G. Joseph, O. T. Oyediran, Rashidat Abidemi Oladiti, A. Iyanda
{"title":"出生体重与第三孕期母体维生素 A、C 和 E 水平","authors":"G. Joseph, O. T. Oyediran, Rashidat Abidemi Oladiti, A. Iyanda","doi":"10.9734/ajrimps/2024/v13i1242","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Background: Deficiencies of micronutrients (especially vitamins C, A, and E) during intra-uterine life have been linked with the possibility of increased risk of some diseases (e.g. cardiovascular disease and type 2 diabetes) in adulthood. \nAims: Therefore, it becomes expedient that persistent and vigorous attention be paid to maternal vitamin status during gestation. \nMethodology: This is a cross-sectional comparative study carried out at maternity centres in Osogbo Local Government. Forty women who were at least 29 weeks of gestation and 40 apparently healthy women, age-matched, non-pregnant constituted the test and control groups respectively. Blood was obtained through an ante-cubital vein, centrifuged and used for vitamin estimations (High-Performance Liquid Chromatography). Birth weight and neonatal mortality ratio were the birth outcomes that were obtained. Data analysis was by Student’s t-test and Pearson’s correlation coefficient. P≤0.05 was considered significant. \nResults: Serum status of vitamins A (2.68±3.88 µg/dL); C (0.95±0.44 mg/dL); and E (0.67±0.04 mg/dL) were significantly lower at third trimester compared with the corresponding values of 6.98±1.26 µg/dL; 2.99±0.11 mg/dL; and 1.66±0.08 mg/dL among non-pregnant control. There were significant adverse pregnancy outcomes as signified by 10% stillbirths. In addition, low birth weight (1.5-2.4 kg) was observed among approximately 50% of the babies but no correlation was observed except between vitamins C and E. \nConclusions: The results of this study revealed that among Nigerian pregnant women, there are risks of abnormal birth outcomes and low levels of vitamin A, C, and E. Aside depletions in vitamin C and E, the results of the study (r= .376; p= .020) suggest possible metabolic interaction between both.","PeriodicalId":8536,"journal":{"name":"Asian Journal of Research in Medical and Pharmaceutical Sciences","volume":"29 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2024-01-03","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Birth Weight and Third-trimester Maternal Vitamins A, C, and E Levels\",\"authors\":\"G. Joseph, O. T. Oyediran, Rashidat Abidemi Oladiti, A. 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Data analysis was by Student’s t-test and Pearson’s correlation coefficient. P≤0.05 was considered significant. \\nResults: Serum status of vitamins A (2.68±3.88 µg/dL); C (0.95±0.44 mg/dL); and E (0.67±0.04 mg/dL) were significantly lower at third trimester compared with the corresponding values of 6.98±1.26 µg/dL; 2.99±0.11 mg/dL; and 1.66±0.08 mg/dL among non-pregnant control. There were significant adverse pregnancy outcomes as signified by 10% stillbirths. In addition, low birth weight (1.5-2.4 kg) was observed among approximately 50% of the babies but no correlation was observed except between vitamins C and E. \\nConclusions: The results of this study revealed that among Nigerian pregnant women, there are risks of abnormal birth outcomes and low levels of vitamin A, C, and E. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
背景:宫内缺乏微量营养素(尤其是维生素 C、A 和 E)可能会增加成年后罹患某些疾病(如心血管疾病和 2 型糖尿病)的风险。目的:因此,有必要对妊娠期母体的维生素状况给予持续而有力的关注。研究方法这是一项横断面比较研究,在奥索博地方政府的产科中心进行。40 名至少妊娠 29 周的妇女和 40 名明显健康、年龄匹配的非孕妇分别组成试验组和对照组。通过胫前静脉采集血液,离心后用于维生素估算(高效液相色谱法)。出生体重和新生儿死亡率是得出的出生结果。数据分析采用学生 t 检验和皮尔逊相关系数。P≤0.05 为差异显著。结果血清中维生素 A(2.68±3.88 µg/dL)、维生素 C(0.95±0.44 mg/dL)和维生素 E(0.67±0.04 mg/dL)的含量在妊娠三个月时明显低于非妊娠对照组的相应值:6.98±1.26 µg/dL;2.99±0.11 mg/dL;1.66±0.08 mg/dL。10%的死胎率表明存在严重的不良妊娠结局。此外,约 50%的婴儿出生体重偏低(1.5-2.4 千克),但除维生素 C 和 E 外,未发现其他相关性:除了维生素 C 和 E 的消耗外,研究结果(r= 0.376;p= 0.020)表明两者之间可能存在新陈代谢相互作用。
Birth Weight and Third-trimester Maternal Vitamins A, C, and E Levels
Background: Deficiencies of micronutrients (especially vitamins C, A, and E) during intra-uterine life have been linked with the possibility of increased risk of some diseases (e.g. cardiovascular disease and type 2 diabetes) in adulthood.
Aims: Therefore, it becomes expedient that persistent and vigorous attention be paid to maternal vitamin status during gestation.
Methodology: This is a cross-sectional comparative study carried out at maternity centres in Osogbo Local Government. Forty women who were at least 29 weeks of gestation and 40 apparently healthy women, age-matched, non-pregnant constituted the test and control groups respectively. Blood was obtained through an ante-cubital vein, centrifuged and used for vitamin estimations (High-Performance Liquid Chromatography). Birth weight and neonatal mortality ratio were the birth outcomes that were obtained. Data analysis was by Student’s t-test and Pearson’s correlation coefficient. P≤0.05 was considered significant.
Results: Serum status of vitamins A (2.68±3.88 µg/dL); C (0.95±0.44 mg/dL); and E (0.67±0.04 mg/dL) were significantly lower at third trimester compared with the corresponding values of 6.98±1.26 µg/dL; 2.99±0.11 mg/dL; and 1.66±0.08 mg/dL among non-pregnant control. There were significant adverse pregnancy outcomes as signified by 10% stillbirths. In addition, low birth weight (1.5-2.4 kg) was observed among approximately 50% of the babies but no correlation was observed except between vitamins C and E.
Conclusions: The results of this study revealed that among Nigerian pregnant women, there are risks of abnormal birth outcomes and low levels of vitamin A, C, and E. Aside depletions in vitamin C and E, the results of the study (r= .376; p= .020) suggest possible metabolic interaction between both.