Distribution of lipid-soluble vitamin intake among exclusively breastfeeding mothers and its correlation with human milk’s fatty acids

The lipid composition such as fatty acids and fat-soluble vitamins is the second-most abundant composition of human milk providing dietary energy to infants. Micronutrient dietary intake such as vitamin A, D, E, K and C by breastfeeding mothers plays an important role in regulating the quality of hu...

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Main Authors: Mohamed, Malissa, Tengku Azhar, Tengku Norbaya, Che Hassan, Muhammad Rahimi, Haridan, Ummi Shakina, Ab Wahab, Noor Akmal, Mohd. Idris, Siti Noorfahana, Mohd. Zazi, Norhafizah, Abdul Ghani, Radiah
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: UPSI Press 2022
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Online Access:http://irep.iium.edu.my/102782/7/102782_Distribution%20of%20lipid-soluble%20vitamin%20intake.pdf
http://irep.iium.edu.my/102782/
https://ojs.upsi.edu.my/index.php/EJSMT/article/view/6796/4123
https://doi.org/10.37134/ejsmt.vol9.2.9.2022
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spelling my.iium.irep.1027822023-01-04T10:40:23Z http://irep.iium.edu.my/102782/ Distribution of lipid-soluble vitamin intake among exclusively breastfeeding mothers and its correlation with human milk’s fatty acids Mohamed, Malissa Tengku Azhar, Tengku Norbaya Che Hassan, Muhammad Rahimi Haridan, Ummi Shakina Ab Wahab, Noor Akmal Mohd. Idris, Siti Noorfahana Mohd. Zazi, Norhafizah Abdul Ghani, Radiah RA0421 Public health. Hygiene. Preventive Medicine The lipid composition such as fatty acids and fat-soluble vitamins is the second-most abundant composition of human milk providing dietary energy to infants. Micronutrient dietary intake such as vitamin A, D, E, K and C by breastfeeding mothers plays an important role in regulating the quality of human milk for optimum infant health and growth. The objective of this paper is to determine the distribution and correlation of maternal micronutrient intake of lipid-soluble vitamin and vitamin C towards fatty acids composition in human milk of exclusively breastfeeding mothers. A total of N=36 nursing women were recruited from Dengkil, Selangor, and Kuantan, Pahang, using a convenience sample method. A 24-hour dietary recall (24HR) was performed to collect thorough information on all foods and beverages ingested in the previous 24 hours by the respondent. The data on micronutrients intake per mother was tabulated using Nutritionist Pro. (NP) software. Following the diet recall, the human sample was collected in the next morning and subjected to fatty acid extraction and transesterification using the Blight and Dyer method. The composition of fatty acids methyl esters was analyzed and quantified by a gas chromatography (Agilent 7890A), equipped with a flame ionization detector (FID) and Agilent Chromatography Workstation software. The highest mean of intake occurred during the fifth to sixth months with, 1067.37±629.66 μg RE/day for vitamin A, during the first two months with, 0.89±0.84 μg RE/day of vitamin D, 5.85±2.49 mg/day while during the fifth to sixth months with, 17.28±11.74 μg /day of Vitamin E and at the first two months of lactation period with, 91.60±55.26 mg per day for vitamin C. Despite the fact that there was no significant correlation between vitamin intake and the fatty acid content of human milk, the study discovered a variety of patterns of correlation. Saturated fatty acids (SFA) in human milk were only positively correlated with vitamin D and C, while monounsaturated fatty acids (MUFA) were positively correlated with vitamin A, E, and K and negatively correlated with the rest. As a result, the fatty acid composition of human milk is less dependent on micronutrient dietary intake and more dependent on De-Novo synthesis in the mammary gland. UPSI Press 2022-11-03 Article PeerReviewed application/pdf en http://irep.iium.edu.my/102782/7/102782_Distribution%20of%20lipid-soluble%20vitamin%20intake.pdf Mohamed, Malissa and Tengku Azhar, Tengku Norbaya and Che Hassan, Muhammad Rahimi and Haridan, Ummi Shakina and Ab Wahab, Noor Akmal and Mohd. Idris, Siti Noorfahana and Mohd. Zazi, Norhafizah and Abdul Ghani, Radiah (2022) Distribution of lipid-soluble vitamin intake among exclusively breastfeeding mothers and its correlation with human milk’s fatty acids. EDUCATUM Journal of Science, Mathematics and Technology, 9 (2). pp. 65-74. E-ISSN 2462-2451 https://ojs.upsi.edu.my/index.php/EJSMT/article/view/6796/4123 https://doi.org/10.37134/ejsmt.vol9.2.9.2022
institution Universiti Islam Antarabangsa Malaysia
