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ORIGINAL RESEARCH COMMUNICATION |
1 From the Child Nutrition Research Centre, Child Health Research Institute, Women's & Children's Hospital, North Adelaide, Australia (MM and RAG), and the Department of Paediatrics & Child Health, Flinders University of South Australia and Flinders Medical Centre, Bedford Park (Adelaide), Australia (JSH and MAN).
2 Supported by Rural Industries Research and Development Corporation (project no. 98/17), a National Health & Medical Research Council Applied Health Sciences Fellowship (to MM), and the MS McLeod Research Trust (partial support to RAG).
3 Reprints not available. Address correspondence to RA Gibson, Child Nutrition Research Centre, Flinders Medical Centre, Bedford Park, SA 5046, Australia. E-mail: rgibson{at}flinders.edu.au.
| ABSTRACT |
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Objective: Our goal was to investigate the effect of consumption of 4 egg yolks/wk on infant DHA status and hemoglobin, ferritin, and plasma cholesterol concentrations. Secondary outcomes included plasma iron, transferrin, and transferrin saturation.
Design: This was a randomized controlled trial comparing no dietary intervention, consumption of 4 regular egg yolks/wk, and consumption of 4 n-3 fatty acidenriched egg yolks/wk in breast-fed and formula-fed infants from 6 to 12 mo of age. Erythrocyte DHA concentrations, cholesterol, and iron status were assessed at 6 and 12 mo of age.
Results: Of the 82 breast-fed infants recruited, 23 of 28 (no intervention), 23 of 27 (regular eggs), and 24 of 27 (n-3 eggs) completed the trial. Of the 79 formula-fed infants enrolled, 23 of 27 (no intervention), 24 of 26 (regular eggs), and 20 of 26 (n-3 eggs) completed the trial. Erythrocyte DHA concentrations were 3040% higher after the n-3 egg intervention than after treatment with regular eggs or no eggs in both breast-fed and formula-fed infants. Egg treatment had no significant effect on plasma cholesterol, hemoglobin, ferritin, and transferrin but did result in improvements in plasma iron and transferrin saturation compared with no egg treatment.
Conclusions: n-3 Fatty acidenriched eggs may provide a means of increasing dietary DHA during the second 6 mo of life. Egg yolks may also be a useful source of iron during the weaning period and can be safely included in the weaning diet with no perturbations in plasma cholesterol. 2002; 75:108492.
Key Words: Weaning diet infants randomized controlled trial docosahexaenoic acid iron cholesterol egg
| INTRODUCTION |
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6 mo. Because breast milk is not a good source of iron, iron-rich weaning foods are considered important to avoid iron deficiency (3). Like meat, egg yolks contain both heme and nonheme iron. Heme iron refers to the iron in hemoglobin, myoglobin, and heme-containing enzymes; nonheme iron includes all other forms of iron. Heme iron is absorbed more efficiently than is nonheme iron and its absorption is not significantly influenced by iron status or other constituents of the diet (3,4). Conversely, the absorption of nonheme iron, mainly from iron salts, can be modified by different dietary factors, and studies investigating the addition of whole eggs to meals containing nonheme iron show a reduction in iron absorption (reviewed in reference 5). These observations are supported by other studies showing that egg white inhibits nonheme iron absorption (6). However, iron absorption from egg yolk alone has not been investigated. Given that egg yolks contain some heme iron, are small in volume, and have a soft texture suitable for weaning infants, an investigation of whether egg yolk in the weaning diet can influence iron status is warranted.
The n-3 long-chain polyunsaturated fatty acid (LCPUFA) docosahexaenoic acid (DHA; 22:6n-3) is an integral component of breast milk and until recently was not added to infant formulas. Randomized controlled trials of infant formula supplemented with DHA compared with formula containing only precursor fatty acids have consistently shown short-term improvements in visual and neural development of preterm infants (7). Trials involving term infants have reported neutral or positive outcomes (7). Although the potential long-term benefits of DHA are still being explored, biochemical data indicate that breast-fed infants accumulate DHA in the brain until
12 mo of age and at a greater rate than do infants fed formula without DHA (8,9). To our knowledge, no trials have addressed whether weaning foods high in n-3 fatty acids, such as n-3 fatty acidenriched egg yolks, can improve infant DHA status during late infancy.
