scispace - formally typeset
Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Factors affecting the absorption of iron from Fe(III)EDTA.

TLDR
Fe(III)EDTA may be a useful compound for food fortification of cereals because the Fe is well absorbed and utilized for haemoglobin synthesis and the mechanism whereby it forms a common pool with intrinsic food Fe differs from that occurring with simple Fe salts.
Abstract
1. The modification of iron absorption from Fe(III)EDTA by agents known to promote or inhibit absorption was examined in 101 volunteer multiparous Indian women. Fe absorption from Fe(III)EDTA was compared with absorption of intrinsic food Fe in a further twenty-eight subjects. Finally the urinary excretion of radio-Fe after oral administration of 59Fe(III)EDTA was studied in twenty-four subjects and evidence of intraluminal exchange of Fe was examined. 2. Fe absorption from maize porridge fortified with Fe(III)EDTA was more than twice that from porridge fortified with FeSO4 . 7H2O. 3. Although bran decreased Fe absorption from FeSO4 . 7H2O approximately 11-fold, it had no significant effect on Fe absorption from Fe(III)EDTA. Nevertheless tea, which is a more potent inhibitor of Fe absorption, decreased absorption from Fe(III)EDTA 7-fold. 4. Fe absorption from Fe(III)EDTA given in water was only increased 40% by addition of 3 mol ascorbic acid/mol Fe but by 7-fold when the relative proportions were increased to 6:1. This enhancing effect was blunted when the Fe(III)EDTA was given with maize porridge. In these circumstances, an ascorbate:iron value of 3:1 (which doubles absorption from FeSO4 . 7H2O) produced no significant increase in Fe absorption, while a value of 6:1 produced only a 2 . 5-fold increase. 5. Fe absorption from Fe(III)EDTA was not altered by addition of maize porridge unless ascorbic acid was present. 6. Less than 1% of 59Fe administered as 59Fe(III)EDTA was excreted in the urine and there was no inverse relationship between Fe absorption and the amounts excreted (r 0 . 58, P less than 0 . 05). 7. Isotope exchange between 59Fe(III)EDTA and 59FeSO4 . 7H2O was demonstrated by finding a similar relative value for the two isotopes in urine and erythrocytes when the two labelled compounds were given together orally. This finding was confirmed by in vitro studies, which showed enhanced 59Fe solubilization from 59FeSO4 . 7H2O in maize porridge when unlabelled Fe(III)EDTA was added. 8. Although Fe absorption from Fe(III)EDTA was marginally higher it appeared to form a common pool with intrinsic food iron in most studies. It is postulated that the mechanism whereby Fe(III)EDTA forms a common pool with intrinsic food Fe differs from that occurring with simple Fe salts. When Fe is present in the chelated form it remains in solution and is relatively well absorbed because it is protected from inhibitory ligands. Simple Fe salts, however, are not similarly protected and are absorbed as poorly as the intrinsic food Fe. 9. It is concluded that Fe(III)EDTA may be a useful compound for food fortification of cereals because the Fe is well absorbed and utilized for haemoglobin synthesis. The substances in cereals which inhibit absorption of simple Fe salts do not appear to inhibit absorption of Fe from Fe(III)EDTA.

read more

Content maybe subject to copyright    Report

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Preventing Iron Deficiency through Food Fortification

TL;DR: One way to prevent iron deficiency anemia in developing countries is through the fortification of food products with iron, and the main challenge is to protect the fortifying iron from potential inhibitors of iron absorption present in commonly fortified foods.
Journal ArticleDOI

Inhibition of food iron absorption by coffee

TL;DR: Two dual isotope studies performed in iron replete human subjects demonstrate that coffee inhibits iron absorption in a concentration-dependent fashion.
Journal ArticleDOI

An evaluation of EDTA compounds for iron fortification of cereal-based foods

TL;DR: It is concluded that Fe absorption is higher from cereal foods fortified with NaFeEDTA than when fortified with FeSO4 or ferrous fumarate, and that Na2EDTA can be added to cereal foods to enhance absorption of soluble Fe-fortification compounds such asFeSO4.
Journal ArticleDOI

Iron fortification of infant cereals: a proposal for the use of ferrous fumarate or ferrous succinate

TL;DR: It is concluded that ferrous fumarate and ferrous succinate are highly available Fe sources in man that can be used to fortify infant cereals without causing fat oxidation or discoloration.
Journal ArticleDOI

Fortification of sugar with iron sodium ethylenediaminotetraacetate (FeNaEDTA) improves iron status in semirural Guatemalan populations

TL;DR: Iron stores in the fortified communities increased significantly except for women 18-48 y of age in one lowland community and > 49 y in the highland community, and iron stores inThe control community remained unchanged except for a rise among adult males.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Ferritin in the Serum of Normal Subjects and Patients with Iron Deficiency and Iron Overload

TL;DR: The concentration of ferritin in serum gives a quantitative measure of the amount of storage iron in normal subjects and those with iron deficiency or overload and a concentration below 10 ng/ml is associated with a low transferrin saturation and iron-deficient erythropoiesis.
Journal ArticleDOI

The effect of tea on iron absorption.

TL;DR: Drinking tannin-containing beverages such as tea with meals may contribute to the pathogenesis of iron deficiency if the diet consists largely of vegetable foodstuffs.
Journal ArticleDOI

Food iron absorption measured by an extrinsic tag.

TL;DR: The extrinsic tag provided a valid measure of absorption despite marked differences in the iron status of the subject, and with wide changes in absorption imposed by adding desferrioxamine or ascorbic acid to the test meal.
Journal ArticleDOI

Food iron absorption: a comparison of vegetable and animal foods.

TL;DR: Food iron absorption could be predicted over the spectrum of normal to iron deficient states when these values were related to the absorption of ferrous ascorbate determined simultaneously in each subject.
Related Papers (5)