Hoffman D, Uauy R. Essentiality of dietary omega 3 fatty
acids for premature infants: plasma and red blood cell fatty
acid composition. Lipids 1992; 27(11): 886-895
Pre-term infants, that are not breast-fed, are deprived of
vital intrauterine fat accretion during late pregnancy and
must rely on formula to obtain fatty acids essential for
normal development, particularly of the visual system.
Preterm infants (30 wk postconception) receiving human milk
were compared to infants given one of the following formulae:
Formula A was a commercial preterm formula with predominantly
18:2 omega 6 (24.2%) and low (0.5%) 18:3 omega 3; Formula B
was based on soy oil and contained similar 18:2 omega 6 levels
(20%) and high 18:3 omega 3 (2.7%); Formula C was also a soy
oil-based formula (20% 18:2, 1.4% 18:3) but was supplemented
with marine oil to provide omega 3 long-chain polyunsaturated
fatty acids (LCP) at a level (docosahexaenoic acid, DHA, 0.35%)
equivalent to human milk.
At entry (10 days of age), the fatty acid composition of plasma
and red blood cell (RBC) membrane lipids of the formula groups
were identical. By 36 wk postconception, the DHA content in
lipids of group A was significantly reduced compared to that
in the human milk and marine oil formula groups.
Omega-3 LCP results were further amplified by 57 wk with
compensatory increases in 22:5 omega 6 in both plasma and RBC
lipids. Provision of 2.7% alpha-linolenic acid in formula group
B was sufficient to maintain 22:6 omega 3 levels equivalent
to those in human milk-fed infants at 36 wk but not at 57 wk.
Effects on the production of thiobarbituric acid reactive substances
and fragility of RBC attributable to the marine oil supplementation
were negligible. The results support the essentiality of omega 3
fatty acids for preterm infants to obtain fatty acid profiles
comparable to infants receiving human milk. Formula for preterm
infants should be supplemented with omega 3 fatty acids including LCP.
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