| Literature DB >> 25405366 |
Karla A Lomagno1, Feifei Hu2, Lynn J Riddell3, Alison O Booth4, Ewa A Szymlek-Gay5, Caryl A Nowson6, Linda K Byrne7.
Abstract
Iron and zinc are essential minerals often present in similar food sources. In addition to the adverse effects of frank iron and zinc-deficient states, iron insufficiency has been associated with impairments in mood and cognition. This paper reviews current literature on iron or zinc supplementation and its impact on mood or cognition in pre-menopausal women. Searches included MEDLINE complete, Excerpta Medica Database (EMBASE), psychINFO, psychARTICLES, pubMED, ProQuest Health and Medical Complete Academic Search complete, Scopus and ScienceDirect. Ten randomized controlled trials and one non-randomized controlled trial were found to meet the inclusion criteria. Seven studies found improvements in aspects of mood and cognition after iron supplementation. Iron supplementation appeared to improve memory and intellectual ability in participants aged between 12 and 55 years in seven studies, regardless of whether the participant was initially iron insufficient or iron-deficient with anaemia. The review also found three controlled studies providing evidence to suggest a role for zinc supplementation as a treatment for depressive symptoms, as both an adjunct to traditional antidepressant therapy for individuals with a diagnosis of major depressive disorder and as a therapy in its own right in pre-menopausal women with zinc deficiency. Overall, the current literature indicates a positive effect of improving zinc status on enhanced cognitive and emotional functioning. However, further study involving well-designed randomized controlled trials is needed to identify the impact of improving iron and zinc status on mood and cognition.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25405366 PMCID: PMC4245583 DOI: 10.3390/nu6115117
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 5.717
Figure 1Flow chart of how the literature was selected for inclusion.
Characteristic summary of the included studies (N = 11). ID, iron deficiency.
| Study | Population | Iron or Zinc Intervention | Baseline Iron or Zinc Status | Study Duration and Dropouts | Outcome Measures | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bruner | 81 | American adolescent females, ID only, 13–18 years | Daily dose of 1300 mg ferrous sulphate, equivalent to 260 mg elemental iron | 8 weeks 8 dropouts | The Brief Test of Attention, Symbol Digits Modalities. The Visual Search and Attention Test, The Hopkins Verbal Learning Test | |
| Beard | 95 | South African mothers, 18–30 years | Daily dose of 125 mg ferrous sulphate to anaemic mothers | 9 months, postpartum 14 dropouts | Edinburgh Post-Natal Depressive Scale, Ravens Coloured Matrices, Perceived Stress Scales | |
| Murray-Kolb and Beard, 2007 [ | 152 | American women, 18–35 years | 160 mg ferrous sulphate, containing 60 mg elemental iron | 16 weeks 39 dropouts | Cognitive Abilities Test | |
| McClung | 219 | Female American soldiers, 15–25 years | 100 mg ferrous sulphate, 15.0 elemental iron ± 0.2 mg | 8 weeks 48 dropouts | Profile of Mood States | |
| Verdon | 144 | French females, ID only, 18–55 years | Ferrous sulphate, 80 mg elemental iron as pill | 4 weeks 12 dropouts | Questionnaire bref d’auto-évaluation des dimensions dépressive, asthénique et anxieuse | |
| Vaucher | 198 | Swiss females, ID only, 18–50 years | 80 mg ferrous sulphate | 12 weeks 77 dropouts | Current and Past Psychological Scale | |
| Lambert | 121 | Adolescent females from New Zealand, ID only, 12.5–17.9 years | 105 mg elemental iron | 8 weeks 5 dropouts | Hopkins Verbal Learning Test, Stroop Task Visual Search, Reading Span Task, Visual search task | |
| Devaki | 120 | Adolescent male and female students from India, 15–18 years | Iron (III) hydroxide polymaltose complex, 100 mg elemental iron | 8 months dropouts not recorded | Ravens Progressive Matrices, Weschler Adult Intelligence Scale, Emotional Quotient | |
| Siwek | 60 | Polish males and females with major depressive disorder, 18–55 years | 100–200 mg imipramine (antidepressant) + 25 mg zinc | Serum zinc determined by flame atomic absorption spectrometry; baseline zinc deficiency was unclear | 12 weeks 9 dropouts | Hamilton Depression Rating Scale, Beck Depression Inventory, Clinical Global Impression Montgomery—Åsberg Depression Rating Scale |
| Nowak | 20 | Polish males and females with major depressive disorder, 25–57 years | clomipramine 125–150 mg, amitriptyline 125–150 mg, citalopram, 20 mg fluoxetine, 40–20 mg (all standard antidepressant treatment) + 25 mg zinc | Unclear | 12 weeks 6 dropouts | Hamilton Depression Rating Scale, Beck Depression Inventory |
| Sawada and Yokoi, 2010 [ | 60 | Japanese females, non-anaemic, 18–21 years | Multivitamins + 7 mg elemental zinc | Serum zinc determined by inductively coupled argon plasma-mass spectrometer; no other details provided on this | 10 weeks dropouts not recorded | Profile of Mood States |
Validity Characteristics of included studies.
