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Dietary Iron Intake and Serum Interleukin-6 Levels of Obese Children With and Without Iron Deficiency
Author(s) -
Lanang Sidiartha,
I Made Bakta,
I Made Wiryana,
I Wayan Putu Sutirta Yasa,
Damayanti Rusli Sjarif
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
bali medical journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2302-2914
pISSN - 2089-1180
DOI - 10.15562/bmj.v5i2.249
Subject(s) - iron deficiency , transferrin saturation , dietary iron , medicine , serum iron , iron status , endocrinology , transferrin , anemia
Background: Iron deficiency is more common in obese children. Low dietary iron intake and inflammation are suspected as the cause. This study investigates the dietary iron intake and serum IL-6 levels relationship with the obese children iron status. Methods: Seventy obese children were recruited. Dietary iron intake was calculated using three days’ food record. Serum IL-6 was measured using sandwich ELISA. Iron deficiency was confirmed if iron serum <60 mcg/dl and/or saturation of transferrin <20%. Independent t-test was used to analyze the mean difference of the dietary iron intake between the with and without iron deficiency groups, α=0.05. And, Mann-Whitney for the median difference of the serum IL-6 between the two groups. Results: Forty-six subjects (65.7%) had iron deficiency. Dietary iron intake of the with and without iron deficiency groups were 6.8 mg (SD 3.3) and 6.6 mg (SD 3.8), respectively (p>0.05). The interleukin-6 was 2.7 pg/ml (0.3-16.8) and 1.7 pg/ml (0.8-4.9), respectively (p<0.05). Conclusion: Iron deficiency in obese children was high. It was not associated with low dietary iron intake, but associated with

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