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Use of water turnover method to measure mother’s milk flow in a rat model: Application to dams receiving a low protein diet during gestation and lactation

Assessment of milk production is of utmost relevance for pediatricians and scientists interested in early life nutrition. The weight-suckle-weight (WSW) method, which consists of weighing babies before and after they suckle their mother, uses the difference in body weight as an estimate of milk inta...

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Autores principales: Sevrin, Thomas, Alexandre-Gouabau, Marie-Cécile, Darmaun, Dominique, Palvadeau, Antoine, André, Agnès, Nguyen, Patrick, Ouguerram, Khadija, Boquien, Clair-Yves
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5513591/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28715436
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0180550
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author Sevrin, Thomas
Alexandre-Gouabau, Marie-Cécile
Darmaun, Dominique
Palvadeau, Antoine
André, Agnès
Nguyen, Patrick
Ouguerram, Khadija
Boquien, Clair-Yves
author_facet Sevrin, Thomas
Alexandre-Gouabau, Marie-Cécile
Darmaun, Dominique
Palvadeau, Antoine
André, Agnès
Nguyen, Patrick
Ouguerram, Khadija
Boquien, Clair-Yves
author_sort Sevrin, Thomas
collection PubMed
description Assessment of milk production is of utmost relevance for pediatricians and scientists interested in early life nutrition. The weight-suckle-weight (WSW) method, which consists of weighing babies before and after they suckle their mother, uses the difference in body weight as an estimate of milk intake. However, this is prone to many sources of error. In the current study, we used for the first time the water turnover method and compartmental analysis with deuterated water (D(2)O) as a non-toxic tracer to quantify in vivo milk production in a rat model. We assessed the effect of a nutritional intervention presumed to affect milk production, a maternal dietary protein restriction during gestation and lactation, which results in the birth of pups with intrauterine growth restriction. The specific aim of this study was to determine milk production with the body water turnover method in rat dams receiving during gestation and lactation, either a control diet (NP) or an iso-caloric low-protein diet (LP). In NP dams, mass of dam’s total body water, output flow constant from dam to litter (K21) and median milk flow, calculated between days 11 to 14 after pup birth, were 282.1 g, 0.0122 h(-1) and 3.30 g/h for NP dams, respectively. Maternal dietary protein restriction (-59%) during perinatal period led to a 34% reduction in milk flow (NP versus LP). With the WSW method, milk flow varied from 1.96 g/h to 2.37 g/h between days 11 to 14 for NP dams. The main advantage of the D(2)0 method compared to the WSW method stems from its higher precision, as attested by the narrowest range of measured values of milk flow ([2.90; 3.75] and [0.98; 6.85] g/h, respectively) for NP group. This method could be suitable for testing the effectiveness of candidate galactologue molecules presumed to enhance milk production in the lactating rat model.
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spelling pubmed-55135912017-08-07 Use of water turnover method to measure mother’s milk flow in a rat model: Application to dams receiving a low protein diet during gestation and lactation Sevrin, Thomas Alexandre-Gouabau, Marie-Cécile Darmaun, Dominique Palvadeau, Antoine André, Agnès Nguyen, Patrick Ouguerram, Khadija Boquien, Clair-Yves PLoS One Research Article Assessment of milk production is of utmost relevance for pediatricians and scientists interested in early life nutrition. The weight-suckle-weight (WSW) method, which consists of weighing babies before and after they suckle their mother, uses the difference in body weight as an estimate of milk intake. However, this is prone to many sources of error. In the current study, we used for the first time the water turnover method and compartmental analysis with deuterated water (D(2)O) as a non-toxic tracer to quantify in vivo milk production in a rat model. We assessed the effect of a nutritional intervention presumed to affect milk production, a maternal dietary protein restriction during gestation and lactation, which results in the birth of pups with intrauterine growth restriction. The specific aim of this study was to determine milk production with the body water turnover method in rat dams receiving during gestation and lactation, either a control diet (NP) or an iso-caloric low-protein diet (LP). In NP dams, mass of dam’s total body water, output flow constant from dam to litter (K21) and median milk flow, calculated between days 11 to 14 after pup birth, were 282.1 g, 0.0122 h(-1) and 3.30 g/h for NP dams, respectively. Maternal dietary protein restriction (-59%) during perinatal period led to a 34% reduction in milk flow (NP versus LP). With the WSW method, milk flow varied from 1.96 g/h to 2.37 g/h between days 11 to 14 for NP dams. The main advantage of the D(2)0 method compared to the WSW method stems from its higher precision, as attested by the narrowest range of measured values of milk flow ([2.90; 3.75] and [0.98; 6.85] g/h, respectively) for NP group. This method could be suitable for testing the effectiveness of candidate galactologue molecules presumed to enhance milk production in the lactating rat model. Public Library of Science 2017-07-17 /pmc/articles/PMC5513591/ /pubmed/28715436 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0180550 Text en © 2017 Sevrin 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 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Sevrin, Thomas
Alexandre-Gouabau, Marie-Cécile
Darmaun, Dominique
Palvadeau, Antoine
André, Agnès
Nguyen, Patrick
Ouguerram, Khadija
Boquien, Clair-Yves
Use of water turnover method to measure mother’s milk flow in a rat model: Application to dams receiving a low protein diet during gestation and lactation
title Use of water turnover method to measure mother’s milk flow in a rat model: Application to dams receiving a low protein diet during gestation and lactation
title_full Use of water turnover method to measure mother’s milk flow in a rat model: Application to dams receiving a low protein diet during gestation and lactation
title_fullStr Use of water turnover method to measure mother’s milk flow in a rat model: Application to dams receiving a low protein diet during gestation and lactation
title_full_unstemmed Use of water turnover method to measure mother’s milk flow in a rat model: Application to dams receiving a low protein diet during gestation and lactation
title_short Use of water turnover method to measure mother’s milk flow in a rat model: Application to dams receiving a low protein diet during gestation and lactation
title_sort use of water turnover method to measure mother’s milk flow in a rat model: application to dams receiving a low protein diet during gestation and lactation
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5513591/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28715436
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0180550
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