Title: Nutrition 526 - 10/4/2002
1Nutrition 526 - 10/4/2002
2Topics
- Pregnancy Data
- Intergenerational Nutritional Effects
- Fetal Growth and Chronic Disease
- Public Health Approaches to Nutrition and
Pregnancy
3Health, United States, 2002 www.cdc.gov/nchs/hus
.htm
- What does the pregnant/parenting population look
like? - What have the trends been?
- Whos not having babies?
4Emerging Understandings about Nutrition in
Pregnancy
- Fetal nutritional status is affected by the
intrauterine and childhood nutritional
experiences of the mother - Maternal nutritional status at time of conception
is an important determinant of outcomes - Intrauterine nutritional environment affects
health and development of the fetus throughout
life
5Emerging Understandings about Nutrition in
Pregnancy
- Periods of critical development are key when
considering effects of nutrition in pregnancy.
Undernutrition has different effects at different
times of life. - Societies transitioning from chronic malnutrition
to access to high calorie foods are at high risk
of chronic disease due to lasting effects of
early nutritional status
6Emerging Understandings about Nutrition in
Pregnancy (Coming Attractions.)
- Pregnancy is a period of increased flexibility in
metabolism and absorption of energy and
nutrients.
7Effect of Womens own Intrauterine Nutritional
Experience her Offspring
8Two Studies of Effects of Maternal Birthweight on
Infant Birthweight
9Godfrey KM, Barker DJP, Robinson S, Osmond C.
Mother's birthweight and diet in pregnancy in
relation to the baby's thinness at birth. Br J
Obstet Gynaecol 19971046637
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11Illinois StudyCoutinho et al. Am J Epi, 1997
146804-809
- N15,287 Black and 117,708 white matched pairs of
infants and mothers. - Mothers were born between 1956-75, infants
between 1989-1991
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13Results
- Fathers birthweight had effect on infant
birthweight but not as strong as mothers. - In multiple linear regression for infants who
weighed more than 2500 g, parental birthweight
accounted for 5 of variance among black infants
and 4 among white infants. - (included parental age, years of schooling,
matiral status and adequacy of prenatal care)
14Results, cont.
- Each 100 g increase in maternal birthweight was
associated with 24-27 g increase in infant
birthweight
15Influence of Maternal Intrauterine Childhood
Nutrition on Outcomes of Pregnancy
16Reproductive performance and nutrition during
childhood
- Nutrition Reviews Washington Apr 1996
Martorell, Reynaldo Ramakrishnan, Usha
Schroeder, Dirk G Ruel, Marie
17Longitudinal Supplementation Trial (1969-1977)
- Guatemala, 4 Villages, one pair of villages had
about 900 people each and the other about 500
each. - 2 each randomized to
- Atole (Incaparina, a vegetable protein mix
developed by INCAP, dry skim milk, sugar, and
flavoring, 163 kcal/cup, 11/5 g protein) - Fresco (flavored drink with sugar, vitamins and
minerals, 59 kcal/cup)
Institute of Nutrition of Central America and
Panama
18- Feeding center was open daily for over 7 years,
from 1969 to 1977. - Anyone in the village could attend, but careful
recording of consumption, including of additional
servings as well as of leftovers, was done only
for women who were pregnant or breastfeeding and
for children 7 years or younger. - Supplements were available twice daily, in
midmorning and midafternoon, so as not to
interfere with meal times.
19Conceptual framework
- Malnutrition in early childhood constrains the
future capacity of women to bear healthy newborns
and their ability to feed and care for them, and
through these mechanisms the growth and
development of the next generation.
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25Follow-Up data - 1990s
- The prevalence of low birthweight is currently
12 in Atole villages (n 65) and 28 in Fresco
villages (n 58) among women exposed to the
supplements during the intrauterine period and
the first 3 years of life. - Mean birthweights are 2.90 kg in Atole villages
and 2.73 in Fresco villages.
26Role of intergenerational effects on linear
growth
- U Ramakrishnan R Martorell D G
- Schroeder R Flores The Journal of Nutrition
Bethesda Feb 1999
27Methods
- The sample was restricted to singleton, term (gt37
wk of gestation) births that occurred in the four
study villages between 1991 and 1996, to women
who were born during the original longitudinal
study (1969-1977) - Complete data were available for 215 mother-child
pairs, and 60 of the mothers (n 140)
28Results
- For every 100 g increase in maternal birth
weight, her infant's birth weight increased by 29
g after adjusting for the effects of maternal
age, gestational age and sex of the infant. This
relationship was highly significant (P lt 0.001) - For every centimeter increase in maternal birth
length, her child's birth weight increased by 53
g.
