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Folic acid is vital for pregnant women especially during early pregnancy to prevent neural tube defects and spine and brain defects in the unborn baby.
Worldwide governments and health organizations have made recommendations concerning folic acid ''supplementation'' for women intending to become pregnant. Despite recommendations, many women miss out on their folic acid supplements.
This has led to the fortification or addition of folates to regularly consumed foods like bread, cereals, grains, flour and breakfast cereals with the intention of everyone benefiting from the associated rise in blood folate levels.
Investigations on effects of folate fortification on blood levels showed that over years fortification of cereals and foods with folic acid will progressively:
Folate fortification, if not accompanied by vitamin B 12, can unmask vitamin B12 mediated nerve damage. This is especially true in older individuals.
Clinical signs of vitamin B12 deficiency are anaemia and/or neurological impairment. Treatment with folic acid can alleviate or mask the anaemia and therefore delay the diagnosis of vitamin B12 deficiency, which can lead to the irreversible and serious nerve damage.
In addition, folic acid can also chemically interact with the pharmacokinetics of phenytoin, an anti- epileptic drug, and may lower serum phenytoin concentrations leading to poorer seizure control. Certain drugs like Methotrexate are anti-folate agents and their efficacy may be affected with mandatory fortification.
Flour fortification with folic acid is opted by several western countries. A number of Middle Eastern countries, Indonesia, Mongolia and a number of ex-Soviet republics have opted for fortification. Australia and New Zealand had jointly agreed to fortification though the Food Standards Australia New Zealand.
Australia has fortified all flour from 18 September 2009. The requirement is 0.135 mg of folate per 100g of bread. In the United Kingdom the Food Standards Agency has recommended fortification.
The United States Public Health Service recommends an extra 0.4 mg/day, which can be taken as a pill. Approximately 53% of the US population uses dietary supplements and 35% uses dietary supplements containing folic acid.
Men consume more folate (in dietary folate equivalents) than women and non-Hispanic whites have higher folate intakes than Mexican Americans and non-Hispanic blacks. As a result of the folic acid fortification program, fortified foods have become a major source of folic acid in the American diet.
Folates can be produced by engineering Lactococcus lactis strains and using bioassay techniques. These engineered folates can potentially help alleviate the effects of folate deficiency in the diet.
Blood studies show that administration of these folates can show an improvement in megaloblastic or macrocytic anemia.