| Literature DB >> 35684517 |
Elena Sinkiewicz-Darol1,2, Iwona Adamczyk1,2, Katarzyna Łubiech1, Gabriela Pilarska1, Magdalena Twarużek1.
Abstract
Breast milk is the optimal food for infants and toddlers, providing basic nutrients. It is also a source of many biologically active substances. Among them are hormones responsible for metabolic balance. One of the hormones taken in with breast milk by a breastfed baby is leptin. This hormone is involved in the regulation of appetite, informing the brain about the body's energy resources. Having the correct mechanisms related to the action of leptin is a factor reducing the risk of obesity. The natural presence of leptin in the composition of breast milk suggests that it has a specific role in shaping the health of a breastfed child. Obesity as a disease of civilization affects more and more people, including children. The development of this disease is multifaceted and determined by many factors, including genetic and environmental factors such as eating habits and low physical activity. Behind obesity, there are complex mechanisms in which many elements of the human body are involved. Understanding the effects of breastfeeding as a natural source of leptin can help prevent childhood obesity and development of this disease in future life.Entities:
Keywords: breast milk; leptin; obesity
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35684517 PMCID: PMC9182392 DOI: 10.3390/molecules27113581
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.927
Variability of the concentration of leptin in human milk.
| Source | Mean Leptin Value in Human Milk | Study Group | Method | Age of Fed |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bronský J. et al. (2006) [ | 0.50 (±1.37) ng/mL | 56 | ELISA (Biovendor-Laboratory Medicine) | 1st week |
| 0.349 (0.031–3.968) ng/mL | 430 | ELISA (Meso Scale Discovery) | 4th month | |
|
0.640 (0.075–4.318) ng/mL 0.484 (0.055–6.576) ng/mL |
135 125 | ELISA (NO COMPANY) | 1st month | |
| Fields D. A. et al. (2012) [ | 0.0918 (±0.0047) ng/mL | 19 | ELISA (NO COMPANY) | 1st month |
| Karatas Z. et al. (2011) [ | BF * Foremilk: 0.33 (0.28–0.50) ng/mL | 26 | ELISA (DRG Instruments) | 2nd month |
|
Milk of non-obese infant: 1.78 (1.67–1.94) ng/mL Milk of obese infant: 1.81 (1.65–1.94) ng/mL |
40 40 | ELISA (Mediagnost) |
2nd–5th month 2nd–5th month | |
|
388.8 (12–3941) ng/mL 269.6 (0.3–2077) ng/mL 320.4 (15.5–1475) ng/mL |
668 445 69 | ELISA (R&D Systems) |
6th week 6th month 1st year | |
| Milk: 0.156 (±0.039) ng/mL | 28 | ELISA (R&D Systems) | 1st month | |
| Brunner S. et al. (2014) [ | Median (** IQR) Milk: 0.11 (0.19); maternal plasma: 9.52 (8.56) ng/mL Milk: 0.09 (0.18); maternal plasma: 8.30 (10.64) ng/mL |
152 120 | Milk RIA (Mediagnost); |
6th week 4th month |
| Savino et al. (2016) [ | BF* Milk median (** IQR): 2.34 (5.73) ng/mL | 23 | RIA (Mediagnost) | <6th month |
| Schister et al. (2011) [ | Median (range) 0.17 (0.08–0.25) ng/mL 0.11(0.06–0.20) ng/mL 0.15 (0.05–0.32) ng/mL |
23 23 23 | RIA (Mediagnost) |
1st week 2nd month 6th month |
| Schueler et al. (2013) [ | Foremilk: 0.9 (±0.7) ng/mL | 12 | RIA (Millipore) | 2nd month |
| Uysal F. K. et al. (2002) [ |
Milk of obese infant: 0.27 (±0. 2) ng/mL Milk of non-obese infant: 0.37 (±0.4) ng/mL |
17 33 | RIA (Linco Research Inc) | 2nd–4th month |
* BF—breastfeeding group. ** IQR—interquartile range.