Moran Victoria Hall
Maternal and Infant Nutrition and Nurture Unit, Faculty of Health, University of Central Lancashire, Preston, UK.
Matern Child Nutr. 2007 Apr;3(2):74-93. doi: 10.1111/j.1740-8709.2007.00081.x.
Adolescent pregnancy is a major public health challenge for many industrialized countries and is associated with significant medical, nutritional, social and economic risk for mothers and their infants. Despite this, relatively little is known about the nutritional status of this population. The aim of this paper was to conduct a systematic review of the current evidence relating to the biochemical markers of nutritional status of pregnant adolescents living in industrialized countries. Six papers were identified that fulfilled the inclusion criteria, the majority of which were conducted in the United States. The studies were of variable quality and most failed to control for potential confounders which may have strongly influenced the findings. Due to limited research, conclusions cannot be drawn about the zinc and calcium status of pregnant adolescents, and data on folate and vitamin B(12) status appeared conflicting. There was some consensus among studies, however, to suggest that indicators of anaemia and iron status were compromised in pregnant adolescents, particularly during the third trimester of pregnancy. Chronological age did not appear to influence nutritional status, although there was some evidence to suggest that increasing gynaecologic age may positively influence plasma ferritin levels. Current research is limited by sampling and measurement bias, and research is urgently required to address these limitations. Further consideration should also be made of the influence of the role of socio-economic support on pregnant adolescents' nutritional status. The achievement of improved nutrition in pregnancy among adolescents requires multidisciplinary collaborations of adolescent healthcare providers, academics, professional organizations, policymakers, industry and service users. Only once this is achieved can adolescent nutrition, and adolescent nutrition in pregnancy, be significantly and sustainably optimized.
青少年怀孕对许多工业化国家来说是一项重大的公共卫生挑战,并且与母亲及其婴儿面临的重大医学、营养、社会和经济风险相关。尽管如此,人们对这一人群的营养状况了解相对较少。本文的目的是对工业化国家中怀孕青少年营养状况生化标志物的现有证据进行系统综述。共识别出六篇符合纳入标准的论文,其中大部分研究在美国开展。这些研究质量参差不齐,且大多数未能控制可能对研究结果产生强烈影响的潜在混杂因素。由于研究有限,无法就怀孕青少年的锌和钙状况得出结论,而关于叶酸和维生素B12状况的数据似乎相互矛盾。不过,各项研究之间存在一些共识,表明怀孕青少年的贫血和铁状况指标受到影响,尤其是在妊娠晚期。按时间顺序排列的年龄似乎并未影响营养状况,尽管有一些证据表明,妇科年龄的增加可能对血浆铁蛋白水平产生积极影响。当前的研究受到抽样和测量偏差的限制,迫切需要开展研究以解决这些局限性。还应进一步考虑社会经济支持作用对怀孕青少年营养状况的影响。要改善青少年孕期营养状况,需要青少年医疗保健提供者、学者、专业组织、政策制定者、行业和服务使用者进行多学科合作。只有实现这一点,青少年营养以及青少年孕期营养才能得到显著且可持续的优化。