.0001). In trial 4, 3 subjects barely responded and 2 subjects had areas under the curve that were similar to their 400-IU cereal responses. The low bioavailability of vitamin E from the 400-IU capsule and the variability observed when the capsule was consumed with cereal suggest that encapsulated vitamin E is poorly absorbed when consumed with a low-fat meal and that bioavailability can be enhanced by food fortification with vitamin E.

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