Vitamin B6 nutriture during pregnancy and lactation. I. Vitamin B6 intake, levels of the vitamin in biological fluids, and condition of the infant at birth. |
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Authors: | J L Roepke A Kirksey |
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Abstract: | Vitamin B6 nutriture was assessed during pregnancy and lactation to determine possible relationships among vitamin B6 intake, levels of the vitamin in biological fluids and the condition of the infant at birth. Vitamin B6 levels were measured in maternal serum and in urine at 5 and 7 months gestation and at delivery, in cord serum and in milk at 3 and 14 days postpartum. Intake of vitamin B6, less than the Recommended Dietary Allowances (1974) for pregnancy and lactation, 2.5 mg/day, resulted in lower levels of the vitamin in maternal serum at delivery and in cord serum than higher intakes. Mothers whose infants had unsatisfactory Apgar scores at 1 min, (less than 7) had significantly low intakes of vitamin B6 and lower levels of the vitamin in both serum and milk than mothers whose infants had satisfactory scores, (greater than or equal to 7). At 5 months gestation, levels of vitamin B6 in maternal serum were significantly correlated with levels of the vitamin in cord serum and in milk at 14 days postpartum. This stage of gestation precedes the period of rapid growth of the central nervous system of the fetus, and is, therefore, a critical time for the assessment of maternal vitamin B6 nutriture. |
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