Multimicronutrient supplementation in older persons decreased zinc deficiency but not serum TNF-á

The increase in the population of older persons needs to be accompanied by increased quality of healthcare in older persons, particularly a decrease in the incidence of infections. Impaired immune responses are common in older adults, and immune senescence likely contributes to the increased inciden...

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Main Authors: Elly Herwana, Yenny
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Faculty of Medicine Trisakti University 2011-08-01
Series:Universa Medicina
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.univmed.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/08/Elly.pdf
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spelling doaj-5739a925c9d945698db34d1413585b122020-11-25T03:08:47ZengFaculty of Medicine Trisakti UniversityUniversa Medicina1907-30622011-08-01302102110Multimicronutrient supplementation in older persons decreased zinc deficiency but not serum TNF-áElly Herwana0Yenny1Department of Pharmacology, Medical Faculty, Trisakti University JakartaDepartment of Pharmacology, Medical Faculty, Trisakti University JakartaThe increase in the population of older persons needs to be accompanied by increased quality of healthcare in older persons, particularly a decrease in the incidence of infections. Impaired immune responses are common in older adults, and immune senescence likely contributes to the increased incidence of infectious diseases in the older persons. The aging process decreases the immune response and many studies have been conducted to explain the role of supplementation with various micronutrients, such as vitamin C, vitamin E, â-carotene and zinc, on the immune response. The aim of the present study was to assess the influence of 6 months of multi-micronutrient (MMN) supplementation on zinc and tumor necrosis factor (TNF-á) levels in older persons. A randomized controlled trial was conducted on 78 older persons, who were divided into two groups. The treatment group received MMN supplementation containing 40 mg elemental zinc, 120 mg ascorbic acid, 6 mg â-carotene, 15 mg á-tocopherol and 400 ìg folic acid and the control group 400 mg calcium carbonate. The study did not demonstrate that 6 months of MMN supplementation resulted in significant differences between both groups, with respect to total protein, albumin, globulin, and TNF-á levels. In contrast, MMN supplementation significantly decreased the proportion of older persons with zinc deficiency in the treatment group, in comparison with the control group. The present data suggest that in older persons with relatively good immune and protein status, improvement of the immune status by MMN supplementation may be difficult and at best limited. http://www.univmed.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/08/Elly.pdfMultimicronutrientsTNF-áproteinzincolder persons
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Elly Herwana
Yenny
spellingShingle Elly Herwana
Yenny
Multimicronutrient supplementation in older persons decreased zinc deficiency but not serum TNF-á
Universa Medicina
Multimicronutrients
TNF-á
protein
zinc
older persons
author_facet Elly Herwana
Yenny
author_sort Elly Herwana
title Multimicronutrient supplementation in older persons decreased zinc deficiency but not serum TNF-á
title_short Multimicronutrient supplementation in older persons decreased zinc deficiency but not serum TNF-á
title_full Multimicronutrient supplementation in older persons decreased zinc deficiency but not serum TNF-á
title_fullStr Multimicronutrient supplementation in older persons decreased zinc deficiency but not serum TNF-á
title_full_unstemmed Multimicronutrient supplementation in older persons decreased zinc deficiency but not serum TNF-á
title_sort multimicronutrient supplementation in older persons decreased zinc deficiency but not serum tnf-á
publisher Faculty of Medicine Trisakti University
series Universa Medicina
issn 1907-3062
publishDate 2011-08-01
description The increase in the population of older persons needs to be accompanied by increased quality of healthcare in older persons, particularly a decrease in the incidence of infections. Impaired immune responses are common in older adults, and immune senescence likely contributes to the increased incidence of infectious diseases in the older persons. The aging process decreases the immune response and many studies have been conducted to explain the role of supplementation with various micronutrients, such as vitamin C, vitamin E, â-carotene and zinc, on the immune response. The aim of the present study was to assess the influence of 6 months of multi-micronutrient (MMN) supplementation on zinc and tumor necrosis factor (TNF-á) levels in older persons. A randomized controlled trial was conducted on 78 older persons, who were divided into two groups. The treatment group received MMN supplementation containing 40 mg elemental zinc, 120 mg ascorbic acid, 6 mg â-carotene, 15 mg á-tocopherol and 400 ìg folic acid and the control group 400 mg calcium carbonate. The study did not demonstrate that 6 months of MMN supplementation resulted in significant differences between both groups, with respect to total protein, albumin, globulin, and TNF-á levels. In contrast, MMN supplementation significantly decreased the proportion of older persons with zinc deficiency in the treatment group, in comparison with the control group. The present data suggest that in older persons with relatively good immune and protein status, improvement of the immune status by MMN supplementation may be difficult and at best limited.
topic Multimicronutrients
TNF-á
protein
zinc
older persons
url http://www.univmed.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/08/Elly.pdf
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