Cargando…

Reduction in Maternal Energy Intake during Lactation Decreased Maternal Body Weight and Concentrations of Leptin, Insulin and Adiponectin in Human Milk without Affecting Milk Production, Milk Macronutrient Composition or Infant Growth

Maternal diet has the potential to affect human milk (HM) composition, but very few studies have directly assessed the effect of maternal diets on HM composition. The primary aim of this study was to assess the effect of improving dietary quality in lactating women over 2 weeks on the concentrations...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Leghi, Gabriela E., Netting, Merryn J., Lai, Ching T., Narayanan, Ardra, Dymock, Michael, Rea, Alethea, Wlodek, Mary E., Geddes, Donna T., Muhlhausler, Beverly S.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8227075/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34072910
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nu13061892
_version_ 1783712439082156032
author Leghi, Gabriela E.
Netting, Merryn J.
Lai, Ching T.
Narayanan, Ardra
Dymock, Michael
Rea, Alethea
Wlodek, Mary E.
Geddes, Donna T.
Muhlhausler, Beverly S.
author_facet Leghi, Gabriela E.
Netting, Merryn J.
Lai, Ching T.
Narayanan, Ardra
Dymock, Michael
Rea, Alethea
Wlodek, Mary E.
Geddes, Donna T.
Muhlhausler, Beverly S.
author_sort Leghi, Gabriela E.
collection PubMed
description Maternal diet has the potential to affect human milk (HM) composition, but very few studies have directly assessed the effect of maternal diets on HM composition. The primary aim of this study was to assess the effect of improving dietary quality in lactating women over 2 weeks on the concentrations of macronutrients and metabolic hormones in HM. The secondary aims were to assess the impact of the dietary intervention on 24 h milk production, maternal body composition and infant growth. Fifteen women completed a 1-week baseline period followed by a 2-week dietary intervention phase targeted towards reducing fat and sugar intake. Maternal anthropometric and body composition and infant growth measurements were performed weekly. Total 24 h milk production was measured before and after the dietary intervention, and HM samples were collected daily. Maternal intakes of energy (−33%), carbohydrate (−22%), sugar (−29%), fat (−54%) and saturated fat (−63%) were significantly reduced during the dietary intervention. HM insulin, leptin and adiponectin concentrations were 10–25% lower at the end of the dietary intervention, but HM concentrations of macronutrients were unaffected. Maternal body weight (−1.8%) and fat mass (−6.3%) were significantly reduced at the end of the dietary intervention, but there were no effects on 24 h milk production or infant growth. These results suggest that reducing maternal energy, carbohydrate, fat and sugar intake over a 2-week period is associated with significant reductions in HM insulin, leptin and adiponectin concentrations. These changes may be secondary to decreases in maternal weight and fat mass. The limited studies to date that have investigated the association between metabolic hormone concentrations in HM and infant growth raise the possibility that the changes in HM composition observed in the current study could impact infant growth and adiposity, but further studies are required to confirm this hypothesis.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-8227075
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2021
publisher MDPI
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-82270752021-06-26 Reduction in Maternal Energy Intake during Lactation Decreased Maternal Body Weight and Concentrations of Leptin, Insulin and Adiponectin in Human Milk without Affecting Milk Production, Milk Macronutrient Composition or Infant Growth Leghi, Gabriela E. Netting, Merryn J. Lai, Ching T. Narayanan, Ardra Dymock, Michael Rea, Alethea Wlodek, Mary E. Geddes, Donna T. Muhlhausler, Beverly S. Nutrients Article Maternal diet has the potential to affect human milk (HM) composition, but very few studies have directly assessed the effect of maternal diets on HM composition. The primary aim of this study was to assess the effect of improving dietary quality in lactating women over 2 weeks on the concentrations of macronutrients and metabolic hormones in HM. The secondary aims were to assess the impact of the dietary intervention on 24 h milk production, maternal body composition and infant growth. Fifteen women completed a 1-week baseline period followed by a 2-week dietary intervention phase targeted towards reducing fat and sugar intake. Maternal anthropometric and body composition and infant growth measurements were performed weekly. Total 24 h milk production was measured before and after the dietary intervention, and HM samples were collected daily. Maternal intakes of energy (−33%), carbohydrate (−22%), sugar (−29%), fat (−54%) and saturated fat (−63%) were significantly reduced during the dietary intervention. HM insulin, leptin and adiponectin concentrations were 10–25% lower at the end of the dietary intervention, but HM concentrations of macronutrients were unaffected. Maternal body weight (−1.8%) and fat mass (−6.3%) were significantly reduced at the end of the dietary intervention, but there were no effects on 24 h milk production or infant growth. These results suggest that reducing maternal energy, carbohydrate, fat and sugar intake over a 2-week period is associated with significant reductions in HM insulin, leptin and adiponectin concentrations. These changes may be secondary to decreases in maternal weight and fat mass. The limited studies to date that have investigated the association between metabolic hormone concentrations in HM and infant growth raise the possibility that the changes in HM composition observed in the current study could impact infant growth and adiposity, but further studies are required to confirm this hypothesis. MDPI 2021-05-31 /pmc/articles/PMC8227075/ /pubmed/34072910 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nu13061892 Text en © 2021 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Leghi, Gabriela E.
