Fairweather-Tait S J, Minihane A M, Eagles J, Owen L, Crews H M
Institute of Food Research, Norwich, United Kingdom.
Am J Clin Nutr. 1997 Apr;65(4):970-6. doi: 10.1093/ajcn/65.4.970.
The use of rare earth elements as nonabsorbable fecal markers for studies of iron absorption from sources labeled extrinsically with stable isotopes was evaluated. On 3 successive days 13 healthy fasting adults were given different stable isotopes of iron with samarium, ytterbium, or dysprosium. On day 1, three meals were given with 57Fe (1 mg per meal) plus samarium (0.33 mg per meal); on day 2, identical meals (taken with a calcium supplement to reduce iron bioavailability) were given with equivalent amounts of 58Fe-labeled iron and ytterbium; on day 3, a well-absorbed reference dose of 54Fe (3 mg) was given with 1 mg Dy. A complete fecal collection was carried out for 5-9 d and each stool was analyzed for rare earth elements by inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry and iron isotopes by thermal ionization quadrupole mass spectrometry. Mean recovery of rare earth elements was 101%, indicating that they are totally unabsorbed. The excretory pattern of the iron isotopes and the rare earth elements was very similar; the correlation coefficients between samarium and 57Fe, ytterbium and 58Fe, and dysprosium and 54Fe were 0.992, 0.989, and 0.988, respectively (P < 0.001). Iron absorption was calculated as the difference between isotope dose and fecal excretion. Mean (+/-SEM) iron absorption was 16.7 +/- 2.4%, 4.3 +/- 1.6%, and 40.3 +/- 3.1% on days 1-3, respectively. Predicted values estimated from the first 4 d of pooled feces, using the rare earth element recovery data to produce corrected figures for unabsorbed isotope, were in close agreement: 19.1 +/- 2.1%, 4.6 +/- 1.7%, and 40.8 +/- 3.1%, respectively (P < 0.001). With the diet of medium iron bioavailability and with the highly bioavailable reference dose it was possible to predict iron absorption accurately from only one or two stools, provided that they were sufficiently enriched with isotope and a rare earth element.
评估了使用稀土元素作为不可吸收的粪便标记物,用于研究从用稳定同位素进行外部标记的来源中吸收铁的情况。连续3天,给13名健康的空腹成年人分别服用不同的铁稳定同位素,并搭配钐、镱或镝。第1天,三餐中分别给予57Fe(每餐1毫克)加钐(每餐0.33毫克);第2天,给予等量的58Fe标记铁和镱,并搭配相同的餐食(同时服用钙补充剂以降低铁的生物利用度);第3天,给予1毫克镝搭配3毫克吸收良好的54Fe参考剂量。进行了5 - 9天的完整粪便收集,通过电感耦合等离子体质谱法分析每份粪便中的稀土元素,通过热电离四极杆质谱法分析铁同位素。稀土元素的平均回收率为101%,表明它们完全不被吸收。铁同位素和稀土元素的排泄模式非常相似;钐与57Fe、镱与58Fe、镝与54Fe之间的相关系数分别为0.992、0.989和0.988(P < 0.001)。铁的吸收量通过同位素剂量与粪便排泄量之间的差值来计算。第1 - 3天的平均(±SEM)铁吸收量分别为16.7 ± 2.4%、4.3 ± 1.6%和40.3 ± 3.1%。利用稀土元素回收数据对未吸收的同位素进行校正,根据合并粪便的前4天数据估算的预测值与上述结果非常接近:分别为19.1 ± 2.1%、4.6 ± 1.7%和40.8 ± 3.1%(P < 0.001)。对于中等铁生物利用度的饮食以及高生物利用度的参考剂量,只要粪便中充分富集了同位素和稀土元素,仅通过一两份粪便就有可能准确预测铁的吸收情况。