Roth F X, Kirchgessner M
Int J Vitam Nutr Res. 1975;45(3):333-41.
The concentration of tocopherols in blood serum, liver and adipose tissue of growing pigs with different vitamin E supply was estimated gas-chromatographically. The animals were fed with a practical diet, supplemented with 0, 5, 15, 25 and 95 ppm dl-alpha-tocopheryl acetate (groups I-V). Based on a naturally vitamin E content of 7.4 and 8.6 mg per kg of the diet the control animals (group I) showed very low tocopherol concentrations of 0.5 mug per ml serum and about 1 mug per g tissue. No clinical vitamin E-deficiency symptoms were observed. The increasing alpha-tocopherol supplements raised the vitamin E contents in a proportional rate, and with high vitamin E supplies the highest quantities of tocopherols were stored in the adipose tissue. When the alpha-tocopherol content in the diet was raised by 1 mg, the concentration in the serum increased by 0.033 mug per ml, in the liver by 0.094 and in the adipose tissue by 0.129 mug per g, respectively (gamma = 0.99). This increase in the concentrations was strongly linear and can be interpreted by constant rates of absorption and retention of alpha-tocopherol in the present investigation. The growth of the pigs was no influenced by the different alpha-tocopherol supplements.