Netting, Merryn J.
Lai, Ching T.
Narayanan, Ardra
Dymock, Michael
Rea, Alethea
Wlodek, Mary E.
Geddes, Donna T.
Muhlhausler, Beverly S.
Reduction in Maternal Energy Intake during Lactation Decreased Maternal Body Weight and Concentrations of Leptin, Insulin and Adiponectin in Human Milk without Affecting Milk Production, Milk Macronutrient Composition or Infant Growth
title Reduction in Maternal Energy Intake during Lactation Decreased Maternal Body Weight and Concentrations of Leptin, Insulin and Adiponectin in Human Milk without Affecting Milk Production, Milk Macronutrient Composition or Infant Growth
title_full Reduction in Maternal Energy Intake during Lactation Decreased Maternal Body Weight and Concentrations of Leptin, Insulin and Adiponectin in Human Milk without Affecting Milk Production, Milk Macronutrient Composition or Infant Growth
title_fullStr Reduction in Maternal Energy Intake during Lactation Decreased Maternal Body Weight and Concentrations of Leptin, Insulin and Adiponectin in Human Milk without Affecting Milk Production, Milk Macronutrient Composition or Infant Growth
title_full_unstemmed Reduction in Maternal Energy Intake during Lactation Decreased Maternal Body Weight and Concentrations of Leptin, Insulin and Adiponectin in Human Milk without Affecting Milk Production, Milk Macronutrient Composition or Infant Growth
title_short Reduction in Maternal Energy Intake during Lactation Decreased Maternal Body Weight and Concentrations of Leptin, Insulin and Adiponectin in Human Milk without Affecting Milk Production, Milk Macronutrient Composition or Infant Growth
title_sort reduction in maternal energy intake during lactation decreased maternal body weight and concentrations of leptin, insulin and adiponectin in human milk without affecting milk production, milk macronutrient composition or infant growth
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8227075/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34072910
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nu13061892
work_keys_str_mv AT leghigabrielae reductioninmaternalenergyintakeduringlactationdecreasedmaternalbodyweightandconcentrationsofleptininsulinandadiponectininhumanmilkwithoutaffectingmilkproductionmilkmacronutrientcompositionorinfantgrowth
AT nettingmerrynj reductioninmaternalenergyintakeduringlactationdecreasedmaternalbodyweightandconcentrationsofleptininsulinandadiponectininhumanmilkwithoutaffectingmilkproductionmilkmacronutrientcompositionorinfantgrowth
AT laichingt reductioninmaternalenergyintakeduringlactationdecreasedmaternalbodyweightandconcentrationsofleptininsulinandadiponectininhumanmilkwithoutaffectingmilkproductionmilkmacronutrientcompositionorinfantgrowth
AT narayananardra reductioninmaternalenergyintakeduringlactationdecreasedmaternalbodyweightandconcentrationsofleptininsulinandadiponectininhumanmilkwithoutaffectingmilkproductionmilkmacronutrientcompositionorinfantgrowth
AT dymockmichael reductioninmaternalenergyintakeduringlactationdecreasedmaternalbodyweightandconcentrationsofleptininsulinandadiponectininhumanmilkwithoutaffectingmilkproductionmilkmacronutrientcompositionorinfantgrowth
AT reaalethea reductioninmaternalenergyintakeduringlactationdecreasedmaternalbodyweightandconcentrationsofleptininsulinandadiponectininhumanmilkwithoutaffectingmilkproductionmilkmacronutrientcompositionorinfantgrowth
AT wlodekmarye reductioninmaternalenergyintakeduringlactationdecreasedmaternalbodyweightandconcentrationsofleptininsulinandadiponectininhumanmilkwithoutaffectingmilkproductionmilkmacronutrientcompositionorinfantgrowth
AT geddesdonnat reductioninmaternalenergyintakeduringlactationdecreasedmaternalbodyweightandconcentrationsofleptininsulinandadiponectininhumanmilkwithoutaffectingmilkproductionmilkmacronutrientcompositionorinfantgrowth
AT muhlhauslerbeverlys reductioninmaternalenergyintakeduringlactationdecreasedmaternalbodyweightandconcentrationsofleptininsulinandadiponectininhumanmilkwithoutaffectingmilkproductionmilkmacronutrientcompositionorinfantgrowth