DIFFERENCES IN CORD SERUM RETINOL CONCENTRATIONS BY ETHNIC-ORIGIN IN THE NEGEV (SOUTHERN ISRAEL)

Citation
R. Gorodischer et al., DIFFERENCES IN CORD SERUM RETINOL CONCENTRATIONS BY ETHNIC-ORIGIN IN THE NEGEV (SOUTHERN ISRAEL), Early human development, 42(2), 1995, pp. 123-130
Citations number
28
Categorie Soggetti
Obsetric & Gynecology",Pediatrics
Journal title
ISSN journal
03783782
Volume
42
Issue
2
Year of publication
1995
Pages
123 - 130
Database
ISI
SICI code
0378-3782(1995)42:2<123:DICSRC>2.0.ZU;2-C
Abstract
Subclinical vitamin A deficiency is related to increased morbidity and mortality in infants and children. Previous studies indicate that the traditional diet of Moslem Bedouins, an important ethnic group in Sou thern Israel, is low in vitamin A content. Cord serum retinol (vitamin A) concentration was measured by HPLC in samples from 251 apparently healthy (birth weight > 2500 g, gestational age > 37 weeks) neonates w ith no abnormal perinatal events, 138 Jews and 113 Bedouins. Retinol < 15 mu g/dl was measured in a total of 14% of infants: in 7% of Jewish and 26% of Bedouin newborns (P < 0.001). However, mean cord serum ret inol was only slightly lower in Bedouins than in Jews (30 +/- 26 vs. 3 7 +/- 27 mu g/dl mean +/- S.D., n.s.). Cord serum retinol was not rela ted to socioeconomic indices. Cord serum retinol < 15 mu g/dl was meas ured in 25% and in 12% of infants with birth weight less than and equa l or greater than 3000 g, respectively (P = 0.01), and in 28% and 13% of infants with gestational age 37-38 weeks and 39-41 weeks, respectiv ely (P = 0.03), Low cord serum retinol was found to be prevalent in So uthern Israel, particularly in Bedouin infants. In the population of h ealthy neonates studied, very low cord serum retinol concentrations we re found more frequently in infants born with a lower weight and/or af ter a shorter gestation.