Behavioral effects of iron supplementation in infants in Madang, Papua New Guinea

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Abstract

The effect of iron supplementation on attending behavior of 96 1-y-old infants was assessed in a double-blind, randomized, controlled trial of iron dextran in Papua New Guinea. The treatment group received an injection of iron dextran at 2 mo; the controls received a placebo injection. Because many children has malarial parasitemia at testing, presence of malaria was used in the analysis. A significant interaction was found between iron and malaria infection on total fixation time: iron-supplemented groups and placebo-treated parasitemic children showed significantly higher total fixation scores than did placebo-treated aparasitemic children. Blood analysis of iron status showed similar results, with lowest iron status evident in the placebo-treated aparasitemic group. There was no effect of treatment on rate of habituation or dishabituation. Supplemental iron treatment has a significant effect on attention but the direction of the effect depends on the presence of malaria infection.

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CITATION STYLE

APA

Heywood, A., Oppenheimer, S., Heywood, P., Jolley, D., Degen Horowitz, F., & Lozoff, B. (1989). Behavioral effects of iron supplementation in infants in Madang, Papua New Guinea. American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, 50(3 SUPPL.), 630–640. https://doi.org/10.1093/ajcn/50.3.630

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