29Influence of Maternal Nutrition in Pregnancy
30Dutch Famine StudiesSusser and Stein, Nutrition
Reviews, 1994
- Dutch famine winter lasted 6 months, from
November 1944- when nazis imposed transport
embargo on west Holland until- - May 7, 1945 when Holland was liberated from the
occupation - Strong evidence for critical stages of
development in several physiological systems
31Affects of Famine
- Fertility decreased
- Maternal weight fell during pregnancy with famine
exposure - Third trimester famine exposure had strong effect
on birthweight - Third trimester famine exposure was associated
with infant mortality at 30-90 days
32Results for Infants Exposed to Famine
- Excess central nervous system disorders (such as
NTD) - Exposure early in gestation associated with
excess obesity in young men (military records)
and women - Famine exposure late in pregancy associated with
less obesity in young adulthood - Famine exposure associated with twofold risk of
schizophrenia in 50 year old women.
33Second Generation
- Modest association found in this cohort between
birthweights of mothers and their offspring.
34Prenatal exposure to famine and brain morphology
in schizophrenia
- Hulshoff Pol HE Hoek HW Susser E Brown AS
Dingemans A Schnack HG van Haren NE Pereira
Ramos LM Gispen-de Wied CC Kahn RS American
Journal of Psychiatry , Jul 2000
35Methods
- Nine schizophrenic patients and nine healthy
comparison subjects exposed during the first
trimester of gestation to the Dutch Hunger Winter
were evaluated with magnetic resonance brain
imaging, as were nine schizophrenic patients and
nine healthy subjects who were not prenatally
exposed to the famine.
36RESULTS
- Prenatal famine exposure in patients with
schizophrenia was associated with decreased
intracranial volume. - Prenatal Hunger Winter exposure alone was related
to an increase in brain abnormalities,
predominantly white matter hyperintensities.
37Further evidence of relation between prenatal
famine and major affective disorder.
- Alan S Brown Jim van Os Corine Driessens Hans
W Hoek et al The American Journal of
Psychiatry Washington Feb 2000
38Methods
- Compared the risk of major affective disorder
requiring hospitalization in birth cohorts who
were and were not exposed, in each trimester of
gestation, to famine during the Dutch Hunger
Winter of 1944-1945.
39Results
- The risk of developing major affective disorder
requiring hospitalization was increased for
subjects with exposure to famine in the second
trimester and was increased significantly for
subjects with exposure in the third trimester,
relative to unexposed subjects.
40Fetal Nutrition and Chronic Diseases of Adulthood
41Fetal Origins ConceptsBarker et al
- Nutrition in early life has permanent effects
- Undernutrition has different effects at different
times of life. - Rapidly growing fetuses and neonates are
vulnerable to undernutrition - Undernutrition results from inadequate maternal
intake, transport, or transfer of nutrients.
42Coronary heart disease death rates, expressed as
standardized mortality ratios, in 10,141 men and
5585 women born in Hertfordshire, United Kingdom,
from 1911 to 1930, according to birth weight.
(Osmond C, Barker DJP, Winter PD, Fall CHD,
Simmonds SJ. Early growth and death from
cardiovascular disease in women. BMJ
1993307151924)
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44Catch-up growth in childhood and death from
coronary heart disease longitudinal study
(Eriksson et al, BMJ, 1999)
- Subjects 3641 men born in Helsinki between
1924-1933 - Followed with school data for weight and height
- Deaths from coronary heart disease from 1971-95
(standardized mortality ratios) were endpoints.
45Catch-up growth in childhood and death from
coronary heart disease longitudinalstudy
(Eriksson et al, BMJ, 1999
- Men who had low birth weight or were thin at
birth have high death rates from coronary heart
disease - Death rates are even higher if weight "catches
up" in early childhood - Death from coronary heart disease may be a
consequence of prenatal undernutrition followed
by improved postnatal nutrition - Programs to reduce obesity among boys may need to
focus on those who had low birth weight or who
were thin at birth
46Framework for understanding the maternal
regulation of fetal development and programming.
