Abstract

Recent evidence suggests that the vitamin A equivalency of beta-carotene from plant sources is lower than previously estimated. We assessed the effect of 60 d of daily supplementation with 750 microg retinol equivalents (RE) of either cooked, puréed sweet potatoes; cooked, puréed Indian spinach (Basella alba); or synthetic sources of vitamin A or beta-carotene on total-body vitamin A stores in Bangladeshi men. Total-body vitamin A stores in Bangladeshi men (n = 14/group) were estimated by using the deuterated-retinol-dilution technique before and after 60 d of supplementation with either 0 microg RE/d (white vegetables) or 750 microg RE/d as sweet potatoes, Indian spinach, retinyl palmitate, or beta-carotene (RE = 1 microg retinol or 6 microg beta-carotene) in addition to a low-vitamin A diet providing approximately 200 microg RE/d. Mean changes in vitamin A stores in the vegetable and beta-carotene groups were compared with the mean change in the retinyl palmitate group to estimate the relative equivalency of these vitamin A sources. Overall geometric mean (+/-SD) initial vitamin A stores were 0.108 +/- 0.067 mmol. Relative to the low-vitamin A control group, the estimated mean changes in vitamin A stores were 0.029 mmol for sweet potato (P = 0.21), 0.041 mmol for Indian spinach (P = 0.033), 0.065 mmol for retinyl palmitate (P < 0.001), and 0.062 mmol for beta-carotene (P < 0.002). Vitamin A equivalency factors (beta-carotene:retinol, wt:wt) were estimated as approximately 13:1 for sweet potato, approximately 10:1 for Indian spinach, and approximately 6:1 for synthetic beta-carotene. Daily consumption of cooked, puréed green leafy vegetables or sweet potatoes has a positive effect on vitamin A stores in populations at risk of vitamin A deficiency.

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