Patterson A J, Brown W J, Roberts D C, Seldon M R
Research Center for Gender and Health and the Discipline of Nutrition and Dietetics, Faculty of Science and Mathematics, The University of Newcastle, New South Wales, Australia.
Am J Clin Nutr. 2001 Nov;74(5):650-6. doi: 10.1093/ajcn/74.5.650.
The Australian Iron Status Advisory Panel advocates dietary intervention as the first treatment option for mild iron deficiency [serum ferritin (SF) = 10-15 microg/L]. However, there appear to be no studies on the efficacy of dietary treatment for iron deficiency.
We compared the effects of iron supplementation and of a high-iron diet on serum ferritin (SF) and hemoglobin in iron-deficient women of childbearing age.
Forty-four iron-deficient women (SF <15 microg/L or SF = 15-20 microg/L plus serum iron <10 micromol/L and total-iron-binding capacity >68 micromol/L) and 22 iron-replete women (hemoglobin > or =120 g/L and SF >20 microg/L) matched for age and parity categories were enrolled and completed 7-d weighed food records at baseline. The iron-deficient women were randomly allocated to receive iron supplementation (105 mg/d; supplement group) or a high-iron diet (recommended intake of absorbable iron: 2.25 mg/d; diet group) for 12 wk. Hematologic and dietary assessments were repeated at the end of the intervention and again after a 6-mo follow-up.
Mean SF in the supplement group increased from 9.0 +/- 3.9 microg/L at baseline to 24.8 +/- 10.0 microg/L after the intervention and remained stable during follow-up (24.2 +/- 9.8 microg/L), whereas the diet group had smaller increases during the intervention (8.9 +/- 3.1 to 11.0 +/- 5.9 microg/L) but continued to improve during follow-up (to 15.2 +/- 9.5 microg/L). Mean hemoglobin tended to improve in both intervention groups, but the change was only significant in the supplement group.
In iron-deficient women of childbearing age, a high-iron diet produced smaller increases in SF than did iron supplementation but resulted in continued improvements in iron status during a 6-mo. follow-up.
澳大利亚铁状态咨询小组提倡将饮食干预作为轻度缺铁[血清铁蛋白(SF)=10 - 15微克/升]的首选治疗方案。然而,似乎尚无关于饮食治疗缺铁疗效的研究。
我们比较了补充铁剂和高铁饮食对缺铁育龄妇女血清铁蛋白(SF)和血红蛋白的影响。
招募了44名缺铁妇女(SF<15微克/升或SF = 15 - 20微克/升加上血清铁<10微摩尔/升且总铁结合力>68微摩尔/升)和22名铁充足妇女(血红蛋白≥120克/升且SF>20微克/升),按年龄和产次类别进行匹配,并在基线时完成7天的称重食物记录。缺铁妇女被随机分配接受铁补充剂(105毫克/天;补充剂组)或高铁饮食(可吸收铁的推荐摄入量:2.25毫克/天;饮食组),为期12周。在干预结束时以及6个月随访后再次进行血液学和饮食评估。
补充剂组的平均SF从基线时的9.0±3.9微克/升增加到干预后的24.8±10.0微克/升,并在随访期间保持稳定(24.2±9.8微克/升),而饮食组在干预期间增加较小(8.9±3.1至11.0±5.9微克/升),但在随访期间持续改善(至15.2±9.5微克/升)。两个干预组的平均血红蛋白均有改善趋势,但变化仅在补充剂组中显著。
在缺铁育龄妇女中,高铁饮食使SF的增加幅度小于补充铁剂,但在6个月的随访期间铁状态持续改善。