Keith M Godfrey and David JP Barker (Fetal
nutrition and adult disease Am J Clin Nutr 2000
71 1344-1352)
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48Early Nutrition Chronic Disease in Adulthood
(Waterland Garza, Am J Clin Nutr, 199969179-97)
- Epi studies BMI, CVD, Htn, IGT
- Animal studies
- Potential mechanisms of metabolic imprinting
49Obesity in Young Men after Famine Exposure in
Utero and early Infancy(Ravelli et al NEJM, 1976)
- N300, 000 Dutch military inductees at age 19
- Famine exposure in first 2 trimesters lead to 80
higher prevalence of overweight (plt0.0005) - Famine exposure in last trimester or famine
exposure in first 5 months of life associated
with 40 lower prevalence of overweight (plt0.005)
50BMI
- The relationship between birth weight and BMI
complicates studies of birth weight and chronic
disease
51Preadult Influences on Cardiovascular Disease and
Cancer (Leon Ben-Shlomo in A Lifecourse
approach to chronic disease epidemiology, 1997)
- 5 large retrospective studies - 4 found inverse
relationship between birth weight and adult CVD - Confounding issues include SES and BMI
52CVD
- The preponderance of data suggest an inverse
association between birth weight and adult CVD
risk. (Waterland and Garza)
53Blood Pressure
- Retrospective studies in diverse populations
have found that birth weight is inversely
correlated with adult blood pressure. Although
each of the studies has some weaknesses, together
they support a biological link between
intrauterine growth and adult blood pressure
(Waterland and Garza)
54Impaired Glucose Tolerance
- Several large retrospective cohort studies in
several countries have found relationship between
bw and IGT. - 266 men and women at age 50 odds ratio for ITG
or type II diabetes were 3.5 for men and 12 for
women with birth weights lt 2.5 compared to gt3.4
(Phillips et al, Diabetologia, 1994)
55Impaired Glucose Tolerance, cont..
- In some populations (ex Pima Indians) both high
and low birth weights are associated with IGT in
adults.
56Animal Models (Waterland and Garza)
- Overall the data from animal models of metabolic
imprinting support the observed epidemiological
associations.
57Metabolic Imprinting
- the basic biological phenomena that putatively
underlie relations among nutritional experiences
of early life and later diseases.
58Metabolic Imprinting Characteristics
- Susceptibility limited to a critical ontogenic
window early in development - Persistent effect lasting through adulthood
- Specific and measurable outcome
- Dose-response or threshold relation between
exposure and outcome
59Metabolic Imprinting Potential Mechanisms
- Organ structure
- Cell number
- Clonal selection
- Metabolic differentiation
60Organ Structure
- Organogenesis starts early by 5 weeks
rudimentary organs are in place, by 8 weeks
organogenesis is nearly complete - Driven by inductive signals from adjacent cells
and morphogen gradients (ex retinoic acid/vit.
A) - Local concentrations of nutrients and metabolites
may modulate this process.
61Cell Number
- Tissues go through limited periods of
hyperplastic and hypertrophic growth - Rate of growth is dependent on nutrient
availability - Winnicks rat studies found severe malnutrition
during critical periods limited brain cell number
- An organs metabolic activity is limited by cell
number
62Clonal Selection
- Each organ is based on a finite number of founder
cells which may have slight differences - Founder cells that divide the most rapidly may
disproportionally make up a tissue - Nutrient availability may select cells with
certain characteristics - Ex cells with more active lipogenic pathways
could grow faster if access to fatty acids was
limited
63Metabolic Differentiation
- Process cells develop stable patterns of basal
and inducible gene expression - Cells are characterized by the ability to express
a limited number of genes. - Mechanisms of control include
- chromatin structure (DNA packaging)
- transcription factors (maintained through cell
divisions) - DNA methylation
64Metabolic Imprinting
- Early nutrition may influence the cascade that
establishes cell specific patterns. - Ex hepatocyte polyploidization - in adults
hepatocytes often have gt normal complement of
chromosomes and increased metabolic activity.
Lack of polyploidization could limit hepatic
metabolic activity.
65Catch-up growth in childhood and death from
coronary heart disease longitudinal study
(Eriksson et al, BMJ, 1999)
- Subjects 3641 men born in Helsinki between
1924-1933 - Followed with school data for weight and height
- Deaths from coronary heart disease from 1971-95
(standardized mortality ratios) were endpoints.
