Division of Behavioral Medicine, Department of Pediatrics, Jacobs School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, University at Buffalo, Buffalo, NY, USA.
Department of Counseling, School, and Educational Psychology, Graduate School of Education, State University of New York at Buffalo, Buffalo, NY, USA.
Int J Obes (Lond). 2021 Dec;45(12):2570-2576. doi: 10.1038/s41366-021-00936-w. Epub 2021 Aug 18.
Parental obesity is linked to offspring obesity, though little research has explored factors that might influence this relationship during the complementary feeding period. This study investigated whether infant intakes of added sugars mediate the relationship between a mother's pre-pregnancy body mass index (BMI) and infant rapid weight gain (defined as upward weight-for-age percentile crossing).
This study was of a cross-sectional design. Anthropometrics for 141 mother-infant dyads (mean age [standard deviation]: 32.6 [4.4] year for mothers, 11.9 [1.9] months for infants) were obtained. Data from three 24-h recalls pertaining to the infants' diets were collected and analyzed. Pearson product-moment correlations and multivariable regressions assessed bivariate relationships between pre-pregnancy BMI, infant added sugar intakes and upward weight-for-age percentile crossing. Mediation models evaluated the effects of added sugars and breastfeeding duration.
Pre-pregnancy BMI correlated positively with infants' added sugar intakes (r = 0.230, p = 0.006). Added sugar intakes mediated the impact of pre-pregnancy BMI on upward weight-for-age percentile crossing (indirect effect = 0.007, 95% CI = 0.0001, 0.0197, indirect/total effect ratio = 0.280). Breastfeeding duration also moderated the relationship, with infants who were breastfed for a shorter duration experiencing a greater mediating effect (indirect effect = 0.010, 95% CI = 0.0014, 0.0277, indirect/direct effect ratio = 0.7368).
Mothers who were overweight or obese prior to pregnancy were significantly more likely to give their infants foods and beverages with added sugars, and this practice was found to mediate the relationship between maternal and infant obesity. Breastfeeding duration moderated the mediating effect of added sugars between pre-pregnancy BMI and infant rapid weight gain.
父母肥胖与子女肥胖有关,尽管很少有研究探讨在补充喂养期影响这种关系的因素。本研究调查了婴儿添加糖的摄入量是否在母亲孕前体重指数(BMI)与婴儿快速体重增加(定义为体重年龄百分位向上交叉)之间的关系中起中介作用。
本研究为横断面设计。对 141 对母婴(母亲平均年龄[标准差]:32.6 [4.4]岁,婴儿 11.9 [1.9]个月)进行了人体测量。收集并分析了婴儿饮食的三个 24 小时回忆数据。Pearson 积矩相关和多变量回归评估了孕前 BMI、婴儿添加糖摄入量和体重年龄百分位向上交叉之间的双变量关系。中介模型评估了添加糖和母乳喂养持续时间的影响。
孕前 BMI 与婴儿添加糖摄入量呈正相关(r=0.230,p=0.006)。添加糖摄入量中介了孕前 BMI 对体重年龄百分位向上交叉的影响(间接效应=0.007,95%置信区间=0.0001,0.0197,间接/总效应比=0.280)。母乳喂养持续时间也调节了这种关系,母乳喂养时间较短的婴儿经历了更大的中介效应(间接效应=0.010,95%置信区间=0.0014,0.0277,间接/直接效应比=0.7368)。
孕前超重或肥胖的母亲更有可能给婴儿食用添加糖的食物和饮料,并且这种做法被发现介导了母亲和婴儿肥胖之间的关系。母乳喂养持续时间调节了添加糖在孕前 BMI 与婴儿快速体重增加之间的中介作用。