USDA, Food and Nutrition Service, Alexandria, VA.
Panum Group, Bethesda, MA.
Am J Clin Nutr. 2019 Mar 1;109(Suppl_7):1003S-1026S. doi: 10.1093/ajcn/nqy240.
Maternal diet during pregnancy and lactation may provide the earliest opportunity to positively influence child food acceptance.
Systematic reviews were completed to examine the relation among maternal diet during pregnancy and lactation, amniotic fluid flavor, breast-milk flavor, and children's food acceptability and overall dietary intake.
A literature search was conducted in 10 databases (e.g., PubMed, Embase, Cochrane, and CINAHL) to identify articles published from January 1980 to June 2017. Data from each included study were extracted, risk of bias assessed, evidence synthesized qualitatively, conclusion statements developed, and strength of the evidence graded.
Eleven and 15 articles met a priori criteria for inclusion to answer questions related to maternal diet during pregnancy and lactation, respectively.
Limited but consistent evidence indicates that flavors (alcohol, anise, carrot, garlic) originating from the maternal diet during pregnancy can transfer to and flavor amniotic fluid, and fetal flavor exposure increases acceptance of similarly flavored foods when re-exposed during infancy and potentially childhood. Moderate evidence indicates that flavors originating from the maternal diet during lactation (alcohol, anise/caraway, carrot, eucalyptus, garlic, mint) transmit to and flavor breast milk in a time-dependent manner. Moderate evidence indicates that infants can detect diet-transmitted flavors in breast milk within hours of a single maternal ingestion (alcohol, garlic, vanilla, carrot), within days after repeated maternal ingestion (garlic, carrot juice), and within 1-4 mo postpartum after repeated maternal ingestion (variety of vegetables including carrot) during lactation. Findings may not generalize to all foods and beverages. Conclusions cannot be drawn to describe the relationship between mothers' diet during either pregnancy or lactation and children's overall dietary intake.
孕妇和哺乳期的饮食可能为积极影响儿童食物接受度提供最早的机会。
系统评价旨在研究孕妇和哺乳期饮食、羊水味道、母乳味道与儿童食物接受度和整体饮食摄入量之间的关系。
在 10 个数据库(如 PubMed、Embase、Cochrane 和 CINAHL)中进行文献检索,以确定从 1980 年 1 月至 2017 年 6 月期间发表的文章。从每个纳入研究中提取数据,评估偏倚风险,定性综合证据,制定结论陈述,并对证据强度进行分级。
11 篇和 15 篇文章分别符合纳入标准,以回答与孕妇和哺乳期饮食相关的问题。
有限但一致的证据表明,孕妇饮食中的味道(酒精、八角茴香、胡萝卜、大蒜)可以转移到羊水并赋予其味道,并且胎儿在婴儿期和潜在的儿童期再次暴露于类似味道的食物时会增加接受度。中等证据表明,哺乳期饮食中的味道(酒精、八角茴香/葛缕子、胡萝卜、桉树、大蒜、薄荷)以时间依赖的方式转移并赋予母乳味道。中等证据表明,婴儿可以在母亲单次摄入后数小时内(酒精、大蒜、香草、胡萝卜)、重复摄入后数天内(大蒜、胡萝卜汁)和哺乳期重复摄入后 1-4 个月内(各种蔬菜,包括胡萝卜)检测到母乳中传递的味道。这些发现可能不适用于所有食物和饮料。无法得出关于母亲在怀孕或哺乳期的饮食与儿童整体饮食摄入量之间关系的结论。