We evaluated the effect of maternal vitamin E supplementation on the α-tocopherol concentrations of colostrum, transitional milk and mature milk of women who had given birth prematurely. This longitudinal randomised-controlled trial divided eighty-nine women into two groups: a control group and a supplemented group. Blood and breast milk were collected from all the participants after delivery. Next, each woman in the supplemented group received 400 IU of RRR-α-tocopheryl acetate. Further breast milk samples were collected 24 h after the first collection, as well as 7 and 30 d after delivery. α-Tocopherol concentrations were determined by HPLC. The baseline α-tocopherol concentrations in the maternal serum of the two groups were similar: 1159.8 (sd 292.4) μg/dl (27.0 (SD 6.8) μmol/l) for the control group and 1128.3 (sd 407.2) μg/dl (26.2 (SD 9.5) μmol/l) for the supplemented group. None of the women was vitamin E deficient. Breast milk α-tocopherol concentrations increased by 60 % 24 h after supplementation in the intervention group and did not increase at all in the control group. α-Tocopherol concentration of the transitional milk in the supplemented group was 35 % higher compared with the control group. α-Tocopherol concentrations of the mature milk in both groups were similar. Maternal supplementation with 400 IU of RRR-α-tocopherol increased the vitamin E concentrations of the colostrum and transitional milk, but not of the mature milk. This study presents relevant information for the design of strategies to prevent and combat vitamin E deficiency in the risk group of preterm infants.
CITATION STYLE
Pires Medeiros, J. F., Ribeiro, K. D. D. S., Lima, M. S. R., Das Neves, R. A. M., Lima, A. C. P., Dantas, R. C. S., … Dimenstein, R. (2016). α-Tocopherol in breast milk of women with preterm delivery after a single postpartum oral dose of vitamin e. British Journal of Nutrition, 115(8), 1424–1430. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0007114516000477
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