The objective of this study is to establish reference values for folic acid in a healthy population of children aged 4–11 years and to examine related epidemiological, dietary and analytical… Click to show full abstract
The objective of this study is to establish reference values for folic acid in a healthy population of children aged 4–11 years and to examine related epidemiological, dietary and analytical factors. A cross-sectional study of 658 healthy children aged 4–11 years was made. Epidemiological, socioeconomic and dietary variables were analysed, the BMI Z-score was obtained, levels of serum folate and serum vitamin B12 were determined and haematological, iron status and erythropoietic activity parameters were examined. The study data were analysed by non-parametric tests and linear multiple regression. The mean folate value was 8.6 ± 4.6 ng/mL (95% reference interval: 2.8–20 ng/mL). A level < 3 ng/mL (5th percentile) was considered as folate deficiency (4.6% of subjects). No child reported symptoms related to this deficiency. Folate values were significantly lower with age (p < 0.01), low NSE and low parental educational level (p: 0.0001). No relationship was found between folates and the analytical variables. According to multivariate linear regression, the variables significantly associated with serum folate were age, socioeconomic level and vitamin B12. Conclusions: Serum folate levels in healthy school children are described. Age, socioeconomic level and serum vitamin B12 are factors associated with folate status. Specific cut-off values for a paediatric population should be defined. What is Known: • Folic acid is an essential micronutrient for optimal growth and development; its deficit is associated with adverse health effects. • The studies on their status and deficit are not comparable due to a lack of agreement on appropriate indicators and reference values. What is New: • This study reports the levels of serum folate in a large population of healthy schoolchildren, with strict inclusion criteria in a developed country and identifies the associated sociodemographic, dietary and analytical (vitamin B12, iron parameters and erythropoietic activity) factors, avoiding potential confusion. What is Known: • Folic acid is an essential micronutrient for optimal growth and development; its deficit is associated with adverse health effects. • The studies on their status and deficit are not comparable due to a lack of agreement on appropriate indicators and reference values. What is New: • This study reports the levels of serum folate in a large population of healthy schoolchildren, with strict inclusion criteria in a developed country and identifies the associated sociodemographic, dietary and analytical (vitamin B12, iron parameters and erythropoietic activity) factors, avoiding potential confusion.
               
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