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Nutrient and aflatoxin contents of traditional complementary foods consumed by children of 6–24 months

The nutrient composition and safety of complementary foods have recently become areas of concern, especially with regard to aflatoxin contamination which has been found to adversely affect health outcomes. This study presents the nutrient and aflatoxin contents of complementary foods consumed by chi...

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Autores principales: Alamu, Emmanuel Oladeji, Gondwe, Therese, Akello, Juliet, Sakala, Nancy, Munthali, Grace, Mukanga, Mweshi, Maziya‐Dixon, Busie
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6021732/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29983946
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/fsn3.621
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author Alamu, Emmanuel Oladeji
Gondwe, Therese
Akello, Juliet
Sakala, Nancy
Munthali, Grace
Mukanga, Mweshi
Maziya‐Dixon, Busie
author_facet Alamu, Emmanuel Oladeji
Gondwe, Therese
Akello, Juliet
Sakala, Nancy
Munthali, Grace
Mukanga, Mweshi
Maziya‐Dixon, Busie
author_sort Alamu, Emmanuel Oladeji
collection PubMed
description The nutrient composition and safety of complementary foods have recently become areas of concern, especially with regard to aflatoxin contamination which has been found to adversely affect health outcomes. This study presents the nutrient and aflatoxin contents of complementary foods consumed by children (6–24 months) and infants and young child feeding practices of mothers from two districts in eastern and southern Zambia. A total of 400 mother–child pairs were recruited from Monze and Chipata districts, and data on breastfeeding and complementary feeding practices were collected twice at 3‐month interval using a structured questionnaire. Samples of two traditional complementary foods (Maize Nshima and Maize porridge) were collected from the mothers and analyzed for nutrient contents and aflatoxin contamination. The results showed that there is a high level of awareness on exclusive breastfeeding among mothers. Fat, protein, carbohydrate, and ash contents of Maize nshima from Chipata were significantly lower (p < .05) compared to those from Monze district except for starch and sugar. Monze mothers preferred to prepare a thicker Maize nshima and Maize porridge compared to their Chipata counterparts. The aflatoxin contamination showed that the Maize porridge samples from Chipata were the most contaminated with mean aflatoxin content of 5.8 ± 15.93 mg/100 g, while Maize nshima was the most contaminated of the two complementary foods from Monze districts with mean aflatoxin level of 3.8 ± 6.41 mg/100 g. There were significant (p < .05) positive correlations between fat and aflatoxin contents for Chipata samples (r = .12409) and for Monze samples (r = .13666). The traditional complementary foods studied were found to be low in fat and protein and high in aflatoxin contamination. Thus, it is imperative that best practices and interventions are designed and introduced to reduce the possible lethal health implications of consumption of such complementary foods by children under 5 years.
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spelling pubmed-60217322018-07-06 Nutrient and aflatoxin contents of traditional complementary foods consumed by children of 6–24 months Alamu, Emmanuel Oladeji Gondwe, Therese Akello, Juliet Sakala, Nancy Munthali, Grace Mukanga, Mweshi Maziya‐Dixon, Busie Food Sci Nutr Original Research The nutrient composition and safety of complementary foods have recently become areas of concern, especially with regard to aflatoxin contamination which has been found to adversely affect health outcomes. This study presents the nutrient and aflatoxin contents of complementary foods consumed by children (6–24 months) and infants and young child feeding practices of mothers from two districts in eastern and southern Zambia. A total of 400 mother–child pairs were recruited from Monze and Chipata districts, and data on breastfeeding and complementary feeding practices were collected twice at 3‐month interval using a structured questionnaire. Samples of two traditional complementary foods (Maize Nshima and Maize porridge) were collected from the mothers and analyzed for nutrient contents and aflatoxin contamination. The results showed that there is a high level of awareness on exclusive breastfeeding among mothers. Fat, protein, carbohydrate, and ash contents of Maize nshima from Chipata were significantly lower (p < .05) compared to those from Monze district except for starch and sugar. Monze mothers preferred to prepare a thicker Maize nshima and Maize porridge compared to their Chipata counterparts. The aflatoxin contamination showed that the Maize porridge samples from Chipata were the most contaminated with mean aflatoxin content of 5.8 ± 15.93 mg/100 g, while Maize nshima was the most contaminated of the two complementary foods from Monze districts with mean aflatoxin level of 3.8 ± 6.41 mg/100 g. There were significant (p < .05) positive correlations between fat and aflatoxin contents for Chipata samples (r = .12409) and for Monze samples (r = .13666). The traditional complementary foods studied were found to be low in fat and protein and high in aflatoxin contamination. Thus, it is imperative that best practices and interventions are designed and introduced to reduce the possible lethal health implications of consumption of such complementary foods by children under 5 years. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2018-03-14 /pmc/articles/PMC6021732/ /pubmed/29983946 http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/fsn3.621 Text en © 2018 The Authors. Food Science & Nutrition published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Research
Alamu, Emmanuel Oladeji
Gondwe, Therese
Akello, Juliet
Sakala, Nancy
Munthali, Grace
Mukanga, Mweshi
Maziya‐Dixon, Busie
Nutrient and aflatoxin contents of traditional complementary foods consumed by children of 6–24 months
title Nutrient and aflatoxin contents of traditional complementary foods consumed by children of 6–24 months
title_full Nutrient and aflatoxin contents of traditional complementary foods consumed by children of 6–24 months
title_fullStr Nutrient and aflatoxin contents of traditional complementary foods consumed by children of 6–24 months
title_full_unstemmed Nutrient and aflatoxin contents of traditional complementary foods consumed by children of 6–24 months
title_short Nutrient and aflatoxin contents of traditional complementary foods consumed by children of 6–24 months
title_sort nutrient and aflatoxin contents of traditional complementary foods consumed by children of 6–24 months
topic Original Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6021732/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29983946
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/fsn3.621
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