National Nutrition Surveillance Centre and Health Research Board Centre for Diet and Health Research, UCD School of Public Health, Physiotherapy and Population Science, Woodview House, University College Dublin, Belfield, Dublin 4, Ireland.
Public Health Nutr. 2013 Aug;16(8):1476-86. doi: 10.1017/S1368980012003667. Epub 2012 Aug 13.
The current study prospectively examines the intra-uterine hypothesis by comparing maternal, paternal and grandparental lineage influences on children’s diet and also maternal–child aggregation patterns during pregnancy and early childhood.
Prenatal dietary information was available for expectant mothers, fathers and up to four grandparents through a detailed validated semi-quantitative FFQ. At 6-year follow-up, when children averaged 5 years of age, dietary information was re-collected for mothers and a subset of maternal grandmothers using the same FFQ. Child’s FFQ version was used for children. Anthropometric and sociodemographic variables were also collected.
Three-generation familial cohort representative of the contemporary Irish national population.
Children aged 5 years (n 567) and their parents and grandparents.
Associations for energy, macronutrient and fibre intakes were compared using Pearson’s correlations, intra-class correlations (ICC) and linear regression models, adjusted for energy and potential confounders. Significant, moderatestrength positive correlations were observed for nutrient intakes in children’s nuclear families (ICC (range)50?22–0?28). The father–child associations (r (range)5 0?13–0?20) were weaker than the mother–child associations (r (range)50?14–0?33). In general, associations were stronger for maternal postnatal intake–child intake than for maternal prenatal intake–child intake, except for percentage of energy from fat (adjusted b50?16, 95% CI 0?05, 0?26; P50?004), which was stronger for maternal prenatal intake, specifically in non-breast-fed children (adjusted b50?28, 95% CI 0?12, 0?44; P50?001). Among all grandparents, correlations were significant only for maternal grandmother–mother pairs (r (range)50?10–0?36). Significant positive ICC were observed for nutrient intakes of maternal grandmother–mother–child triads (ICC (range)50?12–0?27), not found in paternal lines.
These findings suggest that maternal-environment programming influences dietary intake.
本研究前瞻性地通过比较母亲、父亲和祖辈对儿童饮食的影响,以及妊娠和幼儿期母婴聚集模式,检验子宫内假说。
通过详细验证的半定量 FFQ,为孕妇、父亲和多达四位祖辈提供了产前饮食信息。在 6 年的随访中,当孩子平均 5 岁时,使用相同的 FFQ 为母亲和母亲的一部分祖母重新收集了饮食信息。孩子的 FFQ 版本用于孩子。还收集了儿童的人体测量学和社会人口学变量。
代表当代爱尔兰全国人口的三代家族队列。
5 岁儿童(n=567)及其父母和祖父母。
使用 Pearson 相关系数、组内相关系数(ICC)和线性回归模型比较了能量、宏量营养素和纤维摄入量的相关性,调整了能量和潜在混杂因素。在儿童核心家庭中,观察到营养摄入量存在显著的中等强度正相关(ICC(范围)50?22-0?28)。父亲-孩子的关联(r(范围)50?13-0?20)弱于母亲-孩子的关联(r(范围)50?14-0?33)。一般来说,产后母亲摄入-儿童摄入的关联强于产前母亲摄入-儿童摄入,除了脂肪百分比的能量(调整 b50?16,95%CI 0?05,0?26;P50?004),这在非母乳喂养儿童中更强烈(调整 b50?28,95%CI 0?12,0?44;P50?001)。在所有的祖父母中,只有母亲的祖母-母亲对之间的相关性是显著的(r(范围)50?10-0?36)。观察到母亲的祖母-母亲-孩子三联体的营养摄入量存在显著的正 ICC(ICC(范围)50?12-0?27),在父系中没有发现。
这些发现表明,母体环境编程影响饮食摄入。