Acute Maternal Fasting or Fluid Abstention Does Not Significantly Affect the Macronutrient Composition of Human Milk: Clinical and Clinical Research Relevance
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
3. Results
3.1. Acute Model
3.2. Chronic, Repetitive Model
4. Discussion
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Reference | Acute Model | Most Relevant Findings, Human Milk |
Zimmerman et al., 2009 [9] | 48 women, nursing healthy infants (1–6 months) during a 24 h religious fasting period. Paired sampling human milk 2 days before, just after fasting, and 24–25 h later (10 mL milk before nursing). | just after vs. before: sodium (+16%); calcium (+17%); protein (+9%); phosphorus (−19%); lactose (−6%); fat unchanged. 24 h later vs. before: protein (+9%); lactose (−3%). |
Neville et al., 1987 + 1993 [10,11] | 23 women. Fasting after evening meal, non-caloric containing fluids allowed for 18–20 h. Repeated human milk sampling over the fasting period. | throughout fasting: milk glucose, protein, fat and lactose remained constant, despite maternal insulin and glucose decrease. |
Reference | Chronic, Repetitive Model | Most Relevant Findings, Human Milk |
Prentice et al., 1984 [12] | 10 lactating women, 2 weeks before, 2nd–4th week during and 2 weeks after Ramadan; morning and evening samples. 10 non-lactating controls for maternal characteristics (morning vs. evening, lactating vs. non-lactating: higher weight loss (during the day); more dehydration; higher water turnover, likely due to higher water intake at night) in lactating women. | during Ramadan vs. before: osmolarity (+3%), sodium (+25%); lactose (−14%); potassium (−18%). during vs. after: osmolarity (+3%); sodium (+30%); lactose (−9%); potassium (−5%). during morning vs. evening, osmolarity (−3%); lactose (−12%); sodium (+55%); potassium (unchanged). |
Salah et al., 2016 [13] | 24 women, paired sampling during (100 mL) vs. 2 weeks after Ramadan. Morning sampling after nursing, so more a ‘chronic’ model. | during vs. after: lactose (−6%); protein (−6%); sodium (−28%); potassium (−18%); calcium (−7%); phosphorus (−14%) (fat unreported). |
Bener et al., 2001 [14] | 26 women, 2nd–4th week during vs. 2 weeks after Ramadan. Morning sampling after nursing, so more a ‘chronic’ model. | during vs. after: no differences in macronutrients (lactose, protein, fat, solids, triglycerides, cholesterol). |
Rakicioglu et al., 2006 [15] | 21 women, 2nd week during vs. 2 weeks after Ramadan. Morning sampling after nursing, so more a ‘chronic’ model. | during vs. after: no differences in macro-nutrients; potassium (−25%); dry mass (−22%). Magnesium (−12%); Zinc (−16%). |
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Allegaert, K.; Smits, A. Acute Maternal Fasting or Fluid Abstention Does Not Significantly Affect the Macronutrient Composition of Human Milk: Clinical and Clinical Research Relevance. Children 2020, 7, 60. https://doi.org/10.3390/children7060060
Allegaert K, Smits A. Acute Maternal Fasting or Fluid Abstention Does Not Significantly Affect the Macronutrient Composition of Human Milk: Clinical and Clinical Research Relevance. Children. 2020; 7(6):60. https://doi.org/10.3390/children7060060
Chicago/Turabian StyleAllegaert, Karel, and Anne Smits. 2020. "Acute Maternal Fasting or Fluid Abstention Does Not Significantly Affect the Macronutrient Composition of Human Milk: Clinical and Clinical Research Relevance" Children 7, no. 6: 60. https://doi.org/10.3390/children7060060