description): This prospective case-control study will determine whether the practice of breast-feeding during pregnancy is associated with a change in the composition of early milk and a subsequent decrease in milk volume during the next lactation. Because social taboos in the US discourage women from openly breast-feeding through pregnancy, the study can be more efficiently carried out in Peru. 168 multiparous women living in Lima, Peru will be enrolled. Eighty-four women will be identified who are breast-feeding during the third trimester of pregnancy (cases); 84 controls, who have not breast-fed past the first month of pregnancy will be identified after giving birth and will be matched for interbirth interval and sex of the newborn. Intensity of breast-feeding during the last trimester of pregnancy will be determined for the cases. D2 milk composition and volume will be determined. If breast-feeding during pregnancy alters the subsequent lactation, then it would be hypothesize that case infants; intakes of secretory IgA, IgG, total proteins, fat, lactose, and vitamin A would significantly differ than that of controls. Milk volume intake at 1 mo would be significantly decreased. The results of this study will provide the first information on the biological consequences of lactation-pregnancy overlap in humans, essential information needed to understand the health implications of this widespread but little mentioned practice.
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Marquis, Grace S; Penny, Mary E; Zimmer, J Paul et al. (2003) An overlap of breastfeeding during late pregnancy is associated with subsequent changes in colostrum composition and morbidity rates among Peruvian infants and their mothers. J Nutr 133:2585-91 |
Marquis, Grace S; Penny, Mary E; Diaz, Judith M et al. (2002) Postpartum consequences of an overlap of breastfeeding and pregnancy: reduced breast milk intake and growth during early infancy. Pediatrics 109:e56 |