Abstract

Background: To evaluate the potential factors associated with the nutritional composition of human milk of puerperal women. Methods: cross-sectional study, conducted between March 2016 and August 2017, with 107 women, selected in a Tertiary Health Care Tertiary Health Facility of the Unified Health System (SUS) in the Municipality of Rio de Janeiro. Data were collected two months after delivery. The dependent variable of the study was the nutritional composition of human milk. We divided the independent variables into hierarchical levels: distal (age, schooling, parity and pregestational nutritional status), intermediate (number of prenatal visits and gestational weight gain) and proximal (alcohol consumption, smoking, diabetes mellitus and hypertension). For data analysis, we applied the multiple linear regression, centered on the hierarchical model. Only the variables associated with the nutritional composition of breast milk remained in the final model at a 5% level of significance. Results: The nutritional composition of human milk yielded by women with pregestational overweight, smokers and hypertensive had higher amounts of lipids and energy. Conversely, women with gestational weight gain below the recommended had lower amounts of these components. Conclusion: The evaluation of factors associated with the nutritional composition of human milk is extremely important to assist post-partum care practices. In this study, we observed that lipid and energy contents were associated to pregestational nutritional status, gestational weight gain, smoking and hypertension.

Highlights

  • The human milk is a complex biological fluid with thousands of components of importance to the health, growth, development and immunity of the child [1]

  • The application of the hierarchical model in the present investigation indicated that overweight in the pregestational period, gestational weight gain below the recommended, smoking and hypertension were associated with a change in the nutritional composition of human milk

  • Our study has several strengths: we used controlled and consistent sampling protocols for collection and analysis of human milk; the present study offers in an unprecedented way the evaluation of potential maternal factors associated with the nutritional composition of human milk through a hierarchical model

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Summary

Introduction

The human milk is a complex biological fluid with thousands of components of importance to the health, growth, development and immunity of the child [1]. It guarantees adequate nutrition for newborns and infants as a continuation of intrauterine nutrition [2]. The dependent variable of the study was the nutritional composition of human milk. The variables associated with the nutritional composition of breast milk remained in the final model at a 5% level of significance. Results: The nutritional composition of human milk yielded by women with pregestational overweight, smokers and hypertensive had higher amounts of lipids and energy

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