| Literature DB >> 28663822 |
Tonja R Nansel1, Leah M Lipsky1, Anna Maria Siega-Riz2, Kyle Burger3, Myles Faith4, Aiyi Liu5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The rising prevalence of maternal overweight/obesity and excessive gestational weight gain poses a serious public health concern due to the contribution of these factors to increased risk of negative health outcomes for both mother and child. Scant intervention research has indicated moderate short-term improvement in maternal diet and gestational weight gain, with little evidence of long-term behavior change, in parallel with findings from interventions outside of pregnancy. Recent laboratory-based findings from neuroscience implicate aberrant reward processing of food at the brain level ("food reward sensitivity," the between-individual variation in the response to food stimuli) as a contributor to eating beyond energy needs. However, scant research has examined the influence of these processes on weight change in population-based settings, and the relevance of these processes to pregnancy-related weight change has not been explored. The purpose of the Pregnancy Eating Attributes Study (PEAS) is to examine the role of food reward sensitivity in maternal diet and weight change during pregnancy and postpartum. The study examines the interplay of food reward sensitivity with behavioral control, home food environment, and related aspects of eating behavior in the context of weight-related biomedical, psychosocial, genetic and behavioral factors including physical activity, stress, sleep and depression.Entities:
Keywords: Diet; Eating behavior; Food reward sensitivity; Gestational weight gain; Postpartum weight retention; Pregnancy
Year: 2016 PMID: 28663822 PMCID: PMC5486996 DOI: 10.1186/s40795-016-0083-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Nutr ISSN: 2055-0928
Fig. 1Pregnancy Eating Attributes Study (PEAS) conceptual model
Pregnancy Eating Attributes Study (PEAS) data collection and schedule
| Pregnancy | Delivery | Postpartum | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1-15 | 16-27 | 28-36 | 4–14 | 23–31 | 37–41 | 50–58 | ||
| Dietary Intake | ||||||||
| 24-hour Dietary Recall [ | X | X | X | X | X | |||
| Food Reward | ||||||||
| Power of Food Scale [ | X | X | X | X | ||||
| Cravings & Aversions | X | X | X | |||||
| Modified Yale Food Addiction Scale [ | X | X | ||||||
| Food Ratings [ | X | X | X | |||||
| Food Reinforcement Questionnaire [ | X | X | X | X | ||||
| Multiple Choice Procedure [ | X | X | X | |||||
| Behavioral Control | ||||||||
| Delaying Gratification Inventory [ | X | X | ||||||
| Barratt Impulsivity Scale [ | X | X | ||||||
| Other Eating Behaviors | ||||||||
| Dutch Eating Behavior Questionnaire [ | X | X | X | |||||
| Treatment Self -Regulation Questionnaire [ | X | X | ||||||
| Eating Competence [ | X | X | ||||||
| Food Environment | ||||||||
| Home Food Inventory [ | X | X | ||||||
| Infant Dietary Intake and Eating/Feeding Behaviors | ||||||||
| Breastfeeding intention | X | |||||||
| Infant Food Intake and Breastfeeding [ | X | X | X | X | ||||
| Baby Eating Behavior Questionnaire [ | X | |||||||
| Feeding to Soothe [ | X | X | X | |||||
| Additional Health Behaviors | ||||||||
| Physical Activity Questionnaire [ | X | X | X | X | X | |||
| Perceived Stress Scale [ | X | X | X | X | ||||
| Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index [ | X | X | X | X | ||||
| Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale [ | X | X | X | |||||
| Weight History [ | X | |||||||
| Biomedical Data | ||||||||
| Maternal Anthropometrics | X | X | X | X | X | X | ||
| Infant Anthropometrics | X | X | X | |||||
| Maternal Clinical Profile | X | X | X | X | X | |||
| Infant Clinical Profile | X | X | X | |||||
| Maternal Blood[ | X | X | X | X | ||||
| Maternal Urine (first morning) | X | X | ||||||
| Maternal rectal swab | X | X | ||||||
| Cord Blood | X | |||||||
| Infant rectal swab | X | |||||||
The first clinic visit occurs at <12 weeks; self-report measures are completed by week 15
1st and 3rd collection are random; 2nd and 4th are fasting