# Non-Invasive Spectroscopic Determination of the Skin and Blood Carotenoids of Term and Preterm Infants in the First Month of Life and the Influence of Free Radical-Mediated Diseases

**Authors:** Hanne Lademann, Maxim E. Darvin, Anna Häfke, Jürgen Lademann, Laura Wagner, Jan Däbritz, Dirk M. Olbertz

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/life15040534 · 2025-03-24

## TL;DR

This study examines how skin and blood carotenoids change in newborns and their relation to free radical-mediated diseases.

## Contribution

A non-invasive scanner was validated to measure skin carotenoids in infants and compared with blood levels.

## Key findings

- The scanner reliably measured skin carotenoids in infants.
- Term and preterm infants showed similar skin carotenoid kinetics.
- Blood carotenoids were lower in preterm infants and those with FRMD.

## Abstract

Postpartum adaptation causes an increased formation of free radicals (FRs) in the organism, which can lead to development of various FR-mediated diseases (FRMDs) in the newborn. The present study investigates the kinetics of skin and blood carotenoid antioxidants in term and preterm infants and the influence of FRMD. In the first phase, a diffuse reflectance spectroscopy-based scanner was validated for non-invasive measurements of skin carotenoids in term infants (thenar eminence) by correlation with blood carotenoids via reflection spectroscopy. In the second phase, the skin and blood carotenoids of 22 term and 13 preterm infants with and without FRMD were assessed from birth until discharge. It could be shown that the scanner reliably assessed carotenoids in the infants’ skin. The term and preterm infants showed similar kinetics of skin carotenoids, which increased and entered a plateau after 3–4 days. In our cohort, FRMD did not have a significant influence on skin carotenoid concentration. This was due to immature sweat glands and an insufficient excretion of carotenoids. Skin carotenoids seem to be unavailable, suggesting that they may have to be supplemented in infants with FRMD. Blood carotenoid concentrations tended to be lower in preterm infants and infants with FRMD compared to healthy term infants.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** FR-mediated diseases (MESH:C567355)
- **Chemicals:** Carotenoids (MESH:D002338)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

5 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12028751/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12028751