66Catch-up growth in childhood and death from
coronary heart disease longitudinal study
(Eriksson et al, BMJ, 1999
- Men who had low birth weight or were thin at
birth have high death rates from coronary heart
disease - Death rates are even higher if weight "catches
up" in early childhood - Death from coronary heart disease may be a
consequence of prenatal undernutrition followed
by improved postnatal nutrition - Programs to reduce obesity among boys may need to
focus on those who had low birth weight or who
were thin at birth
67Public Health Approaches to Nutrition and
Pregnancy
68Highlights of Trends in Pregnancies and Pregnancy
Rates by Outcome Estimates for the United
States, 1976-96
- Ventura et al., National Vital Statistics
Reports. 4729, 1999.
69Basic US Data
- In 1996 there were
- 6.24 million pregnancies
- 3.89 live births
- 1.37 induced abortions
- 0.98 fetal losses
- 1996 pregnancy rate was 104.7 pregnancies per
1000 women aged 15044 - 9 lower than 1990
70Effects of pregnancy planning status on birth
outcomes and infant care (Kost et al. Family
Planning Perspectives, 1998)
- Analysis of 1988 NMIHS (n9122) and NSFG (n2548)
data.
71Effects of pregnancy planning status on birth
outcomes and infant care (Kost et al. Family
Planning Perspectives, 1998)
72Effects of pregnancy planning status on birth
outcomes and infant care (Kost et al. Family
Planning Perspectives, 1998)
- Knowing the planning status of a pregnancy can
help identify women who may need support to
engage in prenatal behaviors that are associated
with healthy outcomes and appropriate infant
care.
73Surveillance for Pregnancy
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80Healthy People 2010 Goals Related to Maternal and
Infant Nutrition
81Reduce low birth weight (LBW) and very low birth
weight (VLBW).
82Reduce preterm births
83Increase the proportion of mothers who achieve a
recommended weight gain during their pregnancies.
(Developmental)
- In 1988, approximately three-quarters of married
women who delivered at full term gained the
recommended weight during pregnancy.71 Two groups
of women who continue to gain less than the
recommended level of weight during
pregnancyteenagers and African American
womenalso are at particularly high risk for
having LBW infants and other adverse pregnancy
outcomes
84Reduce the occurrence of spina bifida and other
neural tube defects (NTDs)
- Target 3 new cases per 10,000 live births.
- Baseline 6 new cases of spina bifida or another
NTD per 10,000 live births in 1996.
85Increase the proportion of pregnancies begun with
an optimum folic acid level.
86Increase abstinence from alcohol, cigarettes, and
illicit drugs among pregnant women
87Reduce the occurrence of fetal alcohol
syndrome(FAS).(Developmental)
- Estimates of the cases of FAS vary from 0.2 to
1.0 per 1,000 live births.
88Increase the proportion of mothers who breastfeed
their babies
89Increase smoking cessation during pregnancy
- Target 30 percent.
- Baseline 12 percent smoking cessation during the
first trimester of pregnancy in 1991 (age
adjusted to the year 2000 standard population).
90Reduce growth retardation among low income
children under age 5 years
- Target 5 percent.
- Baseline 8 percent of low-income children under
age 5 years were growth retarded in 1997 (defined
as height-for-age below the fifth percentile in
the age-gender appropriate population using the
1977 NCHS/CDC growth charts31 preliminary data
not age adjusted).
91Reduce iron deficiency among young children and
females of childbearing age.
92Reduce anemia among low-income pregnant females
in their third trimester
- Target 20 percent.
- Baseline 29 percent of low-income pregnant
females in their third trimester were anemic
(defined as hemoglobin lt 11.0 g/dL) in 1996
93Anemia Rates - 1996
- African American, non-Hispanic 44
- American Indian/Alaska Native 31
- Asian/Pacific Islander 26
- Hispanic 25
- White, non-Hispanic 24
94Reduce iron deficiency among pregnant females
(Developmental)
- Although the prevalence of iron deficiency among
low-income children continued to decline from
1976-80 to 1988-94, the prevalence of iron
deficiency among all young children remained the
same, and the prevalence of iron deficiency among
females of childbearing age actually increased