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*Substance via MeSH
(Journal of Nutrition. 2000;130:541-545.)
© 2000 The American Society for Nutritional Sciences


Article

Time Course of and Effect of Dietary Iron Level on Iron Incorporation into Erythrocytes by Infants1

Samuel J. Fomon*2, Robert E. Serfass{dagger}, Steven E. Nelson*, Ronald R. Rogers* and Joan A. Frantz*

Departments of * Pediatrics, University of Iowa, Iowa City, IA, and {dagger} Preventive Medicine and Community Health, The University of Texas Medical Branch, Galveston, TX

2To whom correspondence should be addressed.

As a part of our effort to explore various aspects of ferrokinetics in infancy, the present study was designed to determine the timing of entry of an orally ingested iron isotope into circulating erythrocytes, and the effect of the level of dietary iron [0.3 mg/100 kcal (418.4 kJ) vs. 1.8 mg/100 kcal] after isotope administration on erythrocyte incorporation of the isotope. We administered the stable isotope, 58Fe, orally to 56-d-old and 168-d-old infants. All infants were fed a low-iron formula (LF) before and until 5 h after isotope administration. Thereafter, half the infants were fed a formula high in iron (HF group) while the remaining infants continued to receive the LF (LF group) for an additional 28 d. The quantity of 58Fe in circulating erythrocytes increased from 14 to 28 d after isotope administration was nearly constant from 28 through 84 d of age (plateau value) and decreased between 84 and 112 d. Erythrocyte incorporation of 58Fe was greater by the 168-d-old infants than by the 56-d-old infants, presumably because of the lesser iron stores of the older infants. In the 56-d-old infants, erythrocyte incorporation of 58Fe was greater by the LF than by the HF group, but this difference was not significant in the 168-d-old infants. Thus, at least in younger infants, the level of iron intake after administration of an iron isotope affects erythrocyte incorporation of the isotope. The fact that less isotope was present in erythrocytes 112 d than 84 d after administration indicates that the life span of erythrocytes of infants, even beyond the immediate newborn period, is less than the 120-d life span of erythrocytes in the adult.


KEY WORDS: • human infants • erythrocyte incorporation of iron • erythrocyte life span • dietary iron




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