Title: VITAMIN AND MINERAL SUPPLEMENTATION DURING PREGNANCY
1VITAMIN AND MINERAL SUPPLEMENTATION DURING
PREGNANCY Aboubakr Elnashar Benha University
Hospital, Egypt
2- Sources
- Institute of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists and
- Royal College of Physicians of Ireland, 2013
- AAP and ACOG, 2013
- Institute of Medicine, 2011
- RCOG, 2011
- Cochrane systematic Review, 2010
-
3- Recommended Dietary Allowances(RDA)
- Excessive supplements during pregnancy.
- Potentially toxic
- iron, zinc, selenium, and vit A, B6, C, and D.
- Teratogenic
- Excessive vit A10,000 IU/d
- Vit and mineral intake more than twice RDA should
be avoided - (American Academy of Pediatrics and ACOG, 2007)
4- Institute of Medicine, 2011
- RDA amount of nutrients /d needed for
maintenance of good health and recommended by the
Food and Nutrition Board of the National Research
Council. - The tolerable upper nutrient intake level (UL)
maximum amount of a nutrient that will not cause
an adverse effect on an individual's health
5- A. Vitamins
- 30 of pregnant women suffer from any vit
deficiency - without prophylaxis 75 of these would show a
deficit of at least one vitamin. - (Hovdenak , Haram, 2012)
- Developing countries routine multivit
supplementation reduce LBW and IUGR, but did not
alter PTL or PNMR - (Fawzi, 2007).
6- Fat soluble vitamins
- 1. Vitamin A
- RDA
- 750 ug/d
- Toxicity
- gt 10,000 IU/d congenital malformations (RCOG,
2011) - similar to those produced by vit A derivative
isotretinoin (Accutane) - Most prenatal vit contain vit A in doses
considerably below the teratogenic threshold.
7- Sources Beta-carotene precursor of vit A
- found in fruits and vegetables No vit A
toxicity. - (Azais-Braesco and Pascal, 2007).
- Deficiency increased risk
- Maternal anemia impairing Fe status and
resistance to infections - PTL.
8- In USA
- Dietary intake of vit A adequate
supplementation is not routinely recommended. - The recommended upper limit for
retinol supplements is 3000 IU/d. - Avoid
- 1. Supplements containing pre-formed vit A
- (RCOG, 2011)
- 2. Eating liver and liver products contain high
levels of vit A. e.g. cod liver oil - (NICE, 2008).
- 3. Overdosing
- (Hovdenak , Haram, 2012)
-
9- In developing world
- Vit A deficiency prevalent, an endemic
- 6 million pregnant women
- suffer from night blindness
- vit A deficiency
- (West, 2003).
- In India
- Overt deficiency night blindness 3 in 3rd T.
- (Radhika et al, 2002)
- Subclinical deficiency 27 serum retinol 20
µg/dL.
10- 2. Vitamin D
- Sources
- Few foods flesh of fatty fish
- Some fish liver oils (however fish liver oil
should be avoided in pregnancy) - Foods fortified with vit D margarine, milk and
cereals - Also synthesized endogenously with exposure to
sunlight.
11- Essential in
- Absorption of calcium
- Prevention of
- autoimmune diseases
- (Fronczak et al, 2003 Hypponen et al 2001).
- adverse pregnancy outcomes PET
- rickets and osteomalacia.
- Vit D deficiency
- Disordered skeletal homeostasis
- Congenital rickets
- fFactures in the newborn
- (ACOG, 2011).
12- Women at risk of vit D deficiency
- ethnic minorities with darker skin,
- South Asian, African, Caribbean or Middle Eastern
family origin - limited exposure to sunlight
- vegetarians
- women with pre-pregnancy obesity.
- (Bodnar, 2007)
-
13- Adequate provision of vit D
- reduction in the risk of many types of cancer
- CVDs
- Autoimmune diseases
- DM 1 and 2
- Neurological disorders
- Several bacterial and viral infections
- (FSAI, 2007).
