Literature DB >> 49559

The infant's self-regulation of food intake and weight gain. Difference in metabolic balance after growth constraint or acceleration in utero.

M Ounsted, G Sleigh.   

Abstract

Methods of infant feeding, volume of milk intake, the introduction of solid supplements, and weight gain since birth have been studied in 191 babies at the age of 2 months. There were four groups: a hospital sample infants born to women who had been hypertensive during pregnancy, and infants who had been small-for-dates (S.F.D.) or large-for-dates (L.F.D.) at birth. Among bottle-feeders, S.F.D. infants took significantly more milk per kilogramme body-weight than infants in the hospital sample and hypertensive series; L.F.D. infants took significantly less. Within each group there was a negative correlation between actual weight at 2 months and milk intake per kilogramme body-weight. These findings are at variance with previous studies made on normal babies. Mean weight gain per kilogramme birth-weight per day was significantly increased in the S.F.D. series and reduced in the L.F.D. series compared with the hospital sample. Although mean milk intake per day at the age of 2 months was less for S.F.D. babies than for L.F.D. babies, mean weight gain per day was greater for S.F.D babies. In both extreme groups there was a tendency for breast-fed babies to revert towards the median faster than bottle-fed babies. These feeding and growth patterns of S.F.D. and L.F.D. babies suggest that there are powerful self-regulatory controls within the infant, and that the metabolic balance of S.F.D. infants is different from that of L.F.D. infants in the early postnatal months.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  1975        PMID: 49559     DOI: 10.1016/s0140-6736(75)92605-7

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Lancet        ISSN: 0140-6736            Impact factor:   79.321


  12 in total

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3.  Early growth of term SFD infants in relation to caloric intake.

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4.  Association between postnatal catch-up growth and obesity in childhood: prospective cohort study.

Authors:  K K Ong; M L Ahmed; P M Emmett; M A Preece; D B Dunger
Journal:  BMJ       Date:  2000-04-08

5.  Maternal smoking during pregnancy and childhood obesity: results from the CESAR Study.

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6.  Effects of maternal genotype and diet on offspring glucose and fatty acid-sensing ventromedial hypothalamic nucleus neurons.

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7.  Insulin sensitivity and secretion in normal children related to size at birth, postnatal growth, and plasma insulin-like growth factor-I levels.

Authors:  K K Ong; C J Petry; P M Emmett; M S Sandhu; W Kiess; C N Hales; A R Ness; D B Dunger
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8.  Ventromedial nucleus neurons are less sensitive to leptin excitation in rats bred to develop diet-induced obesity.

Authors:  Boman G Irani; Christelle Le Foll; Ambrose A Dunn-Meynell; Barry E Levin
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9.  High energy feeding in small for gestation infants.

Authors:  O G Brooke; J M Kinsey
Journal:  Arch Dis Child       Date:  1985-01       Impact factor: 3.791

10.  Exposure to prenatal smoking and early-life body composition: the healthy start study.

Authors:  Curtis S Harrod; Tasha E Fingerlin; Lisa Chasan-Taber; Regina M Reynolds; Deborah H Glueck; Dana Dabelea
Journal:  Obesity (Silver Spring)       Date:  2014-11-11       Impact factor: 5.002

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