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Correlations Among Parental and Neonatal Anthropometric Parameters, Feeding Practices and Infant Obesity

BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Infant and adult obesity is becoming a real public health concern in Romania, similar to other countries of the European Union. Maternal obesity and excessive weight gain during pregnancy are proven risk factors for the obesity of the child. The protective role of the breastfeed...

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Autores principales: SABAU, DANIEL, STAMATIN, MARIA, STOICESCU, SILVIA, FILIP, VALERIA, CUCEREA, MANUELA, OGNEAN, LIVIA, BLAGA, LIGIA, AVASILOAIEI, ANDREEA, SIMIONESCU, BIANCA, MIU, NICOLAE
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Iuliu Hatieganu University of Medicine and Pharmacy 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4508598/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26528018
http://dx.doi.org/10.15386/cjmed-294
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author SABAU, DANIEL
STAMATIN, MARIA
STOICESCU, SILVIA
FILIP, VALERIA
CUCEREA, MANUELA
OGNEAN, LIVIA
BLAGA, LIGIA
AVASILOAIEI, ANDREEA
SIMIONESCU, BIANCA
MIU, NICOLAE
author_facet SABAU, DANIEL
STAMATIN, MARIA
STOICESCU, SILVIA
FILIP, VALERIA
CUCEREA, MANUELA
OGNEAN, LIVIA
BLAGA, LIGIA
AVASILOAIEI, ANDREEA
SIMIONESCU, BIANCA
MIU, NICOLAE
author_sort SABAU, DANIEL
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Infant and adult obesity is becoming a real public health concern in Romania, similar to other countries of the European Union. Maternal obesity and excessive weight gain during pregnancy are proven risk factors for the obesity of the child. The protective role of the breastfeeding against obesity has also been demonstrated. The most important issue is whether the choice of a milk formula with the right protein composition could or not protect the newborn from becoming a future obese infant and child. Our study aims to describe the characteristics of a group of macrosomic newborns, in relation to the mothers’ weight gain during pregnancy, mode of delivery, birth weight, complications at birth, time of first feeding and type of feeding during maternity stay. PATIENTS AND METHODS: We conducted a retrospective study on 179 newborns with birth weights >4000 grams, born over a period of three months (March–May) in 6 large maternity hospitals in Romania. RESULTS: the newborns had a mean gestational age of 39.5 weeks and a mean birth weight of 4195 grams. Male newborns were prevalent (74%). More than half were born by Cesarian section and had Apgar scores with a median of 9. Macrosomes are prone to complications at birth and in our study those were mainly hypoglycemia and birth trauma. Time at first feeding was 95 minutes (mean), with a high percentage of formula/mixed feeding (68%). CONCLUSION: Macrosomia itself attracts the risk of birth by cesarean section (54% of study group), birth trauma and a low rate of exclusive breast milk feeding (32% of study group) at discharge.
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spelling pubmed-45085982015-11-02 Correlations Among Parental and Neonatal Anthropometric Parameters, Feeding Practices and Infant Obesity SABAU, DANIEL STAMATIN, MARIA STOICESCU, SILVIA FILIP, VALERIA CUCEREA, MANUELA OGNEAN, LIVIA BLAGA, LIGIA AVASILOAIEI, ANDREEA SIMIONESCU, BIANCA MIU, NICOLAE Clujul Med Original Research BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Infant and adult obesity is becoming a real public health concern in Romania, similar to other countries of the European Union. Maternal obesity and excessive weight gain during pregnancy are proven risk factors for the obesity of the child. The protective role of the breastfeeding against obesity has also been demonstrated. The most important issue is whether the choice of a milk formula with the right protein composition could or not protect the newborn from becoming a future obese infant and child. Our study aims to describe the characteristics of a group of macrosomic newborns, in relation to the mothers’ weight gain during pregnancy, mode of delivery, birth weight, complications at birth, time of first feeding and type of feeding during maternity stay. PATIENTS AND METHODS: We conducted a retrospective study on 179 newborns with birth weights >4000 grams, born over a period of three months (March–May) in 6 large maternity hospitals in Romania. RESULTS: the newborns had a mean gestational age of 39.5 weeks and a mean birth weight of 4195 grams. Male newborns were prevalent (74%). More than half were born by Cesarian section and had Apgar scores with a median of 9. Macrosomes are prone to complications at birth and in our study those were mainly hypoglycemia and birth trauma. Time at first feeding was 95 minutes (mean), with a high percentage of formula/mixed feeding (68%). CONCLUSION: Macrosomia itself attracts the risk of birth by cesarean section (54% of study group), birth trauma and a low rate of exclusive breast milk feeding (32% of study group) at discharge. Iuliu Hatieganu University of Medicine and Pharmacy 2014 2014-08-05 /pmc/articles/PMC4508598/ /pubmed/26528018 http://dx.doi.org/10.15386/cjmed-294 Text en http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License
spellingShingle Original Research
SABAU, DANIEL
STAMATIN, MARIA
STOICESCU, SILVIA
FILIP, VALERIA
CUCEREA, MANUELA
OGNEAN, LIVIA
BLAGA, LIGIA
AVASILOAIEI, ANDREEA
SIMIONESCU, BIANCA
MIU, NICOLAE
Correlations Among Parental and Neonatal Anthropometric Parameters, Feeding Practices and Infant Obesity
title Correlations Among Parental and Neonatal Anthropometric Parameters, Feeding Practices and Infant Obesity
title_full Correlations Among Parental and Neonatal Anthropometric Parameters, Feeding Practices and Infant Obesity
title_fullStr Correlations Among Parental and Neonatal Anthropometric Parameters, Feeding Practices and Infant Obesity
title_full_unstemmed Correlations Among Parental and Neonatal Anthropometric Parameters, Feeding Practices and Infant Obesity
title_short Correlations Among Parental and Neonatal Anthropometric Parameters, Feeding Practices and Infant Obesity
title_sort correlations among parental and neonatal anthropometric parameters, feeding practices and infant obesity
topic Original Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4508598/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26528018
http://dx.doi.org/10.15386/cjmed-294
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