Abstract
Deep-fried carrot chips, containing provitamin-A carotenes, were developed as an alternative mode of dietary intervention to combat vitamin A deficiency. The biological use of carotenoids in this product as vitamin A precursors was evaluated in Mongolian gerbils. Male 4-wk-old gerbils were fed a diet containing all essential nutrients for 1 wk. Then six gerbils were killed, and the remaining gerbils were fed the diet without vitamin A for 6 wk to produce marginal vitamin A deficiency. After depletion, six gerbils were killed and the remainder divided into four groups of 12 gerbils each and fed vitamin A-containing diet (+VA), beta-carotene-containing diet (BC), carrot chip-containing diet (CC), or diet containing no vitamin A/provitamin-A carotenes (-VA). The first three diets contained approximately 6 microg RE/g. Six gerbils from each group were killed after 2 wk of consuming these diets, and 6 after 4 wk. Final body weight and weekly food consumption did not differ among groups after 2 or 4 wk of repletion. Total liver vitamin A stores of BC and CC gerbils killed after 4 wk of repletion were not different from those of gerbils killed before depletion, but those of -VA gerbils were significantly lower (P < 0.05) and those of +VA gerbils were significantly higher (P < 0.05). Plasma retinol levels of gerbils killed after 4 wk of repletion, including the -VA group, did not differ. Total liver alpha- and beta-carotenes and 9-cis beta-carotene contents of the CC group were significantly higher (P < 0.05) than in the BC group after 4 wk of repletion. This carrot chip product effectively reversed vitamin A deficiency in gerbils.
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