Publication | Closed Access
Trace Mineral Balances in Preterm Infants Fed Their Own Motherʼs Milk
22
Citations
0
References
1983
Year
NutritionRelative AdequacyBreastfeedingBody CompositionTrace Mineral BalancesMaternal NutritionPublic HealthMineral MetabolismHealth SciencesNutrient PhysiologyClinical NutritionMaternal HealthMaternal-fetal MedicineUtero Retention RatesPreterm InfantsInfant NutritionPhysiologyPediatricsChild Nutrition
Balance studies were conducted on preterm infants (birthweight, 1,500 g or less) fed their own mother's milk or formula (SMA with iron) to compare the relative adequacy of these sources for copper (Cu), iron (Fe), and zinc (Zn). Urine and stools were collected for 72 h from infants aged 1, 2, or 4 weeks while they were fed milk or formula. Infants fed SMA 24 (but not SMA 20) received Cu, Fe, and Zn intakes within the recommended range. They did not, however, achieve estimated in utero retention rates for Fe, and were in negative Cu balance; they did approach in utero retention rates for Zn. Infants fed their own mother's milk received Cu and Zn, but not Fe, in recommended amounts. They achieved in utero retention rates for Cu at each age studied and approached the estimated in utero retention rates for Zn at 4 weeks, but they retained insufficient Fe throughout. Thus, neither the infant's own mother's milk nor this particular formula provides ideal amounts of all three minerals studied--Cu, Zn, and Fe--during the 1st month of life.