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Orange but not apple juice enhances ferrous fumarate absorption in small children.

Journal of pediatric gastroenterology and nutrition (2010-07-20)
Kimberly S Balay, Keli M Hawthorne, Penni D Hicks, Ian J Griffin, Zhensheng Chen, Mark Westerman, Steven A Abrams
ZUSAMMENFASSUNG

Ferrous fumarate is a common, inexpensive iron form increasingly used instead of ferrous sulfate as a food iron supplement. However, few data exist as to whether juices enhance iron absorption from ferrous fumarate. We studied 21 children, ages 4.0 to 7.9 years using a randomized crossover design. Subjects consumed a small meal including a muffin containing 4 mg Fe as ferrous fumarate and either apple (no ascorbic acid) or orange juice (25 mg ascorbic acid). They were separately given a reference dose of Fe (ferrous sulfate) with ascorbic acid. Iron absorption increased from 5.5% +/- 0.7% to 8.2% +/- 1.2%, P < 0.001 from the muffins given with orange juice compared with muffins given with apple juice. The absorption of ferrous fumarate given with orange juice and enhancement of absorption by the presence of juice were significantly positively related to height, weight, and age (P < 0.01 for each). Although iron absorption from ferrous fumarate given with apple juice was significantly inversely associated with the (log transformed) serum ferritin, the difference in absorption between juice types was not (P > 0.9). These data demonstrate an overall benefit to iron absorption from ferrous fumarate provided with orange juice. The effect was age related such that in children older than 6 years of age, there was a nearly 2-fold increase in iron absorption from ferrous fumarate given with orange juice.

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Eisen(II)-fumarat, Pharmaceutical Secondary Standard; Certified Reference Material