Balancing Nutrition and Osmolality: Risk of Hyperosmolality During Individualized Fortification With Protein Fortifiers in an In Vitro Study
Laxman Basany, Abid Ali, Naga Priyanka G Gandrakota, Ajay B Kulkarni, Mahevish Tabassum, Harini Manjunath, Vinay Batthula

TL;DR
This study examines how adding protein fortifiers to human milk for preterm infants affects osmolality, finding that careful selection of fortifiers is needed to avoid unsafe levels.
Contribution
The study provides specific osmolality thresholds for different fortifiers, guiding safe fortification practices for preterm infants.
Findings
Adding 1 g of preterm formula increased EBM osmolality to 384 mOsm/kg.
MCF4 resulted in the highest osmolality (428 mOsm/kg) when added to fortified milk.
Adding 1 g of protein fortifier exceeded safe osmolality thresholds with some MCFs but not others.
Abstract
Background: Individualized fortification of human milk with protein fortifiers (PFs) and fat fortifiers (FFs) helps optimize the nutritional requirements of preterm infants but increases osmolality. This study aims to evaluate the impact of PFs and FFs on the osmolality of human milk fortified with multi-component fortifiers (MCFs). Methods: The osmolality of 25 mL of expressed breast milk (EBM) was measured with six MCFs (1 g each), preterm formula (PTF), PF, and FF separately. Additionally, the osmolality of 25 mL of sterile water was measured with 1 g of each MCF separately. PF was added in increasing amounts (0.5, 1, 1.5, and 2 g) to fortified human milk (FHM), and the maximum amount of PF that could be added without exceeding the osmolality of 450 mOsm/kg was determined. Results: The osmolality of EBM was 288 mOsm/kg, which increased to 384 mOsm/kg with the addition of 1 g of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsInfant Nutrition and Health · Clinical Nutrition and Gastroenterology · Child Nutrition and Water Access
