Literature DB >> 7702031

Vitamin A supplementation and childhood malaria in northern Ghana.

F N Binka1, D A Ross, S S Morris, B R Kirkwood, P Arthur, N Dollimore, J O Gyapong, P G Smith.   

Abstract

Two companion, randomized, placebo-controlled trials of prophylactic vitamin A supplementation provided the opportunity to assess the impact of supplementation on malaria parasitemia, morbidity, and mortality in young children in northern Ghana. In the mortality study, 21,906 children were visited every 4 mo over 2 y, and in the morbidity study 1455 children were visited weekly for 1 y. There was no difference between children supplemented with vitamin A and those given placebo in malaria mortality rates (rate ratio = 1.03; 95% CI 0.74, 1.43) or fever incidence based on reported symptoms. Malaria parasitemia rates, parasite densities in children with a positive blood smear, and rates of probable malaria illness also did not differ between treatment groups. There was no correlation between serum retinol at the beginning of the trial and subsequent malaria parasitemia in children who received placebo (r = 0.01). It is concluded that vitamin A supplementation had no impact on malaria in this population.

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Year:  1995        PMID: 7702031     DOI: 10.1093/ajcn/61.4.853

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Clin Nutr        ISSN: 0002-9165            Impact factor:   7.045


  18 in total

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