The most commonly cited reason for delaying the introduction of whole eggs to infants is to avoid sensitizing infants to egg white proteins and hence the development of egg-related allergies (1). Furthermore, although dietary recommendations for adults to reduce their intake of eggs to limit the cholesterol content of the diet have little relevance to young children, such guidelines may influence a parent's food choices for his or her child. The purpose of our trial was to investigate the nutritional role of egg yolks in the weaning diets of breast-fed and formula-fed infants. Primary outcome measures included erythrocyte DHA concentrations, infant iron status, and plasma cholesterol concentrations. Secondary outcomes included growth and plasma indexes of allergy.
| SUBJECTS AND METHODS |
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A research nurse attended immunization clinics in the Adelaide metropolitan area and screened mother-infant pairs for eligibility. The research nurse explained the trial, provided an information sheet to mothers with eligible infants, and invited their participation. Written, informed consent was obtained in adherence to the protocol approved by the Committee on Clinical Investigation (Ethics), Flinders Medical Centre (FMC), and the Research and Ethics Committee, Women's and Children's Hospital.
Mother-infant pairs attended an initial appointment at the FMC. Each appointment was made according to the date the infant was expected to turn 6 mo of age (26 ± 1 wk). Just before this appointment, the clinical trials staff randomly allocated infants to receive either no dietary intervention, regular eggs, or n-3 fatty acidenriched eggs (n-3 eggs) according to a computer-generated randomization schedule. Breast-fed and formula-fed infants were allocated by using separate schedules. The investigator who generated these randomization schedules (MAN) was not involved in the day-to-day management of the trial.
Dietary intervention
The aim of the dietary intervention was to include 4 egg yolks/wk in the diet of weaning infants between 6 and 12 mo of age without significantly altering intake from other foods. The dietary intervention with n-3 eggs was designed to match the amount of DHA a breast-fed infant would normally receive, ie,
100 mg/d. The fatty acid and nutrient compositions of the eggs are shown in Tables 1
and 2
. The eggs were enriched with DHA by feeding hens diets rich in n-3 fatty acids, including DHA (11). Eggs (weighing 6065 g each) were purchased from South Coast Eggs (Myponga, South Australia) and were supplied in plain cartons coded A or B. The regular and n-3 eggs were similar in appearance, taste, and smell. Both the study participants and the research personnel were unaware of the type of eggs provided.
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Assessments
At 6 (26 ± 1 wk), 9 (39 ± 1 wk), and 12 (52 ± 1 wk) mo of age, infant weight, length, and head circumference were measured and a brief feeding questionnaire was completed by the infants' mothers. Particular attention was paid to the mode of feeding (quantity of breast milk and formula feeds) and intake of eggs and other foods in the weaning diet that also contain iron and LCPUFAs, such as fish and meat. The questionnaire thus enabled us to determine whether the dietary intervention (4 egg yolks/wk) replaced other solid meals that may contribute significantly to the iron or LCPUFA intake of infants. At 6 mo, information regarding parental socioeconomic status and education was also collected (12).
At 6 and 12 mo, a blood sample (2 mL) was taken by venipuncture for the assessment of LCPUFA status, iron status, plasma cholesterol, and plasma indexes of allergy. A portion of the sample (500 µL) was placed in EDTA for hemoglobin determination and the remainder was stored in containers with lithium heparin. Plasma was used to measure ferritin, iron, transferrin, transferrin saturation, and total cholesterol. The remaining plasma sample was stored at -80°C until analyzed for allergen-specific immunoglobulin E (IgE). Packed red blood cells were used to analyze erythrocyte phospholipid fatty acids.
Fatty acid analysis
Plasma and erythrocytes were separated by centrifugation (700 x g for 5 min at room temperature). The erythrocytes were washed 3 times with isotonic saline, and the lipids were extracted with chloroform:propanol (13). The total phospholipid fraction of the lipid extract was separated by thin-layer chromatography and methylated. Fatty acid methyl esters were separated and quantified by capillary gas chromatography as previously reported (14). Results are expressed as percentages of total phospholipid fatty acids.
Iron studies
All iron studies were conducted by the SouthPath SA laboratory at FMC. SouthPath staff were blinded to each infant's dietary allocation. Hemoglobin concentrations were measured spectrophotometrically by using a Coulter STKS analyzer (Beckman Coulter, Hialeah, FL). Plasma ferritin and transferrin were determined by immunoturbidimetric assays (Boehringer Mannheim Systems, New South Wales, Australia) on a BM/Hitachi 917 Automatic Analyzer. Plasma iron was measured on the same analyzer by using the BM/Hitachi 917 Systems Pack. Precision values for the SouthPath SA laboratory (expressed as CVs) for each of these indexes were as follows: hemoglobin, 1.5%; ferritin, 5%; iron, 2.3%; and transferrin, 2.1%.
