The Influence of Vitamin A Supplementation on Iron Status
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Clinical Trials
2.1.1. Vitamin A Supplementation in Children and Adolescents
References | Country | Population (Age in Years) | N | Intervention (Groups) | Time (Month) | Impact | Conclusions |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Children and Adolescents | |||||||
Mwanri et al. (2000) [6] | Tanzania | Anemic children (9–12) | 135 | 5000 IU VA/3× week; 5000 IU VA + 200 mg Fe/3× week; 200 mg Fe/3× week; Placebo | 3 | ↑Hb = 13.5; ↑Hb = 22.1; ↑Hb = 17.5; ↑Hb = 3.6 | ↑Hb in the Fe + VA group (p < 0.05) |
Varma et al. (2007) [10] | India | Children (3–5.5) | 516 | Rice and lentils fortified with 500 IU VA + 14 mg Fe + 50 μg folic acid; 6 times/week; Placebo | 6 | ↑Hb = 4.0, ↑serum ferritin = 10.4; ↑Hb = 4.0, ↓serum ferritin = −2.8 | ↑serum ferritin in the VA + Fe + folic acid group (p < 0.001) |
Zimmermann et al. (2006) [11] | Morocco | Schoolchildren (5–13) | 81 | 200,000 IU VA † at baseline and after 5 months; Placebo | 10 | ↑Hb = 7.0, MCV = 7.0, serum ferritin = −7.0, ↓TfR = −2.3, EPO = 6.9, ZnPP = -4.0; ↑Hb = 1.0, MCV = 0.0, serum ferritin = 1.0, ↓TfR = −0.2, EPO = 3.3, ZnPP = 1.0 | ↑Hb, MCV and EPO in the VA group (p < 0.02) |
Kapil et al. (2005) [3] | India | Adolescent girls (17–18) | 39 | 200,000 IU VA † + 100 mg Fe + 500 μg folic acid + 60 mg vitamin C/day; 100 mg Fe + 500 μg folic acid + 60 mg vitamin C/day | 3.3 | ↑Hb = 18; ↑Hb = 13 | ↑Hb status in both groups (p < 0.05); higher in the VA group |
Children and Adolescents | |||||||
Leenstra et al. (2009) [12] | Kenya | Anemic adolescent girls (12–18) | 249 | 25,000 IU VA + 120 mg Fe/week; 25,000 IU VA + Placebo/week; 120 mg Fe/week + Placebo; Placebo/week | 5 | VA-supplemented group compared to vitamin A placebo group (adjusted for Fe supplementation): ↓Hb = −0.7, ↓serum ferritin = −1.7; Fe-supplemented group compared to Fe placebo group (adjusted for vitamin A supplementation): ↑Hb = 5.2, ↑serum ferritin = 13.3 | ↑Hb and serum ferritin (p < 0.001) only in the Fe supplemented groups |
Pregnant and Lactating Women | |||||||
Suharno et al. (1993) [13] | Indonesia | Pregnant women (17–35) | 251 | 8000 IU VA + 60 mg Fe/day; 8000 IU VA + Fe placebo/day; 60 mg Fe/day + vitamin A placebo; Placebo | 2 | ↑Hb = 12.70, Ht = 0.04, ↑ serum ferritin = 1.82, ↑TS = 0.036, ↑serum iron = 1.62, ↓TIBC= −3.00; ↑Hb = 3.68, Ht = 0.01, ↑serum ferritin = 1.34, ↑TS = 0.006, ↑serum iron = 0.22, ↓TIBC = −0.60; ↑Hb = 7.71, Ht = 0.02, ↑serum ferritin = 2.22, ↑TS = 0.017, ↑serum iron = 0.81, ↓TIBC = −1.30; ↑Hb = 2.00, Ht = 0.01, ↑serum ferritin = 1.22, ↑TS = 0.002, ↑serum iron = 0.10, ↓TIBC = −0.10 | Difference in all parameters between the VA + Fe group and the other groups (p < 0.001) |
Pregnant and Lactating Women | |||||||
Muslimatun et al. (2001a, 2001b) [14,15] | Indonesia | Pregnant women (17–35) | 190 | 20,000 IU VA + 120 mg Fe + 500μg folic acid/week; 120 mg Fe + 500 μg folic acid/week; 90–120 mg Fe + 250 μg folic acid ††/day | 5 | ↑Hb = 3.70, ↓serum ferritin = −7.10, ↑TfR = 0.43; ↑Hb = 2.10, ↓serum ferritin = −3.00, ↑TfR = 0.47; ↓Hb = −0.70, ↓ serum ferritin = −5.30, ↑TfR = 0.56 | Difference in Hb (p < 0.05), serum ferritin, TfR (p < 0.01) between the VA + Fe + folic acid group and the other groups |
