Hop L T, Gross R, Giay T, Sastroamidjojo S, Schultink W, Lang N T
National Institute of Nutrition, Ministry of Health, 48 Tang Bat Ho, Hanoi, Vietnam.
J Nutr. 2000 Nov;130(11):2683-90. doi: 10.1093/jn/130.11.2683.
The objective of this longitudinal study was to investigate the association between the premature initiation of complementary feeding and physical growth of children. Four cohorts of newborn children were included, consisting of 90 infants born in 1981, 90 in 1982, 60 infants in 1983 and 60 in 1984. The weights and heights of children were measured monthly up to 1 y, then every 3 mo for y 2 and 3, and once every 6 mo in y 4. Information on feeding practices and diseases of the children was obtained by interviewing the mothers at each home visit. All but three children (98.6%) were breast-fed. Although 87.1% of the mothers breast-fed their children for at least 1 y, only 3.3% of the infants were breast-fed exclusively at the age of 4 mo. In the analyses of growth, care was taken to address the biases of reverse causality, regression to the mean and confounding. There was little association between feeding pattern at 15 d and growth in length in mo 1. However, partially breast-fed and weaned infants gained weight more slowly than those exclusively or predominantly breast-fed. From 1 to 3 mo, exclusively breast-fed infants grew more quickly in both weight and length, followed by predominantly breast-fed infants. From 3 to 6 mo, exclusively breast-fed infants gained more weight compared with the other groups, but there was a slight difference (P = 0.047) in length gain only between exclusively and partially breast-fed infants. In the older period (6-12 mo), exclusively and predominantly breast-fed infants grew in length more quickly than partially breast-fed and weaned groups. However, there was no difference in weight gain among groups. Morbidity from diarrhea and acute respiratory infections was significantly lower for the >/=3 mo exclusively breast-fed group (chi(2) and Fisher-Exact Test). Over nearly the whole age range from 1 mo to 4 y, Z-scores for all indices (weight-for-age, height-for-age and weight-for-height) of the children who received complementary food were significantly lower than those of children who were exclusively breast-fed for at least 3 mo (repeated measures ANOVA, adjusted for sex, family size, maternal education and family income). These results show a long-term deterioration of physical growth in infants who received premature complementary feeding and confirm the importance of exclusive breast-feeding for infants for at least 3 mo.
这项纵向研究的目的是调查辅食过早添加与儿童身体生长之间的关联。研究纳入了四组新生儿队列,分别为1981年出生的90名婴儿、1982年出生的90名婴儿、1983年出生的60名婴儿以及1984年出生的60名婴儿。在1岁前,每月测量儿童的体重和身高,在2岁和3岁时每3个月测量一次,4岁时每6个月测量一次。通过在每次家访时与母亲面谈,获取有关儿童喂养方式和疾病的信息。除三名儿童(98.6%)外,所有儿童均进行母乳喂养。尽管87.1%的母亲对其子女进行了至少1年的母乳喂养,但在4个月龄时,只有3.3%的婴儿是纯母乳喂养。在生长分析中,注意处理了反向因果关系、均值回归和混杂因素的偏差。出生15天时喂养方式与第1个月身长增长之间几乎没有关联。然而,部分母乳喂养和已断奶的婴儿体重增加比纯母乳喂养或主要母乳喂养的婴儿更慢。在1至3个月时,纯母乳喂养的婴儿在体重和身长方面增长更快,其次是主要母乳喂养的婴儿。在3至6个月时,与其他组相比,纯母乳喂养的婴儿体重增加更多,但仅在纯母乳喂养和部分母乳喂养的婴儿之间身长增加存在细微差异(P = 0.047)。在较大年龄段(6至12个月),纯母乳喂养和主要母乳喂养的婴儿身长增长比部分母乳喂养和已断奶组更快。然而,各组之间体重增加没有差异。对于≥3个月的纯母乳喂养组,腹泻和急性呼吸道感染发病率显著较低(卡方检验和Fisher精确检验)。在从1个月到4岁的几乎整个年龄范围内,接受辅食的儿童所有指标(年龄别体重、年龄别身高和身高别体重)的Z评分显著低于纯母乳喂养至少3个月的儿童(重复测量方差分析,校正了性别、家庭规模、母亲教育程度和家庭收入)。这些结果表明,过早添加辅食的婴儿身体生长会长期恶化,并证实了婴儿至少纯母乳喂养3个月的重要性。