Plasma zinc concentration increased in children who received daily zinc supplementation for 15 d but not in those who received a zinc-fortified complementary food containing a similar amount of zinc. Additional longer-term studies are needed to assess the effect of zinc-fortification programs on zinc-related functional outcomes and the usefulness of plasma zinc as a biomarker of program effect. This trial was registered at www.clinicaltrials.gov as study NCT0094398.
We completed a series of studies to assess the acceptability of zinc-fortified, cereal-based complementary foods and zinc-fortified wheat breads. Young children and their caregivers completed acceptability tests with complementary foods fortified with iron only (60 mg iron as ferrous fumarate per kilogram cereal flour), or the same level of iron and zinc (240 mg zinc as zinc oxide per kilogram cereal flour), and the caregivers completed triangle taste tests to compare the same products. A separate group of adult participants completed acceptability tests with wheat breads fortified with iron and folic acid (15 mg iron as ferrous fumarate per kilogram flour and 1.5 mg folic acid per kilogram flour) or the same levels of iron-folic acid and 2 levels of zinc (63 mg zinc or 126 mg zinc as zinc oxide per kilogram flour). Finally, a threshold test was administered to another group of adult participants to compare nonfortified wheat bread to breads fortified with zinc in 80 mg increments ranging from 80 to 400 mg zinc as zinc oxide per kilogram flour. All products were acceptable when compared to non-zinc-fortified equivalents, and were well liked by the respective participants. For the triangle tests, caregivers were not able to detect significant differences between products. For threshold tests, adult participants detected differences in breads prepared from fortified wheat flour at 80 mg, 160 mg, and 320 mg zinc per kilogram flour, but not at 240 mg and 400 mg zinc per kilogram flour, respectively, when compared to nonfortified bread equivalents. Zinc fortification of cereal flours in the ranges of fortification that were tested does not adversely affect the acceptability of complementary foods and breads prepared from these flours. Practical Application: Fortification of staple food products is a low-cost approach to deliver additional micronutrients (including zinc) to large segments of a population. Determining the acceptability of products fortified with zinc is an important step in the development of zinc fortification programs.
The responsiveness of plasma zinc concentration to zinc fortification is uncertain. Our objective in this study was to determine whether plasma zinc concentration changes in response to consuming zinc-fortified foods or liquid zinc supplements. We conducted a 4-wk double-blind, randomized trial among 132 healthy Senegalese men ≥ 18 y. Participants received 1 of 4 interventions: 1) (control) 200 g/d of wheat bread fortified with iron and folic acid, but not zinc, and a liquid multivitamin supplement without zinc between meals; 2) (zinc supplement) the same bread and the same multivitamin supplement with 15 mg zinc as ZnSO(4) added; 3) (moderate zinc fortification) the same bread cofortified with 7.5 mg zinc as ZnO and the same multivitamin supplement without zinc; or 4) (high zinc fortification) the same bread cofortified with 15 mg zinc as ZnO and the same multivitamin supplement without zinc. Fasting blood samples were collected twice at baseline and at d 15 and 29 of the intervention. There was no significant interaction between group and study day (P = 0.11). However, at d 15, the mean change in plasma zinc concentration in the zinc-supplemented group was greater than in the placebo and fortification groups ( 0.72 μmol/L vs. -0.09 to 0.03 μmol/L; P = 0.05). At d 29 there were no significant group-wise differences. Across all time points, the zinc-supplemented group was the only group where plasma zinc concentration increased from baseline (P = 0.006). These results suggest that plasma zinc concentration may not be a sufficiently sensitive indicator to evaluate short-term responses to zinc fortification.
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