Antenatal Vitamin A Supplementation Increases Birth Weight and Decreases Anemia among Infants Born to Human Immunodeficiency Virus–Infected Women in Malawi

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Antenatal Vitamin A Supplementation Increases Birth Weight and Decreases Anemia among Infants Born to Human Immunodeficiency Virus–Infected Women in Malawi

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Title: Antenatal Vitamin A Supplementation Increases Birth Weight and Decreases Anemia among Infants Born to Human Immunodeficiency Virus–Infected Women in Malawi
Author: Kumwenda, Newton; Miotti, Paolo G.; Taha, Taha E.; Broadhead, Robin; Biggar, Robert J.; Jackson, J. Brooks; Melikian, George; Semba, Richard D.
Abstract: Vitamin A is essential for immunity and growth. A controlled clinical that involved 697 human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)–infected pregnant women was conducted to determine whether vitamin A prevents anemia, low birth weight, growth failure, HIV transmission, and mortality. Women received daily doses of iron and folate, either alone or combined with vitamin A (3 mg retinol equivalent), from 18–28 weeks’ gestation until delivery. In the vitamin A and control groups, respectively, the mean (±SE) birth weights were 2895 ±31 g and 2805 ±32 g (P=.05), the proportions of low-birth-weight infants were 14.0% and 21.1% (P=.03), the proportions of anemic infants at 6 weeks postpartum were 23.4% and 40.6% (P < .001), and the respective cumulative proportions of infants who were HIV infected at 6 weeks and 24 months of age were 26.6% and 27.8% (P=.76) and 27.7% and 32.8% (P=.21). Receipt of vitamin A improved birth weight and neonatal growth and reduced anemia, but it did not affect perinatal HIV transmission.
URI: http://www.ndr.mw:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/702
Date: 2012-12-04


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