Domellöf Magnus, Dewey Kathryn G, Cohen Roberta J, Lönnerdal Bo, Hernell Olle
Department of Clinical Sciences, Pediatrics, Umeå University, Umeå, Sweden.
Acta Paediatr. 2005 Nov;94(11):1578-82. doi: 10.1080/08035250500252674.
To investigate whether iron supplements compromise copper status in infants.
214 healthy, term, breastfed Swedish and Honduran infants were randomized to (1) iron supplements (1 mg/kg/d) from 4-9 mo of age, (2) iron supplements from 6-9 mo, or (3) placebo. Blood samples were obtained at 4, 6, and 9 mo and analyzed for plasma copper (p-Cu) and, at 9 mo, for copper/zinc-dependent superoxide dismutase (CuZn-SOD) activity.
P-Cu increased with infant age. At 9 mo, Honduran infants had significantly higher p-Cu (1.40+/-0.29 vs 1.09+/-0.22 mg/l, p<0.001) and CuZn-SOD activity (1.09+/-0.29 vs 0.93+/-0.21 U/mg Hb, p<0.001) than Swedish infants. Infants receiving iron supplements from 4-9 mo had significantly lower CuZn-SOD at 9 mo of age (0.95+/-0.27 vs 1.08+/-0.24 U/mg Hb, p=0.023) than those receiving placebo.
There is a physiologic increase in p-Cu during the first 9 mo of life. Differences in copper status between Swedish and Honduran infants may be due to genetic or nutritional differences. Iron supplementation decreases CuZn-SOD activity, probably due to a negative effect on copper status. Possible clinical implications remain to be elucidated.