The normal reference ranges used in this study for the iron status of infants (6 mo to 2 y) are as follows: hemoglobin, 105135 g/L; ferritin, 10250 µg/L; iron, 830 µmol/L; transferrin, 2.03.6 g/L; and transferrin saturation, 1060% (4). Infants whose hemoglobin and plasma iron markers fell within these limits were considered iron sufficient. All infants with a hemoglobin concentration <105 g/L were classified as having anemia (15). Infants who had plasma ferritin concentrations
10 mg/L were classified as having iron deficiency (15). Infants with iron deficiency who also had hemoglobin concentrations < 105 g/L were classified as having iron deficiency anemia (15).
For ethical reasons, infants who had anemia at 6 mo were withdrawn from the study and referred for treatment. If an infant was iron deficient at 6 mo, the infant-mother pair was invited back for a repeat blood sample in 68 wk. If iron deficiency anemia developed in that time, the infant was withdrawn and referred for treatment.
Plasma cholesterol analysis
Total cholesterol analyses of nonfasting blood samples were also performed by SouthPath SA at the FMC. Plasma cholesterol was determined by the cholesterol CHOD-PAP method enzymatic colorimetric test (Boehringer Mannheim Systems) with a BM/Hitachi 917 analyzer.
Immunoglobulin E analysis
The concentration of circulating allergen-specific IgE antibodies in plasma was measured by using the Pharmacia CAP System RAST (radioallergosorbent test) Radioimmunoassay (Kabi Pharmacia Diagnostics AB, Uppsala, Sweden). World Health Organization IgE standard-based calibrators (Kabi Pharmacia Diagnostics AB) were used to measure specific IgE antibodies, and values are expressed in kUA/L, where A is allergen-specific antibodies. The measurement range for undiluted plasma is 0.35100 kUA/L, and the results are reported as the percentage with a RAST class
1 (where RAST = 1 is defined as 0.35 to <0.7 kUA/L).
Sample size and statistics
For erythrocyte DHA and plasma cholesterol values, an
of 0.01 was used in estimates of sample size and power to allow for multiple comparisons. A sample size of 20 infants per group allowed us to detect a mean (±SD) difference of 1 ± 0.80% in phospholipid erythrocyte fatty acids between dietary groups with 89% power. Similarly, a sample size of 20 infants per group allowed us to detect a change of 1 ± 0.80 mmol/L in mean plasma cholesterol between dietary groups with 89% power. Estimates of sample size and power were undertaken for hemoglobin and ferritin values because these are the primary measures of iron status. Sample sizes of 40 infants per egg treatment group and 20 infants per control group allowed us to detect a difference of 8 ± 10 g/L in hemoglobin (
= 0.05) and a difference of 20 ± 25 µg/L in ferritin (
= 0.05) between groups with 82% power. When egg treatment groups were combined, statistical comparisons were conducted across 4 groups (egg treatment groups combined within each cohort) and cross-checked across all 6 groups to ensure that there were no inconsistencies in the outcomes of the statistical analyses.
Differences in baseline characteristics (before intervention) among dietary groups were tested by analysis of variance (ANOVA) and adjusted for multiple comparisons. Differences in baseline characteristics between breast-fed and formula-fed infants were also assessed. The effects of the dietary intervention, mode of feeding (breast-fed or formula-fed), and time were evaluated by using three-factor repeated-measures ANOVA for the outcomes of reported number of egg yolks consumed; reported consumption of meat, chicken, and fish; reported consumption of baby cereal; reported consumption of adult cereal; erythrocyte DHA and AA; plasma cholesterol; and indexes of iron status. Analysis of plasma ferritin values was performed by using log-transformed data. Post hoc tests were adjusted for multiple comparisons. Comparisons of weight, length, and head circumference were also by three-factor repeated-measures ANOVA in which dietary grouping, mode, and time were treated as the main effects. All analyses were conducted with SPSS for WINDOWS (version 10.0; SPSS Inc, Chicago). All data are expressed as means ± SDs unless otherwise stated.
| RESULTS |
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4 egg yolks/wk did not affect the frequency of consumption of other foods, such as meats and cereals, that are likely to contribute iron or LCPUFAs to infant diets. The formula-fed infants consumed more adult cereal, meat, chicken, and fish than did the breast-fed infants, whereas the breast-fed infants consumed more baby cereal.