14- Vit D supplementation is needed by most women
during pregnancy - Vit D3 cannot be made in the skin from October to
March UV light that is able to promote Vit D
synthesis cannot penetrate the atmosphere during
this time. - Sun exposure may increase the risk of melanoma
advising sun exposure is not an effective public
health strategy - In order to meet nutritional requirements for vit
D women should take oily fish once or twice a
week not widespread - (FSAI, 2011).
- Supplementation in 3rd T in vitamin D deficient
women beneficial. (Hovdenak , Haram, 2012)
15- RDA during pregnancy and lactation
- 15 µg/d(600 IU/d).
- (The Food and Nutrition Board of the Institute of
Medicine, 2011) -
- Higher dose
- history of rickets in a sibling or
- known maternal vit D deficiency
16- 3. Vitamin K
- Essential in
- blood coagulation.
- (RCOG, 2011)
- Supplementation
- risk of cerebral hge in preterm babies
- non-significant reduction in cerebral hge
- no improvement in neuro-development outcomes in
childhood.
17- Water soluble vitamins
- 1. Folic Acid
- Folate a B vit which is referred to as folic
acid in the synthetic form. - Sources
- Green leafy vegetables
- Citrus fruit
- Whole grains
- Legumes
- Foods fortified with folic acid
- breads and cereals.
- nutritional sources alone are insufficient
folic acid supplementation is recommended - (ACOG, 2013).
18- Folate deficiency
- 25 of pregnant women in India
-
- congenital malformations (NTD, orofacial clefts,
cardiac anomalies) - Anaemia, spontaneous abortions
- PET, IUGR
- Abruptio placentae.
- (Hovdenak , Haram, 2012)
19- Folic acid supplementation
- strong protective effect against
- NTD half can be prevented
- Other congenital anomalies CV defects, limb
defects - Paediatric cancers leukaemia, paediatric brain
tumours and neuroblastoma.
20- Start
- Before conception.
- Up to
- 12 w NT will have closed
- Throughout pregnancy.
- role in red blood cell manufacture and in cell
replication
21- Dose
- 400mcg/d0.4 mg (CDC, 2004)
- 4000mcg/ 4 milligrams
- 1. Family history of NTDs
- 2. Pre-existing diabetes (HSE 2010).
- 3. Obese women (CMACE, 2010 Institute of
Obstetricians and Gynaecologists, 2011) - incidence of congenital malformations, including
NTDs, are higher in obese (Rasmussen et al,
2008). - 4. Anti-seizure medication (FSAI, 2011).
- Care should be taken increased risk of
colorectal adenomas with prolonged high dose
intake (Cole BF et al, 2007 Fife J et al,
2009).
22- 2. Vitamin B12
- In developing countries diets are generally low
in animal products and consequently in vitamin
B12 content.
23- Maternal plasma levels decrease in normal
pregnancy - Reduced plasma levels of their carrier proteins
transcobalamins - Vit B12 occurs naturally only in foods of animal
origin - Excessive ingestion of vit C functional
deficiency of vit B12. - low levels of vit B12 preconceptionally (similar
to folate) - increase the risk of NTD (Molloy, 2009
Thompson, 2009). - Reduce fetal growth.
- Vit B12 supplementation
- in vegetarian
24- 3. Vit B6Pyridoxine
- Supplementation
- Routine No benefits
- (Thaver, 2006, RCOG, 2011)
25- Vitamin B6 deficiency
- High risk
- Substance abusers
- Adolescents
- Multifetal gestation
- PET, gestational carbohydrate intolerance,
- H gravidarum, neurologic disease of infants.
- 2-mg/d
- Benefits
- Reduces the severity of nausea but not vomiting
(RCOG, 2011) - when combined with the antihistamine doxylamine
dec nausea and vomiting (Boskovic, 2003
Staroselsky, 2007). - Decrease dental decay
26- Vit B1, B2, B3, B5, B7, and B12
- minimal data on the benefits and harms of
supplementation - no strong evidence to support supplementation
(RCOG, 2011)
27- 4. Vitamin C
- Sources
- Fruits and vegetables.
- (RCOG, 2011)
- Essential in
- collagen synthesis
- wound healing
- prevention of anaemia
- As an antioxidant.
