Vitamin A in Pregnancy: Impact on Maternal and Neonatal Health

Autor: Dibley, Michael J., Jeacocke, David A.
Zdroj: Food & Nutrition Bulletin; January 2001, Vol. 22 Issue: 3 p267-284, 18p
Abstrakt: Vitamin A is an essential nutrient, for which there is a slightly increased requirement during the third trimester of pregnancy, with even greater requirements for lactating women. Serum retinol levels decline during pregnancy, especially during the third trimester, followed by a rapid increase postpartum. Hemodilution and inadequate nutritional status contribute to this pattern. Night-blindness is more common in the third trimester of pregnancy, and night-blind pregnant women have lower mean serum retinol concentrations. Increased morbidity is associated with night-blindness in women, especially during pregnancy. Vitamin A supplementation during pregnancy in deficient populations reduces night-blindness, low serum retinol levels, and nutritional anemia during pregnancy and substantially reduces maternal postpartum infections. A substantial reduction in maternal mortality has been observed in malnourished vitamin A–deficient women following vitamin A or β-carotene supplementation. Infant cord blood retinol and birthweight appear to be resistant to maternal supplementation with vitamin A during pregnancy. No studies have reported an impact of maternal vitamin A supplementation on neonatal morbidity or mortality.
Databáze: Supplemental Index