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4 n-3 egg yolks/wk to the diets of infants fed formula without LCPUFAs resulted in erythrocyte DHA concentrations that were not significantly different from those in the breast-fed infants in the control group at 12 mo of age. Erythrocyte AA concentrations were <10% lower after treatment with n-3 eggs than after the control or treatment with regular eggs in both the breast-fed and formula-fed cohorts at 12 mo of age.
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1 to 4/wk did not alter mean plasma cholesterol concentrations in either the breast-fed or formula-fed infants (Table 5
Hemoglobin, ferritin, and transferrin values did not differ significantly between the combined egg treatment groups and the control group within both the breast-fed and formula-fed cohorts (Table 6
). At 12 mo, however, plasma iron and transferrin saturation were higher in the egg-treated breast-fed and formula-fed infants than in the respective control groups. Only one breast-fed infant receiving regular eggs had iron deficiency anemia at 12 mo of age. Iron status did not differ significantly between the breast-fed and formula-fed infants, except that plasma ferritin concentrations tended to be lower in the breast-fed infants (P = 0.06). At 12 mo of age, more breast-fed infants (17.1%, 12 of 70) than formula-fed infants (7.5%, 5 of 67) were iron deficient (NS). The frequency of positive values for antibodies specific to egg yolk and egg white did not differ significantly between the combined egg treatment group and the control group within both cohorts or between the breast-fed and formula-fed cohorts (Table 7
).
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| DISCUSSION |
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A major finding of the current trial was that infants fed formulas without DHA but who consumed 4 n-3 egg yolks/wk had erythrocyte DHA percentages that were not significantly different from those of the breast-fed infants. We showed in an earlier study that weaning diets are very low in LCPUFAs, such that formula-fed infants have little chance in the normal course of events to achieve LCPUFA status similar to that seen in breast-fed infants (16). In that earlier study, we calculated that it could take
14 regular egg yolks/wk to provide an infant with the same amount of DHA that breast-fed infants receive. The results of the present trial, which showed that 4 regular egg yolks/wk in the weaning diet had no significant effect on erythrocyte DHA status, add credibility to this calculation. However, the addition of 4 n-3 egg yolks/wk, which provided
100 mg additional DHA/d in the weaning diets of the formula-fed infants, resulted in erythrocyte DHA amounts not significantly different from those of the breast-fed infants, who also obtained
100 mg DHA/d.
It is also interesting to note that erythrocyte DHA concentrations decreased with age in the breast-fed infants in the control group, whereas there was no significant change in DHA status with time in the formula-fed infants in the control group. Although breast milk remains the main dietary source of DHA in 612-mo-old infants, the increasing consumption of weaning foods low in DHA and the reduction in breast milk volume consumed during this age bracket probably explain the reduction in DHA status of the breast-fed infants in the control group. On the other hand, DHA status remains low in infants consuming formulas without DHA and DHA-poor weaning foods and does not alter with age. Our data indicate that n-3 egg yolks can be a useful dietary source of DHA for both breast-fed and formula-fed infants, and show for the first time that egg yolks can be incorporated into the weaning diet for a sustained period of time. The implications of these findings remain to be determined because no trials have specifically addressed changes in physiologic functions or clinical outcomes of infants supplemented with DHA during the second 6 mo of life.
Our trial showed no significant effect of egg yolk intervention on hemoglobin and ferritin, the major determinants of iron status, although there was a positive effect of egg treatment on transferrin saturation and plasma iron. This is perhaps not surprising because the infants studied were largely iron sufficient and had adequate hemoglobin and iron stores (as measured by ferritin). The improvements in plasma iron and transferrin saturation with egg treatment reflect increases in iron transportation (17). Given that the additional amount of iron supplied by the egg yolk intervention was
0.5 mg/d, it is possible that either a greater dose or a longer treatment period would be necessary before improvements in iron stores could be observed.
Other comparable trials involving largely iron-sufficient infants that investigated the effect of different iron-containing weaning foods on infant iron status had different results. Engelmann et al (18) showed that partially breast-fed infants randomly allocated to a high-meat (27 g/d) diet had improved iron status compared with infants allocated to a low-meat (10 g/d) weaning diet. Note that the iron contribution from meat in the high-meat group is similar to the amount of iron received from the egg yolk treatment in the current trial. Conversely, one of our earlier trials showed that infants fed a high-iron weaning diet (8.2 ± 2.9 mg/d), in which the iron was derived largely from iron-fortified cereal, had iron status that was not different from that of a control group (5.2 ± 3.4 mg/d) at 12 mo of age (19). The infants in the intervention group of this earlier trial received an extra 3 mg Fe/d compared with an extra 0.5 mg Fe from egg yolk in the current trial. Collectively, these data suggest that foods such as egg yolks and meat may make a useful contribution to the weaning diet and that interventions aimed at increasing the intake of such foods in iron-deplete infants deserve to be tested in a large, community-based trial.