28- RDA
- 80 mg/d
- 20 more than when nonpregnant
- A low dose
- 20 mg is commonly included in many multivitamin
pregnancy preparations. - Routine supplementation of higher dose vitamin C
and E Not recommended. - No effect on prevention of
- PET (Conde-Agudelo, 2011)
- PTL (Swaney et al, 2014)
- PROM
- IUGR
- Miscarriage or SB (Cochrane SR, 2005)
29- B. Minerals
- Iron
- Increased iron Requirements
- 1000 mg required for normal pregnancy
- 300 mg actively transferred to the fetus and
placenta - 200 mg lost through normal excretion routes,
primarily GIT. - 500 mgAverage increase in the total circulating
erythrocyte volume 450 mL each 1 mL of
erythrocytes contains 1.1 mg of iron.
30- most iron is used during the latter half of
pregnancy iron requirement becomes large after
midpregnancy and averages 7 mg/day (Pritchard,
1970). - Few women have sufficient iron stores or dietary
iron intake to supply this amount
31- Maternal iron deficiency
- Direct impact on neonatal Fe stores
- Birth weight
- may cause cognitive and behavioural problems in
childhood. - Fe supplementation
- low-income pregnant women
- pregnant women in developing countries
- documented deficiency
- overtreatment should be avoided.
32- Universal supplementation
- From booking
- (WHO, 2001) or
- From 2nd T
- (INACG)
- (Stolzfus et al, 1998).
- Cochrane review (2009)
- Iron supplementation improved
- birth length
- Apgar scores
- infant ferritin at 3 months
- reduces postpartum maternal transfusion
- ironfolic acid supplementation
- improved birth weight.
33- Dietary Advice
- Diet rich in iron
Poor Medium Rich
milk and its products, root vegetables meat, chicken, fish, spinach, banana, apple liver, egg yolk, dry beans, dry fruits, wheat germ, yeast
34- Avoid inhibitors of iron absorption
Enhance Inhibit
Heme Phytates cereals
Ascorbic acid Tannins tea coffee
Ferrous iron(Fe2) Calcium
35- Oral Iron
- Patil et al, 2012 I J Med Pharmaceutical Sci
- I. Conventional iron preparations
- Fe sulfate, Fe fumarate.
- Cheap.
- Should not be given with food
- salts bind the iron impair absorption
- Side effects
- 40
- Nausea, vomiting, heart burn, metallic taste,
constipation, abdominal cramps, diarrhea. - 10 Discontinue
36- Extended (slow) release capsules or enteric
coated capsules - Less side effect
- slow/decreased iron absorption, absorbed lower
parts of the GI - Iron absorption occurs at the duodenum and
proximal jejunum - Not very effective
- Should be avoided
- majority of the iron is carried past the
duodenum limiting absorption - (Tapiero, 2001).
37- II. New iron preparations
- Multi Amino Acid Chelated iron, Carbonyl iron,
Iron polymaltose, others. - Multi Amino Acid Chelated iron Vs iron salt
- (Pineda et al, 1994 Sofia et al, 2001)
- Low GIT intolerance
- Increase Hbg level faster with significant low
doses - High bioavailability and regulation
- Better improve iron stores
- Higher cost.
38- Higher stability of amino acid chelate
- prevents the molecule from being destroyed in the
gut less GI irritation - Atomic structure and chemistry
- protects the ferrous iron from undesirable
chemical reactions in the stomach and intestine
that limit iron absorption. - Absorption
- not reduced in presence of phytates.
39- 2. Iodine
- Dietary sources
- Seaweed
- iodized salt
- dairy products and
- fish.
- Iodine requirements
- increase by 50
- (Stagnaro-Green et al 2011)
- RDA
- 220 µg (American Thyroid Association,
Stagnaro-Green et al 2011) - 500 µg (WHO)
- 600µg/day (EFSA , 2009)
- Prenatal vits contain various amounts
-
40- Iodine deficiency
- maternal thyriod gland cannot meet the demand
for increasing production of thyroid hormones
(Obican et al 2012). - Endemic cretinism multiple severe neurological
defects. - Hypothyroinaemia and elevated TSH in infants
cognitive and psychomotor deficits
A six-week-old male presents with lethargy and
hypotonia. On physical exam he is jaundiced and
has a large protruding tongue.
