FATTY-ACID COMPOSITION OF BREAST-MILK LIPIDS OF NIGERIAN WOMAN

Citation
Rh. Glew et al., FATTY-ACID COMPOSITION OF BREAST-MILK LIPIDS OF NIGERIAN WOMAN, Nutrition research, 15(4), 1995, pp. 477-489
Citations number
24
Categorie Soggetti
Nutrition & Dietetics
Journal title
ISSN journal
02715317
Volume
15
Issue
4
Year of publication
1995
Pages
477 - 489
Database
ISI
SICI code
0271-5317(1995)15:4<477:FCOBLO>2.0.ZU;2-K
Abstract
Breast milk lipids from 13 lactating women in Southern Nigeria who wer e moderate to severely malnourished and whose mean body mass index (BM I) was 20.2 (+/- 1.9) and (16.4 +/- 1.2)), respectively were separated into various neutral lipid and phospholipid fractions and analyzed fo r their fatty acid compositions. There were no differences in the cont ent of free fatty acids, diglycerides, triglycerides or the major phos pholipid classes between the two groups of women. Three saturated fatt y acids (12:0, 14:0, and 16:0) and oleic acid accounted for more than three-fourths of the total fatty acids in the triglyceride fractions. Lauric acid (12:0) and myristic acid (14:0), intermediate-chain length fatty acids which are readily digested, absorbed and oxidized by newb orn infants, comprised an unusually high proportion (approximately 40% ) of the fatty acids of the total breast milk lipids. While the breast milk of all the mothers we studied contained moderate levels of linol eic acid [18:2(n-6)], they were markedly deficient in another essentia l fatty acid, namely alpha-linolenic acid [18:3(n-3)]. A lack of alpha -linolenic acid could result in a deficiency of docosahexaenoic acid [ 22:6(n-3)] in the central nervous system of the infants being nursed b y these mothers.