Although an egg yolk typically contains
200 mg cholesterol and
6 g fat (2 g of which is saturated fat), introducing
4 eggs/wk to the diets of weaning infants did not significantly alter plasma cholesterol concentrations in either breast-fed or formula-fed infants. This finding parallels observations from a trial involving adults in which the intake of 4 regular or 4 n-3 eggs/wk resulted in no increase in blood lipids (20). One of the largest randomized intervention trials that investigated early diet and lifestyle counseling to reduce atherosclerosis risk factors showed that intervention to reduce fat intake and replace saturated fat with monounsaturated and polyunsaturated fat in the weaning diet of infants resulted in no effect on blood lipids when infants were 13 mo of age (21). On the other hand, breast-fed infants are consistently reported to have higher plasma cholesterol concentrations than formula-fed infants (2224). Various randomized trials of cholesterol-supplemented formula have been undertaken with the aim of investigating the effect of cholesterol supplementation on blood lipids and lipid metabolism (25,26). Although both trials reported increases in plasma cholesterol with cholesterol supplementation of infant formula (25,26), cholesterol synthesis remained lower in breast-fed infants than in cholesterol-supplemented, formula-fed infants (25). Few data exists regarding the implications of these findings for physiologic functions and clinical outcomes, and these remain controversial. It has been suggested that cholesterol consumption in human milk may promote the delivery of adequate substrate for brain lipids (26), but other work suggests that the rat brain synthesizes its cholesterol de novo (27).
Egg allergy and intolerance are among the most common food allergies and intolerances (1). In our group of healthy infants with no known protein allergies or intolerances, only 1 of 82 breast-fed and 1 of 79 formula-fed infants were withdrawn from the trial because the parents perceived that the infants had an adverse reaction to the egg yolk intervention. Both of these infants were ingesting egg protein as part of their usual weaning diet, however, and we did not have the opportunity to confirm egg intolerance by using a double-blind, placebo-controlled challenge. The presence of antigen-specific antibodies to egg yolk and egg white were used as indexes of egg intolerance, although IgE antibody responses to food proteins can appear in healthy infants with no clinical manifestations of allergy or intolerance (28). The results of our trial confirm this because none of the infants had overt signs of egg intolerance, but 4% and 8% of the egg-treated infants had specific antibody responses to egg yolk and egg white, respectively, compared with 2% and 15% of the control infants, respectively. Within the limits of our trial there were no significant differences in specific antibody responses between the treated and control infants. However, given the relatively low rates of positive responses, hundreds of infants per treatment group would have been required to detect differences. Further studies should be conducted to better define the clinical and plasma markers of allergy in response to egg intervention.
In summary, the results of our trial indicate that it is possible and practical for weaning infants to consume
4 egg yolks/wk without affects on the intake of other foods such as cereals and meats. The egg yolk intervention resulted in modest improvements in iron status that may be most beneficial to infants who are iron deplete, and this deserves further investigation. Eggs fortified with n-3 fatty acids provide a means of increasing dietary DHA during the second 6 mo of life without altering plasma cholesterol. The emerging work in the field of dietary DHA and infant outcomes will determine whether there are any physiologic or clinical benefits to improved DHA status during the second half of infancy.
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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| REFERENCES |
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-linolenic acid in the diet of term infants: effects on visual function and growth. Am J Clin Nutr 2000;71:1209.
-Linolenic acid and docosahexaenoic acidenriched eggs from hens fed flaxseed: influence on blood lipids and platelet phospholipid fatty acids in humans. Am J Clin Nutr 1995;62:816.This article has been cited by other articles:
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D. R. Hoffman, R. C. Theuer, Y. S. Castaneda, D. H. Wheaton, R. G. Bosworth, A. R. O'Connor, S. E. Morale, L. E. Wiedemann, and E. E. Birch Maturation of Visual Acuity Is Accelerated in Breast-Fed Term Infants Fed Baby Food Containing DHA-Enriched Egg Yolk J. Nutr., September 1, 2004; 134(9): 2307 - 2313. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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