| Study | Selection Bias or Detection Bias | Performance or Detection Bias | Attrition Bias | Controlled Variables | Reviewer Notes/Possible Limitations |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bruner | Randomization clear, double-blinded design | Researchers and participants blinded to allocation | Not all randomized included in outcomes; dropouts and reasons for dropouts reported | Additional vitamins and minerals | All participants had ID. There was no measurement of baseline differences between iron-sufficient and ID adolescents. Serum ferritin was a marker of iron status. Statistical analysis was by group assignment, rather than ferritin response. |
| Beard | Randomization clear, double-blinded design | Participants unaware of group allocation | Intention-to-treat protocol utilized to deal with missing data; dropouts reported; however, reasons for dropouts not reported | Age, socioeconomic status, income, education, nutritional intakes | Staff members administered supplementations at health clinics with instructions for the mothers on when to take and when to return,
|
| Murray-Kolb and Beard, 2007 [ | Randomization clear, double-blind placebo-controlled design | One researcher knew the group allocation; outcome assessors, as well as participants were blinded to group allocation | Not all of those randomized included in outcomes; dropout rates reported; however, reasons for dropouts not reported | Socioeconomic status, grade point average, level of physical activity and other demographics;other vitamins/minerals; inflammation, contraception and menstrual cycle; intellectual ability (IQ) was used as a covariate | Standardized and validated measures of were cognition used. High reliability. Analysis was completed on women who were classified as ferritin responders or non-responders. Determination of the relationship between changes in iron status and changes in cognition. 16 weeks used to allow more time for brain iron concentrations to replenish. |
| McClung | Randomization reported, double-blind, placebo-controlled design | Researchers, outcome assessors and participants all blinded to allocation | Unclear if all of those randomized included in outcomes; dropout rates and reasons for dropouts reported | Compliance monitored and assessed as a confounding variable. Research assistants administered capsules to participants each day. Treatment occurred on the background of battle combat training. Randomization procedures were not described. | |
| Verdon | Randomization clear, double-blind design | Researchers, outcome assessors and participants blind to allocation | Intention-to-treat protocol completed to deal with missing data; dropout rates recorded and reasons for dropout recorded | Other disorders that could explain fatigue | Intervention period was relatively shorter than other included studies. A validated self-administered questionnaire was used, although fatigue was assessed on a visual analogue scale. Adherence to treatment was monitored by an electronic device that recorded the date and time that the pill container was opened |
| Vaucher | Multi-centre study, randomization clear, double-blind, placebo-controlled design | Researchers, outcome assessors and participants blinded to allocation | Intention-to-treat protocol completed to deal with missing data | A validated self-administered questionnaire used. Intention-to-treat analysis was used, and attrition and compliance were less of an issue. Dropout rates were not reported | |
| Lambert | Randomization occurred, but allocation procedures not described | Researcher and participants blinded to allocation | Unclear if randomized participants included in outcomes/dropout rates reported/reasons for dropouts reported | Standardized and validated outcome measures were used. | |
| Devaki | No randomization described | No blinding methods described | Unclear if randomized participants included in outcomes; dropout rates and reasons for dropout reported | Compliance was monitored as supplements were administered by a supervisor at breakfast and lunch. Potential for performance, selection and detection bias. | |
| Siwek | Randomization clear | Researchers and participants blinded to allocation | Outpatient sample. | ||
| Nowak | Randomization described | Researchers and participants blinded to allocation | Unclear if randomized participants included in outcome; dropout rates reported however reasons for dropout not reported | Clinical sample, so it is difficult to generalize to wider population. Standardized and validated measures of depressive symptoms were used. Allocation procedures were not described. | |
| Sawada and Yokoi, 2010 [ | Randomization clear, A double-blind, double-blinded, placebo-controlled design | Researchers and participants blinded to allocation | Information around dropout rates and missing data was not reported | Age, height, body mass, body weight | Pilot study, first of its kind. There are missing data and information around how this was dealt with. Treatment was possibly confounded by the use of multivitamins, alongside zinc |
Summary of relevant results. HVLT, Hopkins Verbal Learning Test; MCV, mean corpuscular volume.
