1. Biological availability of iron supplements for rats, chicks and humans.
- Author
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Pennell MD, Davies MI, Rasper J, and Motzok I
- Subjects
- Animals, Biological Assay, Caseins, Chickens, Ferric Compounds metabolism, Ferrous Compounds metabolism, Glucose, Humans, Lactose, Milk, Rats, Species Specificity, Structure-Activity Relationship, Sucrose, Biological Availability, Biopharmaceutics, Dietary Carbohydrates, Dietary Proteins, Hemoglobins metabolism, Iron metabolism
- Abstract
Fourteen experiments were concluded on the effect of protein and carbohydrate sources in the assay diets on the relative biological values (RBV) of food grade sodium iron pyrophosphate (NaFePP) and ferric orthophosphate (FePO4) vs. ferrous sulfate (FeSO4) for rats and chicks, using the response in blood hemoglobin to graded levels of supplemental iron as the assay criterion. Two trials were made with volunteers to estimate the RBV of NaFePP and FePO4 for humans, based on the increase in plasma iron 2 hours after ingestion of 100 mg of iron of a test dose following an overnight fast. The RBV of iron from NaFePP and FePO4 for rats were consistently lower when the basal diet contained nonfat dried milk (9 to 16 and 28, respectively, vs. FeSO4=100) than when casein was used (25 to 28 and 49, respectively). The addition of 22% beta-lactose, replacing sucrose in a diet containing casein fed to rats, significantly reduced the RBV of iron from NaFePP from 25 to 15; the addition of 22% alpha-lactose or 40% glucose in place of sucrose had no effect on the RBV of this iron source. The RBV of iron from NaFePP and FePO4 for chicks were 4 to 6 and 4, respectively, with the source of dietary protein having no effect. Very low RBV of iron from NaFePP and FePO4 (4.3 and 5.9, respectively, vs. FeSO4=100) were also obtained with human subjects.
- Published
- 1976
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