Nighttime eating during pregnancy and infant adiposity at 6 months of life.
Front Nutr
; 11: 1364722, 2024.
Article
in En
| MEDLINE
| ID: mdl-39050138
ABSTRACT
Introduction:
Chrononutrition studies the relation between diet, circadian rhythms and metabolism, which may alter the metabolic intrauterine environment, influencing infant fat-mass (FM) development and possibly increasing obesity risk.Aim:
To evaluate the association of chrononutrition in pregnancy and infant FM at 6 months.Methods:
Healthy pregnant women and term-babies (n = 100pairs) from the OBESO cohort (2017-2023) were studied. Maternal registries included pregestational body-mass-index (BMI), gestational complications/medications, weight gain. Diet (three 24 h-recalls, 1 each trimester) and sleep-schedule (first and third trimesters) were evaluated computing fasting (hours from last-first meal), breakfast and dinner latencies (minutes between wake up-breakfast and dinner-sleep, respectively), number of main meals/day, meal skipping (≥1 main meal/d on three recalls) and nighttime eating (from 900 pm-559 am on three recalls). Neonatal weight, length, BMI/age were assessed. At 6 months, infant FM (kg, %; air-displacement plethysmography) was measured, and FM index (FMI-kgFM/length2) computed. Exclusive breastfeeding (EBF) was recorded. Multiple linear regression models evaluated the association between chrononutrition and 6 month infant FM.Results:
Mean fasting was 11.7 ± 1.3 h; breakfast, dinner latency were 87.3 ± 75.2, 99.6 ± 65.6 min, respectively. Average meals/day were 3.0 ± 0.5. Meal skipping was reported in 3% (n = 3) of women and nighttime eating in 35% (n = 35). Most neonates had normal BMI/age (88%, n = 88). Compared to those who did not, mothers engaged in nighttime-eating had infants with higher %FM (p = 0.019). Regression models (R 2 ≥ 0.308, p ≤ 0.001) showed that nighttime eating was positively associated with %FM (B 2.7, 95%CI 0.32-5.16). When analyzing women without complications/medications (n = 80), nighttime eating was associated with higher FM [%FM, B 3.24 (95%CI 0.59-5.88); kgFM, B 0.20 (95%CI 0.003-0.40); FMI, B 0.54 (95%CI 0.03-1.05)]. Infant sex and weight (6 months) were significant, while maternal obesity, pregnancy complications/medications, parity, energy intake, birth-BMI/age, and EBF were not.Conclusion:
Maternal nighttime eating is associated with higher adiposity in 6 month infants.
Full text:
1
Collection:
01-internacional
Database:
MEDLINE
Language:
En
Journal:
Front Nutr
Year:
2024
Document type:
Article
Affiliation country:
Mexico
Country of publication:
Switzerland