RESUMO
OBJECTIVE: The aim of the study was to evaluate and compare the levels of alpha-tocopherol in colostrum milk and serum of mothers with premature birth, classified as severe prematurity and moderate prematurity. METHODS: Cross-sectional study with 65 women, 18 births classified as severe prematurity (<32 weeks of gestation) and 47 as moderate prematurity (≥32 weeks of gestation). The study only included mothers without any conditions associated with pregnancy and who had a single conception without any malformation. Samples of serum and colostrum were collected during fasting in the immediate postpartum, and alpha-tocopherol was analyzed by high-performance liquid chromatography. To determine the biochemical nutritional status of vitamin E, a serum cutoff (11.6 µmol/L) was adopted. The Student t test for independent variables compared the average concentrations of alpha-tocopherol in serum and colostrum among prematurity groups. Differences were considered significant when Pâ<â0.05. RESULTS: The alpha-tocopherol concentrations in colostrum were similar in both groups, being 34.5â±â20.2 µmol/L for women with severe prematurity and 35.1â±â16.3 µmol/L for moderate prematurity. For the serum of puerperal women with severe prematurity, alpha-tocopherol concentration was, however, lower than in women with moderate prematurity, 22.2â±â4.4 µmol/L versus 27.1â±â8.6 µmol/L (Pâ<â0.05). The serum levels of alpha-tocopherol indicated nutritional risk at 5.6% (nâ=â1) of women with severe prematurity and 4.3% (nâ=â2) for those with moderate prematurity. CONCLUSIONS: Severe prematurity affected the levels of alpha-tocopherol in maternal serum; however, the level of prematurity did not change the concentration of vitamin E in colostrum.