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The effect of iron and zinc supplementation and discontinuation of this practice on iron and zinc level in tissues in rats fed deficient diets
Authors:Joanna Kaluza  Dawid Madej  Anna Brzozowska
Affiliation:Department of Human Nutrition, Warsaw University of Life Sciences – SGGW, 159C Nowoursynowska Str., 02-776 Warsaw, Poland
Abstract:The effect of iron and iron/zinc supplementation on their levels in tissues of rats fed initially one of the three following regimen: C – control AIN-93 diet, D – iron deficient diet and R – diet with 50% reduction of all vitamins and minerals was investigated. The study was conducted on 6-week male Wistar rats, in 3 stages: (1) 4-week adaptation to the diets (C, D or R); (2) 4-week supplementation with the same regimen enriched with 10-times more iron (CSFe, DSFe, RSFe) or iron/zinc (CSFeZn, DSFeZn, RSFeZn); (3) 2-week post-supplementation period (the same diets as the stage I). Iron and zinc content in serum, the initial segment of intestine, liver and kidney were measured using FAAS method. After supplementation period (stage II) the content of iron in the intestine, liver and kidney in groups of rats fed DSFe and DSFeZn-diet were significantly higher (all p-values  0.05) than in rats fed D-diet (intestine: DSFe = 50.1 ± 9.0 μg/g wet weight, DSFeZn = 43.0 ± 9.9 μg/g vs. D = 16.5 ± 2.1 μg/g; liver: DSFe = 149 ± 30 μg/g, DSFeZn = 152 ± 25 μg/g vs. D = 56 ± 13 μg/g; kidney: DSFe = 74.0 ± 8.1 μg/g, DSFeZn = 72.7 ± 6.6 μg/g vs. D = 59.3 ± 9.5 μg/g). The same significant associations (all p-values  0.05) were observed in R rats in the intestine and liver (intestine: RSFe = 60.8 ± 6.6 μg/g, RSFeZn = 54.8 ± 6.6 μg/g vs. R = 31.5 ± 8.2 μg/g; liver: RSFe = 161 ± 10 μg/g, RSFeZn = 166 ± 21 μg/g vs. R = 136 ± 24 μg/g). After post-supplementation period the statistically significant differences between supplemented and non-supplemented rats fed D- and R-diets were still observed. There was not found the effect of applied treatments on zinc status. In conclusion, iron or iron/zinc supplementation increased similarly iron level in tissues of rats fed D-diet or R-diet with prolonged effect after supplementation discontinuation.
Keywords:Iron  Zinc  Supplementation  Rats  Tissues
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