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American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, Vol 22, 147-155, Copyright © 1969 by The American Society for Clinical Nutrition, Inc.

Vitamin E Content of Milk, Milk Products, and Simulated Milks: Relevance to Infant Nutrition

DAVID C. HERTING PH.D.1 and EMMA-JANE E. DRURY B.S.1

1 From the Research Laboratories, Distillation Products Industries, Division of Eastman Kodak Company, Rochester, New York 14603

Milk, milk products, and simulated milks were analyzed by column chromatography on MgHPO4 or thin-layer chromatography on alumina to establish agr-tocopherol levels, and by gas-liquid chromatography to determine polyunsaturated fatty acids. Human milk contained an average of 1.14 mg agr-tocopherol/quart whether frozen-fresh, lyophilized, or pasteurized. The agr-tocopherol content of homogenized cow's milk varied from about 0.21 mg/quart in early spring to about 1.06 mg/quart in mid-fall. Raw milk showed a similar pattern. Bovine colostrum contained about seven times as much agr-tocopherol as milk taken 1 or 2 weeks postpartum. Evaporated, condensed, and nonfat dry milks supplied about 0.66, 1.29, and 0.02 mg agr-tocopherol/reconstituted quart, respectively. Vitamin E levels in liquid and powdered simulated milks varied from 3.46 to 6.80 mg/reconstituted quart in standard formulas and from 2.30 to 7.67 mg/reconstituted quart in hypoallergenic formulas, depending primarily on the vegetable oil used and whether or not the product was fortified. Polyunsaturated fatty acid varied from about 4% of fatty acids in cow's milk to about 50% of fatty acids in hypoallergenic milks. The adequacy for infant nutrition of the agr-tocopherol content in milks, milk products, and simulated milks may depend as much on the relative content of polyunsaturated fatty acids as on the absolute level of agr-tocopherol.







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Copyright © 1969 by The American Society for Nutrition