Division of Pediatric Gastroenterology and Nutrition, Department of Pediatrics, University of California San Francisco, San Francisco, California, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2011 Feb 23;6(2):e16737. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0016737.
Latino children are at increased risk for mirconutrient deficiencies and problems of overweight and obesity. Exposures in pregnancy and early postpartum may impact future growth trajectories.
To evaluate the relationship between prenatal and postnatal maternal depressive symptoms experienced in pregnancy and infant growth from birth to 2 years of age in a cohort of Latino infants.
We recruited pregnant Latina mothers at two San Francisco hospitals and followed their healthy infants to 24 months of age. At 6, 12 and 24 months of age, infants were weighed and measured. Maternal depressive symptoms were assessed prenatally and at 4-6 weeks postpartum. Women who had high depressive symptoms at both time periods were defined as having chronic depression. Logistic mixed models were applied to compare growth curves and risk for overweight and underweight based on exposure to maternal depression.
We followed 181 infants to 24 months. At 12 and 24 months, respectively, 27.4% and 40.5% were overweight, and 5.6% and 2.2% were underweight. Exposure to chronic maternal depression was associated with underweight (OR = 12.12, 95%CI 1.86-78.78) and with reduced weight gain in the first 2 years of life (Coef = -0.48, 95% CI -0.94-0.01) compared with unexposed infants or infants exposed to episodic depression (depression at one time point). Exposure to chronic depression was also associated with reduced risk for overweight in the first 2 years of life (OR 0.28, 95%CI 0.03-0.92).
Exposure to chronic maternal depression in the pre- and postnatal period was associated with reduced weight gain in the first two years of life and greater risk for failure to thrive, in comparison with unexposed infants or those exposed episodically. The infants of mothers with chronic depression may need additional nutritional monitoring and intervention.
拉丁裔儿童存在微量营养素缺乏以及超重和肥胖问题的风险增加。妊娠和产后早期的暴露可能会影响未来的生长轨迹。
评估妊娠期间和产后期间经历的产前和产后母亲抑郁症状与拉丁裔婴儿出生至 2 岁期间婴儿生长的关系。
我们在旧金山的两家医院招募了怀孕的拉丁裔母亲,并在 24 个月时对她们健康的婴儿进行了随访。在 6、12 和 24 个月时,婴儿会被称重和测量。在产前和产后 4-6 周评估产妇抑郁症状。在两个时间段都有高抑郁症状的女性被定义为患有慢性抑郁症。应用逻辑混合模型比较了基于暴露于母亲抑郁的生长曲线和超重与体重不足的风险。
我们对 181 名婴儿进行了 24 个月的随访。分别在 12 个月和 24 个月时,27.4%和 40.5%超重,5.6%和 2.2%体重不足。与未暴露于慢性母亲抑郁的婴儿或仅在一个时间点暴露于抑郁的婴儿相比,慢性母亲抑郁的暴露与体重不足(OR=12.12,95%CI 1.86-78.78)以及前 2 年的体重增长减少(Coef=-0.48,95%CI -0.94-0.01)相关。暴露于慢性抑郁也与前 2 年超重风险降低相关(OR 0.28,95%CI 0.03-0.92)。
与未暴露于慢性母亲抑郁的婴儿或仅在一个时间点暴露于抑郁的婴儿相比,妊娠和产后期间暴露于慢性母亲抑郁与前两年的体重增长减少以及生长不良的风险增加有关。患有慢性抑郁症的母亲的婴儿可能需要额外的营养监测和干预。