Allen L H, Lung'aho M S, Shaheen M, Harrison G G, Neumann C, Kirksey A
Department of Nutrition, University of California, Davis 95616-8669.
Eur J Clin Nutr. 1994 Nov;48 Suppl 3:S68-76; discussion S76-7.
This paper uses data from the Nutrition CRSP in Egypt, Mexico and Kenya to examine relationships between maternal BMI and pregnancy outcome. Women were studied from the periconceptional period up to 6 months of lactation. No women in Egypt or Mexico, and only two in Kenya where periods of food shortage occurred, had a BMI < 18 at conception. Women with a lower BMI in Mexico and Kenya gained more weight and fat in pregnancy and lost more weight and fat during lactation. These counter-intuitive relationships affect the interpretation of weight and body composition measures used to assess energy adequacy during pregnancy and lactation. Lower pre-pregnancy BMI predicted lower infant weights at birth and was a risk factor for low birthweight in Kenya. At 3-6 months post partum, maternal BMI was less strongly related to infant size, and the lean body mass component of BMI appeared to be a more important predictor than fatness.
本文使用来自埃及、墨西哥和肯尼亚的营养政策研究中心的数据,来研究孕产妇体重指数(BMI)与妊娠结局之间的关系。研究对象为从受孕前期至哺乳期6个月的女性。在埃及或墨西哥,没有女性在受孕时BMI<18,在肯尼亚只有两名女性在出现食物短缺期间BMI<18。在墨西哥和肯尼亚,BMI较低的女性在孕期体重和脂肪增加更多,在哺乳期体重和脂肪减少更多。这些与直觉相悖的关系影响了用于评估孕期和哺乳期能量充足情况的体重和身体成分测量指标的解读。孕前BMI较低预示着出生时婴儿体重较低,并且是肯尼亚低出生体重的一个风险因素。在产后3至6个月,孕产妇BMI与婴儿大小的相关性较弱,而且BMI中的瘦体重部分似乎比脂肪含量是更重要的预测指标。