Jornal de Pediatria (Versão em Português) (Sep 2014)

Serum phenylalanine in preterm newborns fed different diets of human milk

  • Débora M. Thomaz,
  • Paula O. Serafin,
  • Durval B. Palhares,
  • Luciana V.M. Tavares,
  • Thayana R.S. Grance

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jpedp.2014.02.003
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 90, no. 5
pp. 518 – 522

Abstract

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Objective: To evaluate phenylalanine plasma profile in preterm newborns fed different human milk diets. Methods: Twenty‐four very‐low weight preterm newborns were distributed randomly in three groups with different feeding types: Group I: banked human milk plus 5% commercial fortifier with bovine protein, Group II: banked human milk plus evaporated fortifier derived from modified human milk, Group III: banked human milk plus lyophilized fortifier derived from modified human milk. The newborns received the group diet when full diet was attained at 15 ± 2 days. Plasma amino acid analysis was performed on the first and last day of feeding. Comparison among groups was performed by statistical tests: one way ANOVA with Tukey's post‐test using SPSS software, version 20.0 (IBM Corp, NY, USA), considering a significance level of 5%. Results: Phenylalanine levels in the first and second analysis were, respectively, in Group I: 11.9 ± 1.22 and 29.72 ± 0.73; in Group II: 11.72 ± 1.04 and 13.44 ± 0.61; and in Group III: 11.3 ± 1.18 and 15.42 ± 0.83 μmol/L. Conclusion: The observed results demonstrated that human milk with fortifiers derived from human milk acted as a good substratum for preterm infant feeding both in the evaporated or the lyophilized form, without significant increases in plasma phenylalanine levels in comparison to human milk with commercial fortifier.

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