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High-Protein Diet in Lactation Leads to a Sudden Infant Death-Like Syndrome in Mice

BACKGROUND: It is well accepted that reduced foetal growth and development resulting from maternal malnutrition are associated with a number of chronic conditions in later life. On the other hand such generation-transcending effects of over-nutrition and of high-protein consumption in pregnancy and...

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Autores principales: Walther, Thomas, Dietrich, Nils, Langhammer, Martina, Kucia, Marzena, Hammon, Harald, Renne, Ulla, Siems, Wolf-Eberhard, Metges, Cornelia C.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3052301/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21408058
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0017443
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author Walther, Thomas
Dietrich, Nils
Langhammer, Martina
Kucia, Marzena
Hammon, Harald
Renne, Ulla
Siems, Wolf-Eberhard
Metges, Cornelia C.
author_facet Walther, Thomas
Dietrich, Nils
Langhammer, Martina
Kucia, Marzena
Hammon, Harald
Renne, Ulla
Siems, Wolf-Eberhard
Metges, Cornelia C.
author_sort Walther, Thomas
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: It is well accepted that reduced foetal growth and development resulting from maternal malnutrition are associated with a number of chronic conditions in later life. On the other hand such generation-transcending effects of over-nutrition and of high-protein consumption in pregnancy and lactation, a proven fact in all developed societies, are widely unknown. Thus, we intended to describe the generation-transcending effects of a high-protein diet, covering most relevant topics of human life like embryonic mortality, infant death, and physical health in later life. METHODS: Female mice received control food (21% protein) or were fed a high protein diet (42% protein) during mating. After fertilisation, females stayed on their respective diet until weaning. At birth, pups were put to foster mothers who were fed with standard food or with HP diet. After weaning, control diet was fed to all mice. All offspring were monitored up to 360 days after birth. We determined glucose-tolerance and measured cardiovascular parameters using a tip-catheter. Finally, abdominal fat amount was measured. RESULTS AND CONCLUSIONS: We identified a worried impact of high-protein diet during pregnancy on dams' body weight gain, body weight of newborns, number of offspring, and also survival in later life. Even more important is the discovery that high-protein diet during lactation caused a more than eight-fold increase in offspring mortality. The observed higher newborn mortality during lactation is a hitherto non-described, unique link to the still incompletely understood human sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS). Thus, although offspring of lactating mothers on high-protein diet might have the advantage of lower abdominal fat within the second half of life, this benefit seems not to compensate the immense risk of an early sudden death during lactation. Our data may implicate that both pregnant women and lactating mothers should not follow classical high-protein diets.
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spelling pubmed-30523012011-03-15 High-Protein Diet in Lactation Leads to a Sudden Infant Death-Like Syndrome in Mice Walther, Thomas Dietrich, Nils Langhammer, Martina Kucia, Marzena Hammon, Harald Renne, Ulla Siems, Wolf-Eberhard Metges, Cornelia C. PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: It is well accepted that reduced foetal growth and development resulting from maternal malnutrition are associated with a number of chronic conditions in later life. On the other hand such generation-transcending effects of over-nutrition and of high-protein consumption in pregnancy and lactation, a proven fact in all developed societies, are widely unknown. Thus, we intended to describe the generation-transcending effects of a high-protein diet, covering most relevant topics of human life like embryonic mortality, infant death, and physical health in later life. METHODS: Female mice received control food (21% protein) or were fed a high protein diet (42% protein) during mating. After fertilisation, females stayed on their respective diet until weaning. At birth, pups were put to foster mothers who were fed with standard food or with HP diet. After weaning, control diet was fed to all mice. All offspring were monitored up to 360 days after birth. We determined glucose-tolerance and measured cardiovascular parameters using a tip-catheter. Finally, abdominal fat amount was measured. RESULTS AND CONCLUSIONS: We identified a worried impact of high-protein diet during pregnancy on dams' body weight gain, body weight of newborns, number of offspring, and also survival in later life. Even more important is the discovery that high-protein diet during lactation caused a more than eight-fold increase in offspring mortality. The observed higher newborn mortality during lactation is a hitherto non-described, unique link to the still incompletely understood human sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS). Thus, although offspring of lactating mothers on high-protein diet might have the advantage of lower abdominal fat within the second half of life, this benefit seems not to compensate the immense risk of an early sudden death during lactation. Our data may implicate that both pregnant women and lactating mothers should not follow classical high-protein diets. Public Library of Science 2011-03-09 /pmc/articles/PMC3052301/ /pubmed/21408058 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0017443 Text en Walther et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Walther, Thomas
Dietrich, Nils
Langhammer, Martina
Kucia, Marzena
Hammon, Harald
Renne, Ulla
Siems, Wolf-Eberhard
Metges, Cornelia C.
High-Protein Diet in Lactation Leads to a Sudden Infant Death-Like Syndrome in Mice
title High-Protein Diet in Lactation Leads to a Sudden Infant Death-Like Syndrome in Mice
title_full High-Protein Diet in Lactation Leads to a Sudden Infant Death-Like Syndrome in Mice
title_fullStr High-Protein Diet in Lactation Leads to a Sudden Infant Death-Like Syndrome in Mice
title_full_unstemmed High-Protein Diet in Lactation Leads to a Sudden Infant Death-Like Syndrome in Mice
title_short High-Protein Diet in Lactation Leads to a Sudden Infant Death-Like Syndrome in Mice
title_sort high-protein diet in lactation leads to a sudden infant death-like syndrome in mice
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3052301/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21408058
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0017443
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