Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Oregon Health & Science University, Portland, OR.
School of Public Health, University of California, Berkeley, CA.
Am J Obstet Gynecol. 2022 May;226(5):607-632. doi: 10.1016/j.ajog.2021.12.035. Epub 2021 Dec 27.
Most women in the United States do not meet the recommendations for healthful nutrition and weight before and during pregnancy. Women and providers often ask what a healthy diet for a pregnant woman should look like. The message should be "eat better, not more." This can be achieved by basing diet on a variety of nutrient-dense, whole foods, including fruits, vegetables, legumes, whole grains, healthy fats with omega-3 fatty acids that include nuts and seeds, and fish, in place of poorer quality highly processed foods. Such a diet embodies nutritional density and is less likely to be accompanied by excessive energy intake than the standard American diet consisting of increased intakes of processed foods, fatty red meat, and sweetened foods and beverages. Women who report "prudent" or "health-conscious" eating patterns before and/or during pregnancy may have fewer pregnancy complications and adverse child health outcomes. Comprehensive nutritional supplementation (multiple micronutrients plus balanced protein energy) among women with inadequate nutrition has been associated with improved birth outcomes, including decreased rates of low birthweight. A diet that severely restricts any macronutrient class should be avoided, specifically the ketogenic diet that lacks carbohydrates, the Paleo diet because of dairy restriction, and any diet characterized by excess saturated fats. User-friendly tools to facilitate a quick evaluation of dietary patterns with clear guidance on how to address dietary inadequacies and embedded support from trained healthcare providers are urgently needed. Recent evidence has shown that although excessive gestational weight gain predicts adverse perinatal outcomes among women with normal weight, the degree of prepregnancy obesity predicts adverse perinatal outcomes to a greater degree than gestational weight gain among women with obesity. Furthermore, low body mass index and insufficient gestational weight gain are associated with poor perinatal outcomes. Observational data have shown that first-trimester gain is the strongest predictor of adverse outcomes. Interventions beginning in early pregnancy or preconception are needed to prevent downstream complications for mothers and their children. For neonates, human milk provides personalized nutrition and is associated with short- and long-term health benefits for infants and mothers. Eating a healthy diet is a way for lactating mothers to support optimal health for themselves and their infants.
大多数美国女性在怀孕前和怀孕期间都无法达到健康营养和体重的建议标准。女性和提供者经常会问孕妇应该吃什么样的健康饮食。信息应该是“吃得更好,而不是更多”。这可以通过以各种营养丰富的全食物为基础来实现,包括水果、蔬菜、豆类、全谷物、富含欧米伽 3 脂肪酸的健康脂肪,包括坚果和种子,以及鱼类,而不是质量较差的高度加工食品。这种饮食体现了营养密度,与标准的美国饮食相比,不太可能伴随着过多的能量摄入,标准的美国饮食包括增加加工食品、高脂肪的红色肉类以及加糖的食物和饮料的摄入。在怀孕前和/或怀孕期间报告“谨慎”或“有意识”的饮食模式的女性可能会有更少的妊娠并发症和不良儿童健康结局。在营养不足的女性中补充综合营养(多种微量营养素加均衡的蛋白质能量)与改善出生结局相关,包括降低低出生体重率。应避免严重限制任何宏量营养素类别的饮食,具体包括缺乏碳水化合物的生酮饮食、由于限制乳制品而导致的原始人饮食,以及任何以过量饱和脂肪为特征的饮食。迫切需要易于使用的工具来快速评估饮食模式,并提供如何解决饮食不足的明确指导,以及来自经过培训的医疗保健提供者的嵌入式支持。最近的证据表明,尽管过度的妊娠体重增加预测了体重正常的女性的不良围产期结局,但孕前肥胖的程度比肥胖女性的妊娠体重增加更能预测不良围产期结局。此外,低体重指数和不足的妊娠体重增加与不良围产期结局相关。观察性数据表明,孕早期的体重增加是不良结局的最强预测因素。需要从早孕或孕前开始进行干预,以防止母婴下游并发症。对于新生儿来说,人乳提供个性化的营养,并与婴儿和母亲的短期和长期健康益处相关。健康饮食是哺乳期母亲支持自己和婴儿最佳健康的一种方式。