building IIUM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider International Islamic University Malaysia
content_source IIUM Repository (IREP)
url_provider http://irep.iium.edu.my/
language English
topic RA0421 Public health. Hygiene. Preventive Medicine
spellingShingle RA0421 Public health. Hygiene. Preventive Medicine
Mohamed, Malissa
Tengku Azhar, Tengku Norbaya
Che Hassan, Muhammad Rahimi
Haridan, Ummi Shakina
Ab Wahab, Noor Akmal
Mohd. Idris, Siti Noorfahana
Mohd. Zazi, Norhafizah
Abdul Ghani, Radiah
Distribution of lipid-soluble vitamin intake among exclusively breastfeeding mothers and its correlation with human milk’s fatty acids
description The lipid composition such as fatty acids and fat-soluble vitamins is the second-most abundant composition of human milk providing dietary energy to infants. Micronutrient dietary intake such as vitamin A, D, E, K and C by breastfeeding mothers plays an important role in regulating the quality of human milk for optimum infant health and growth. The objective of this paper is to determine the distribution and correlation of maternal micronutrient intake of lipid-soluble vitamin and vitamin C towards fatty acids composition in human milk of exclusively breastfeeding mothers. A total of N=36 nursing women were recruited from Dengkil, Selangor, and Kuantan, Pahang, using a convenience sample method. A 24-hour dietary recall (24HR) was performed to collect thorough information on all foods and beverages ingested in the previous 24 hours by the respondent. The data on micronutrients intake per mother was tabulated using Nutritionist Pro. (NP) software. Following the diet recall, the human sample was collected in the next morning and subjected to fatty acid extraction and transesterification using the Blight and Dyer method. The composition of fatty acids methyl esters was analyzed and quantified by a gas chromatography (Agilent 7890A), equipped with a flame ionization detector (FID) and Agilent Chromatography Workstation software. The highest mean of intake occurred during the fifth to sixth months with, 1067.37±629.66 μg RE/day for vitamin A, during the first two months with, 0.89±0.84 μg RE/day of vitamin D, 5.85±2.49 mg/day while during the fifth to sixth months with, 17.28±11.74 μg /day of Vitamin E and at the first two months of lactation period with, 91.60±55.26 mg per day for vitamin C. Despite the fact that there was no significant correlation between vitamin intake and the fatty acid content of human milk, the study discovered a variety of patterns of correlation. Saturated fatty acids (SFA) in human milk were only positively correlated with vitamin D and C, while monounsaturated fatty acids (MUFA) were positively correlated with vitamin A, E, and K and negatively correlated with the rest. As a result, the fatty acid composition of human milk is less dependent on micronutrient dietary intake and more dependent on De-Novo synthesis in the mammary gland.
format Article
author Mohamed, Malissa
Tengku Azhar, Tengku Norbaya
Che Hassan, Muhammad Rahimi
Haridan, Ummi Shakina
Ab Wahab, Noor Akmal
Mohd. Idris, Siti Noorfahana
Mohd. Zazi, Norhafizah
Abdul Ghani, Radiah
author_facet Mohamed, Malissa
Tengku Azhar, Tengku Norbaya
Che Hassan, Muhammad Rahimi
Haridan, Ummi Shakina
Ab Wahab, Noor Akmal
Mohd. Idris, Siti Noorfahana
Mohd. Zazi, Norhafizah
Abdul Ghani, Radiah
author_sort Mohamed, Malissa
title Distribution of lipid-soluble vitamin intake among exclusively breastfeeding mothers and its correlation with human milk’s fatty acids
title_short Distribution of lipid-soluble vitamin intake among exclusively breastfeeding mothers and its correlation with human milk’s fatty acids
title_full Distribution of lipid-soluble vitamin intake among exclusively breastfeeding mothers and its correlation with human milk’s fatty acids
title_fullStr Distribution of lipid-soluble vitamin intake among exclusively breastfeeding mothers and its correlation with human milk’s fatty acids
title_full_unstemmed Distribution of lipid-soluble vitamin intake among exclusively breastfeeding mothers and its correlation with human milk’s fatty acids
title_sort distribution of lipid-soluble vitamin intake among exclusively breastfeeding mothers and its correlation with human milk’s fatty acids
publisher UPSI Press
publishDate 2022
url http://irep.iium.edu.my/102782/7/102782_Distribution%20of%20lipid-soluble%20vitamin%20intake.pdf
http://irep.iium.edu.my/102782/
https://ojs.upsi.edu.my/index.php/EJSMT/article/view/6796/4123
https://doi.org/10.37134/ejsmt.vol9.2.9.2022
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score 13.160551