Tanumihardjo (2002) [16] | Indonesia | Pregnant women (18–37) | 27 | 8000 IU VA/day; 60 mg Fe/day; 8000 IU VA + 60 mg Fe/day; Placebo | 2 | ↑Hb = 7.10, ↑Ht = 0.036, ↑serum ferritin = 4.70; ↑Hb = 6.60, ↑Ht = 0.018, ↑serum ferritin = 15.00; ↑Hb = 3.90, ↑Ht = 0.049, ↑serum ferritin = 12.00; ↓Hb = −9.00, ↓Ht = −0.034, ↓serum ferritin = −13.80 | Positive effect of supplementation with VA + Fe on indicators of iron status (p < 0.05) |
Suprapto et al. (2002) [17] | Indonesia | Anemic pregnant women (<35) | 84 | 5000 IU VA + 60 mg Fe + 250 μg folic acid + 5 mg riboflavin; 5000 IU VA + 60 mg Fe + 250 μg folic acid; 60 mg Fe + 250 μg folic acid + 5 mg riboflavin; 60 mg Fe + 250 μg folic acid + placebo | 2 | ↑Hb = 4.6; ↑Hb = 1.9; ↑Hb = 8.2; ↑Hb = 4.9 | Increase in Hb in all groups (p < 0.05), except in the VA + Fe + folic acid group (p > 0.05) |
Sun et al. (2010) [18] | China | Anemic pregnant women (20–30) | 180 | 6000 IU VA+ 60 mg Fe+ 400 μg folic acid/day; 60 mg Fe/day; 60 mg Fe+ 400 μg folic acid/day; Placebo | 2 | ↑Hb = 16.5, ↑serum ferritin = 8.12; ↑Hb = 17.9, ↑serum ferritin = 2.11; ↑Hb = 14.7, ↑serum ferritin = 3.38; ↓Hb = −1.98, ↓serum ferritin = −1.61 | VA + Fe supplementation was more beneficial to improve iron status and lymphocyte proliferation in pregnancy than Fe alone (p < 0.001) |
References | Country | Population (Age in Years) | N | Intervention (Groups) | Time (Months) | Impact | Conclusions | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Children and Adolescents | ||||||||||
Pereira et al. (2007) [7] | Brazil | Children and Adolescents (6–14) | 267 | 10,000 IU VA + 40 mg Fe/week; 40 mg Fe/week | 7.5 | ↑Hb = 8.0, ↓anemia = 43.8%, ↑MCV = 1.4, microcytosis = 3.8; ↑Hb = 9.0, ↓anemia = 30.7%, ↑MCV = 1.6, microcytosis = 3.2 | No differences between the groups according to mean Hb and prevalence of anemia. | |||
Soekarjo et al. (2004) [19] | Indonesia | Adolescents (12–15) | 3616 | 10,000 IU VA/week; 10,000 IU VA + 60 mg Fe/week; 60 mg Fe + 250 μg folic acid/week; Control | 3.5 | Girls | Boys | No differences among the groups (p > 0.05). | ||
Prepuberal | Puberal | Prepuberal | Puberal | |||||||
↑Hb = 5.9 | ↑Hb = 2.7 | ↑Hb = 8.4 | ↑Hb = 12.0 | |||||||
Davidsson et al. (2003) [20] | Côte d’Ivoire | Schoolchildren (6–13) | 13 | 2.0 mg Fe added to maize porridge; 2.0 mg Fe + 3300 IU VA added to maize porridge | 0.7 | ↓Fe stable isotope in erythrocyte = −1.4 | VA added to the meal decreased erythrocyte incorporation of Fe in children in the VA group, but had no impact after a mega dose of VA. | |||
Pregnant and Lactating Women | ||||||||||
Semba et al. (2001) [21] | Malawi | Pregnant women (20–26) | 137 | 10,000 VA + 30 mg Fe + 400 μg folic acid/day; 30 mg Fe + 400 μg folic acid/day | 3.75 | ↑Hb = 4.7, ↑EPO = 2.39; ↑Hb = 7.3, ↓EPO = −2.87 | No difference between the groups. |
2.1.2. Vitamin A Supplementation in Pregnant and Lactating Women
3. Discussion
4. Conclusions
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Michelazzo, F.B.; Oliveira, J.M.; Stefanello, J.; Luzia, L.A.; Rondó, P.H.C. The Influence of Vitamin A Supplementation on Iron Status. Nutrients 2013, 5, 4399-4413. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu5114399
Michelazzo FB, Oliveira JM, Stefanello J, Luzia LA, Rondó PHC. The Influence of Vitamin A Supplementation on Iron Status. Nutrients. 2013; 5(11):4399-4413. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu5114399
Chicago/Turabian StyleMichelazzo, Fernanda B., Julicristie M. Oliveira, Juliana Stefanello, Liania A. Luzia, and Patricia H. C. Rondó. 2013. "The Influence of Vitamin A Supplementation on Iron Status" Nutrients 5, no. 11: 4399-4413. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu5114399