| Literature DB >> 31713886 |
Sávio Dos Santos Barbosa1, Ana Paula da Fonseca Arcoverde Cabral Mello1, Viviane de Oliveira Nogueira1, Ially Fabiane da Silva1, Palloma Emanuelle Dornelas de Melo1, Carlos Renato Dos Santos2, João Henrique da Costa-Silva1, Alice Valença Araújo2.
Abstract
Maternal undernutrition may cause injuries in several organs of the offspring, as well as lead to diseases in adulthood. Obesity and/or the consumption of a high-fat diet may also induce metabolic and cardiorespiratory diseases. We hypothesized that the consumption of a post-weaning high-fat diet would potentiate the deleterious effects of maternal protein undernutrition. This study evaluated the effects of the association of a low-protein diet during gestation and lactation with a post-weaning high-fat diet on the biochemical and ventilatory parameters of rats. Male Wistar rats from mothers who received a low-protein (9% of protein) or normoprotein diet during pregnancy and lactation received a high-fat (32% of total kilocalories from lipids) or a normal fat diet after weaning. Mass gain and somatic growth of the offspring were monitored. Also examined were biochemical chemical parameters and respiratory frequency, tidal volume (volume of air displaced in each normal respiratory cycle when extra effort is not applied), and pulmonary ventilation. Offspring from undernourished mothers presented lower birth weight (P = .0225), which remained until the end of lactation (P < .01). The rats that consumed high-fat diet and had been submitted to maternal undernutrition presented higher tidal volume when compared to the ones that consumed control diet at the 21st day of life (P ˂ .05). At 30 and 90 days, no further ventilatory changes were observed. Our data show that the consumption of a high-fat diet post-weaning did not seem to potentiate the changes induced by maternal undernutrition.Entities:
Keywords: biochemical parameters; body patterning; high-fat diet; maternal diet; protein undernutrition; ventilatory parameters
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31713886 DOI: 10.1111/1440-1681.13210
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Exp Pharmacol Physiol ISSN: 0305-1870 Impact factor: 2.557