1. Association between maternal vitamin E status and alpha-tocopherol levels in the newborn and colostrum.
- Author
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Ribeiro, Karla Danielly, Lima, Mayara Santa Rosa, Medeiros, Jeane Franco Pires, Rebouças, Amanda, Dantas, Raquel Costa Silva, Bezerra, Danielle Soares, Osório, Mônica Maria, and Dimenstein, Roberto
- Subjects
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VITAMIN E analysis , *BREAST milk , *COLOSTRUM , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *INTERVIEWING , *LIQUID chromatography , *LONGITUDINAL method , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL records , *MOTHERS , *PROBABILITY theory , *RESEARCH funding , *STATISTICS , *UMBILICAL cord , *VITAMIN E , *VITAMIN E deficiency , *SAMPLE size (Statistics) , *DATA analysis , *SOCIOECONOMIC factors , *CROSS-sectional method , *DATA analysis software , *NUTRITIONAL status , *MANN Whitney U Test , *CHILDREN , *VITAMIN deficiency - Abstract
Vitamin E is important because of its antioxidant activity in situations of oxidative stress, especially postnatally. Hence, the objective was to verify whether maternal alpha‐tocopherol level is associated with the alpha‐tocopherol levels of the newborn and colostrum. This is a cross‐sectional study of 58 women and their term newborns from a public hospital. Blood and colostrum were collected to measure alpha‐tocopherol levels by high‐performance liquid chromatography. Mothers with serum alpha‐tocopherol levels <16.2 mmol L−1 and newborns <11.6 mmol L−1 were indicative of deficiency or low levels. Mothers were divided into two groups: <16.2 mmol L−1 and those with levels ≥16.2 mmol L−1. The mean (95% confidence interval) serum alpha‐tocopherol levels of mothers, umbilical cords and colostrum were 28 (24–32), 6 (5–8) and 39 mmol L−1 (32–45), respectively (P < 0.001); 19% of the women and 90% of the newborns had low alpha‐tocopherol levels. Maternal alpha‐tocopherol level was associated with that of the umbilical cord. Newborns from mothers at risk of deficiency had low alpha‐tocopherol levels (P < 0.001). Colostrum levels of vitamin E were not influenced by maternal serum. Maternal deficiency influenced the vitamin E level of the umbilical cord but does not in the colostrum, evidencing distinct transfer mechanisms via the mammary gland. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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