Panacea Index Logo

Command Palette

Search for a command to run...

A combination of iron and retinol supplementation benefits iron status, IL-2 level and lymphocyte proliferation in anemic pregnant women.

Asia Pacific journal of clinical nutrition
January 1, 2010
Yong Y Sun et al. (8 authors)
Journal ArticleRandomized Controlled TrialResearch Support, Non-U.S. Gov'tHuman StudyClinical
Study Details

Study Goal

The researchers aimed to determine the effects of iron combined with retinol supplementation on iron status, IL-2 levels, and lymphocyte proliferation in anemic pregnant women.

Results Summary

Iron supplementation (alone or combined with retinol and folic acid) significantly improved iron status (Hb, plasma iron, ferritin) and immune markers (IL-2 levels, lymphocyte proliferation), with the greatest improvements seen in the group receiving iron, retinol, and folic acid.

Population

186 anemic pregnant women with hemoglobin levels between 80-110 g/L.

Effective Dosage

60 mg iron as ferrous sulfate daily, with some groups also receiving 0.4 mg folic acid and/or 2.0 mg retinol.

Duration

2 months

Interactions

None mentioned

Extracted Claims (15)
InterventionDirectionEndpointPopulationDosageImpactClaim #
60 mg iron as ferrous sulfate
increase
iron status in Hb, plasma iron and ferritin
anemic pregnant women
-
considerable increases
#1
60 mg iron and 0.4 mg folic acid
increase
iron status in Hb, plasma iron and ferritin
anemic pregnant women
-
considerable increases
#2
60 mg iron, 2.0 mg retinol and 0.4 mg folic acid
increase
iron status in Hb, plasma iron and ferritin
anemic pregnant women
-
considerable increases
#3
60 mg iron, 2.0 mg retinol and 0.4 mg folic acid
increase
plasma iron and ferritin
anemic pregnant women
-
significantly greater increases
#4
60 mg iron as ferrous sulfate
increase
IL-2 levels
anemic pregnant women
119 ng/L
increases
#5
60 mg iron and 0.4 mg folic acid
increase
IL-2 levels
anemic pregnant women
184 ng/L
increases
#6
60 mg iron, 2.0 mg retinol and 0.4 mg folic acid
increase
IL-2 levels
anemic pregnant women
206 ng/L
increases
#7
60 mg iron as ferrous sulfate
increase
lymphocyte proliferation
anemic pregnant women
0.095
increased
#8
60 mg iron and 0.4 mg folic acid
increase
lymphocyte proliferation
anemic pregnant women
0.112
increased
#9
60 mg iron, 2.0 mg retinol and 0.4 mg folic acid
increase
lymphocyte proliferation
anemic pregnant women
0.219
increased
#10
60 mg iron and 0.4 mg folic acid
increase
IL-2
anemic pregnant women
65.3 ng/L
greater increases
#11
60 mg iron, 2.0 mg retinol and 0.4 mg folic acid
increase
IL-2
anemic pregnant women
87.5 ng/L
greater increases
#12
60 mg iron, 2.0 mg retinol and 0.4 mg folic acid
increase
lymphocyte proliferation
anemic pregnant women
0.124
greater
#13
60 mg iron, 2.0 mg retinol and 0.4 mg folic acid
increase
lymphocyte proliferation
anemic pregnant women
0.107
greater
#14
iron combined retinol supplementation
increase
iron status and lymphocyte proliferation
anemic pregnant women
-
more beneficial to improving
#15
Abstract

BACKGROUND: Iron and vitamin A deficiencies impact anemia and the immune system. OBJECTIVE: to investigate the effect of iron combined with retinol supplementation on iron status, IL-2 level and lymphocyte proliferation. METHODS: a double-blind randomized trial conducted over 2 months. We randomly allocated 186 anemic pregnant women with 80 ≤ Hb 0 < 110 g/L into four groups. Group I (n=47) was supplemented daily with 60 mg iron as ferrous sulfate, IF (n=46) with 60 mg iron and 0.4 mg folic acid, IR (n=46) with 60 mg iron, 2.0 mg retinol and 0.4 mg folic acid and C (n=47) was the placebo group,. RESULTS: after the 2 months trial, there were considerable increases of iron status in Hb, plasma iron and ferritin in the I, IF and IR groups compared with Group C. Increases in plasma iron and ferritin in the IR group were also significantly greater than in Groups I and IF. Compared with group C, increases of IL-2 levels were 119, 184 and 206 ng/L; and lymphocyte proliferation increased by 0.095, 0.112 and 0.219 in Groups I, IF and IR, respectively. Increases of IL-2 were 65.3 ng/L and 87.5 ng/L in Groups IF and IR, greater than in Group I (both p values <0.01); and lymphocyte proliferation in Group IR were 0.124 and 0.107, also greater than in Groups I and IF, respectively. CONCLUSION: iron combined retinol supplementation was more beneficial to improving iron status and lymphocyte proliferation during pregnancy than iron alone.

Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
AdultAnemiaDietary SupplementsDouble-Blind MethodFemaleFerritinsFerrous CompoundsFolic AcidHumansInterleukin-2IronIron, DietaryLymphocytesNutritional StatusPregnancyPregnancy ComplicationsVitamin AVitamins
Study Links
PubMed ID21147712
Quality Scores
SafetyNot Assessed
Efficacy85/10
Quality80/10
Citation Metrics
Total Citations22
Citations/Year1.5
Relative Citation Ratio0.83
NIH Percentile43.4%
Research Impact Scores
APT Score0.75
Weight Score1.26
Normalized Score0.70
Related Supplements