| 1: Iron | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Study | Dependent Variable | Domains | Statistical Analysis | Changes in Iron/Zinc Status | Findings |
| Bruner | Cognition | Intention-to-treat analysis; multiple linear regression, assessment of post iron treatment cognitive scores; analysis of variance (ANOVA), assessed HVLT learning curve | Iron girls: significantly higher serum ferritin concentration (18.2 (SD 12.6) | No significant effect on attention were found. Significant improvement on total recall scores of HVLT for girls who took iron treatment, compared to control group ( | |
| Beard | Cognition | Repeated measures ANOVA; Pearson’s correlation, strength of association between variables | IDA iron group: Significant improvement in Hb transferrin saturation (TSAT) and serum ferritin (Ft) values. IDA placebo: Also significant increase in Hb, reflecting natural state of iron status restoration postpartum. Iron sufficient: No change in haematology | Iron treatment effected significant improvement on RPMs and Digit Symbol scores. Iron-treated mother’s scores were almost identical to non-anaemic mothers at 9 months. An association was found between—RPM scores and Hb, 10 weeks—Digit symbol test and MCV at 9 months | |
| Emotions (postpartum depression) | Repeated Measures ANOVA; Pearson’s Correlation | Results of EPDS were unclear. Pearson’s correlation found that scores on the EPDS Hb and MCV. | |||
| Murray-Kolb and Beard, 2007 [ | Cognition | ANCOVA, assessed differences between groups with IQ as a covariate; repeated-measures ANOVA, assessed change in cognitive variables over time | Iron-treated participants were found to have significantly improved iron status. Significant increases occurred in ID iron treatment and IDA iron treatment groups for ferritin ( | ||
| McClung | Mood and physical performance | Two-way repeated measures ANOVA, treatment and time effects | Participation in 8-wk battle combat training had effects on iron status, as shown by elevation ( | Group x Time interaction for vigour on the POMS: Iron supplementation had a significant effect on vigour, after Battle CombatTraining (BCT). After stratification by iron status at the beginning of BCT, the positive effects of time on mood stayed significant ( | |
| Verdon | Depression, anxiety and fatigue | Intention-to-treat protocol χ2 and linear regression | Unclear | The iron group showed the largest decrease in cumulative −4.6 (7.5) score for fatigue (−7.5 (8.0)), a difference of 3.0 points, 0.3 to 5.6, | |
| Lambert | Cognition | Multiple regression analysis | Ferritin level was increased for both placebo ( | ||
| Devaki | Cognition and Emotion (mood) | STM: recall a list of 6 digit numbers, after interpolated activity, asked to recall (not as in Wechsler Intelligence Scale (WAIS)). Long-term memory (LTM): recited the stimulus number, presented four times and then asked to recall one h of interpolated activity (not as in WAIS). IQ: Ravens Progressive Matrices (RPM). WAIS. | 2 × 2 ANOVA with duration as one factor and study group as another | Iron-sufficient, supplement group, ID and IDA groups showed significant increases in Hb, transferrin saturation (TS) and serum ferritin 8 months post-treatment ( | Iron supplementation groups showed improvements in mean scores of STM, LTM WAIS and RPM, at four- and eight-month follow up, which also reflected changes in haematological parameters. Changes in cognitive scores were much higher in the iron-deficient and iron-deficient anaemic group, compared to iron-sufficient, supplement group. No significant change in Emotion Quotient (EQ) score was seen for any group. |
| Vaucher | Primary Fatigue: Secondary: Mood | Fatigue and depressive symptoms: Current and Past Psychological Scale. Fatigue: Multidimensional Assessment of Fatigue score; self-reported health questionnaire, Global Fatigue Index and Severity. | Intention-to-treat analysis | After 6 weeks of iron treatment, significant effects on markers of iron status were found for iron-supplemented groups. Hb: (3 g/L; | Patients receiving iron supplement had a 3.5 point improvement (95% CI) in their fatigue score in current and past psychological scale compared to those in placebo group. Iron treatment had a significant effect on the global fatigue index from the Multidimensional Assessment of Fatigue Scale ( |
| Siwek | Depression | Depressive Index scores on Clinical Global Impression (CGI), Montgomery-Åsberg Depression Rating Scale (MADRS), Hamilton Depression Rating Scale (HDRS), Beck Depression Inventory (BDI). Remission of depression was defined by a score of “very much” on CGI, plus scores of ≤7 on HDRS, ≤10 on MADRS or ≤9 on BDI. | Linear model, mixed-design ANOVA, with repeated factor being test number, and between factors being treatment, antidepressant and treatment resistance. A non-treatment-resistant group and a treatment-resistant group formed. | Zinc-supplemented groups had a significant increase in serum zinc levels at Weeks 6 and 12. Non-zinc-supplemented groups saw an increase of zinc at Week 12. Treatment-resistant groups demonstrated lower levels of zinc than treatment- and non-treatment-resistant groups. | A significant negative correlation between zinc levels and MADRS scores at Week 12 was found, when either all ( |
| Nowak | Depression | Depression Index: HDRS and BDI. | Group differences were assessed using | Unclear | Scores of the HDRS were significantly reduced over time: |
| Sawada and Yokoi, 2010 [ | Depression | Somatic symptoms and mood feelings, like anxiety, sensitivity, anger and tension: Profile of Mood State (POMS) and Cornell Medical Index (CMI). | Data were analysed with Wilcoxon’s signed-rank test | Neither intervention showed a significant change in serum ferritin or Hb concentration. Multivitamin (MV) + zinc significantly increased serum zinc concentration, whereas MV alone did not. | Women who took multivitamins with zinc showed a significant decrease in anger-hostility and depression-dejection scores on the POMS. |