41- Iodine supplementation
- decrease the risk of cognitive and psychomotor
developmental delay (Trumpff et al 2013). - In parts of China and Africa where this condition
is common - very early in pregnancy (Cao, 1994).
- Recommendations
- use of iodized salt and bread products
- increase foods containing iodine
42- 3. Calcium
- The pregnant woman retains approximately 30 g of
calcium. - Most of this is deposited in the fetus late in
pregnancy (Pitkin, 1985). - This amount of calcium represents only 2.5 of
total maternal calcium
43- Essential in
- development of healthy bones and teeth
- extra-cellular fluid, muscle, and other tissues.
- vascular contractions and vasodilation, muscle
contractions - neural transmission
- glandular secretion.
- Adequate dietary intake should be encouraged.
- 3 portions of dairy or calcium-fortified
alternatives daily (FSAI, 2011). - Calcium deficiency
- PET, IUGR.
- Supplementation may reduce both the risk of LBW
and the severity of PET (Hovdenak , Haram, 2012)
44- Calcium Supplementation
- 1.52.0 g elemental Ca daily for pregnant women
in areas with low dietary calcium. - (WHO 2011)
- LDC lt1 g/d, with or without other supplements.
(linoleic acid, vit D) (Hofmeyr et al, 2014) - PET was reduced consistently (nine trials, 2234
women) - LDC plus antioxidants commencing at 812 w tended
to reduce miscarriage
45- 4. Zinc
- Severe deficiency
- poor appetite
- suboptimal growth
- impaired wound healing
- Impaired absorption
- Intake of cereal-based diets rich in phytate
- high intakes of supplemental Fe
- GITdisease
- RDA 12 mg.
46- Zn supplementation
- Small (14) but significant reduction in PTL
- (Cochrane systematic review, 2012)
- primarily in low income women
- No reduction in LBW
- No sig differences between Zn and no Zn groups
for any of the other maternal or neonatal
outcomes - Reduced acute diarrhea, dysentery, and impetigo.
(Osendarp et al, 2001) - Supplemental Zn
- women with poor GIT function
- Zn deficient women
47- 5. Magnesium
- Deficiency
- In normal pregnancy has
- not been recognized.
- But during
- prolonged illness
- intestinal bypass surgery
- hematological and teratogenic damage
48- Mg supplementation
- 365-mg from 13 to 24 w
- not improve any measures of pregnancy outcome
- (Sibai et al, 1989)
- A Cochrane review significant LBW risk
reduction in Mg supplemented individuals.
49- 6. Potassium
- Concentration in
- maternal plasma
- decreases by 0.5 mEq/L
- by midpregnancy
- (Brown, 1986).
- Deficiency
- develops in the same
- circumstances as
- in nonpregnant individuals.
50- 7. Fluoride
- Supplementation
- Not beneficial
- (Institute of Medicine, 1990).
- Fluoride metabolism is not altered during
pregnancy. - (Maheshwari et al, 1983)
51- 8. Trace Metals
- Copper, selenium, chromium, and manganese
- important roles in certain enzyme functions.
- Most are provided by an average diet.
52- Selenium (Se)
- Antioxidant supporting humoral and cell-mediated
immunity. - Se deficiency
- identified in a large area of China
- fatal cardiomyopathy, recurrent abortion, PET,
IUGR - Se toxicity
- over supplementation has been observed.
- No need to supplement selenium in American women.
- Se supplementation
- Although beneficial effects are suggested there
is no evidence-based recommendation
53- Recommendations
- Vit and mineral supplements cannot replace a
healthy diet - Multivit supplements are recommended for pregnant
women who cannot meet the RDAs through food
intake - At-risk populations include
- Adolescents
- women carrying multiple gestations
- those with a substance abuse history
- those with eating disorders
- those taking certain medications that can alter
absorption - strict vegetarians or vegans.
-
54- Pregnant women should stay below the upper limits
of supplementation guidelines - Pregnant women should be encouraged to take a
multivit (vit C, vit D, folic ac) and iron - Provide iodine supplementation in areas of known
dietary insufficiency.
55 Thank you