Effects of oral and intramuscular vitamin K prophylaxis on vitamin K 1, PIVKA-II, and clotting factors in breast fed infants

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Abstract

A randomised clinical trial was conducted to establish the effects of oral and intramuscular administration of vitamin K at birth on plasma concentrations of vitamin K1, proteins induced by vitamin K absence (PIVKA-II), and clotting factors. Two groups of about 165 healthy breast fed infants who received at random 1 mg vitamin K1 orally or intramuscularly after birth were studied at 2 weeks and 1 and 3 months of age. Although vitamin K 1 concentrations were statistically significantly higher in the intramuscular group, blood coagulability, activities of factors VII and X and PIVKA-II concentrations did not reveal any difference between the two groups. At 2 weeks of age vitamin K, concentrations were raised compared with reported unsupplemented concentrations and no PIVKA-II was detectable. At 3 months vitamin K1 concentrations were back at unsupplemented values and PIVKA-II was detectable in 11·5% of infants. Therefore, a repeated oral prophylaxis will be necessary to completely prevent (biochemical) vitamin K deficiency beyond the age of 1 month.

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APA

Cornelissen, E. A. M., Kollée, L. A. A., De Abreu, R. A., Van Baal, J. M., Motohara, K., Verbruggen, B., & Monnens, L. A. H. (1992). Effects of oral and intramuscular vitamin K prophylaxis on vitamin K 1, PIVKA-II, and clotting factors in breast fed infants. Archives of Disease in Childhood, 67(10), 1250–1254. https://doi.org/10.1136/adc.67.10.1250

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