在一组非裔美国青少年中,高妊娠期体重增加并没有改善出生体重。

J. N. Nielsen, K. O’Brien, F. Witter, Shih-chen Chang, Jeri Mancini, Maureen Schulman Nathanson, L. Caulfield
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引用次数: 20

摘要

背景:由于怀孕的非裔美国妇女和青少年有低出生体重的风险,她们经常被建议在医学研究所推荐的范围内争取孕期体重增加的上限。目的:研究这种体重增加是否能改善孕前体重指数(BMI)低(或=19.8至<或=26.0)或高(>26)的弱势非洲裔美国青少年的出生结局。在kg / m2)。从1990年至2000年在市中心产科诊所接受产前护理的1120名非裔美国青少年的医疗图表中提取数据,采用协方差分析和多元回归方法进行分析。结果815名青少年获得数据,其中711名足月分娩(>或=37周)。在所有足月分娩中,58% (n = 409)和74%的高bmi青少年(n = 126)的体重增加在推荐范围的上半部分或以上。在所有BMI组中,最显著的出生结果差异出现在体重增加低于推荐范围的青少年和体重增加低于推荐范围一半的青少年之间的比较中。进一步的增加并没有明显的好处,特别是对于高bmi母亲的婴儿。结论非裔美国青少年进入妊娠期体重不足或体重正常,应建议其体重在推荐范围内增加,而体重超重的青少年则需要支持以避免妊娠期体重过度增加。鉴于肥胖与慢性疾病可能性增加之间的已知关联,这样的建议将是谨慎的。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
High gestational weight gain does not improve birth weight in a cohort of African American adolescents.
BACKGROUND Because pregnant African American women and teens are at risk of low birth weight, they are frequently counseled to strive for gestational weight gains at the upper limits of the Institute of Medicine's recommended ranges. OBJECTIVE The objective was to examine whether such weight gains improve birth outcomes in a cohort of disadvantaged African American adolescents of low (<19.8), average (> or =19.8 to < or =26.0), or high (>26) prepregnancy body mass index (BMI; in kg/m2). DESIGN Data were extracted from the medical charts of 1120 African American adolescents who received prenatal care at an inner-city maternity clinic between 1990 and 2000 and analyzed by using analysis of covariance and multivariate regression methods. RESULTS Data were available for 815 adolescents, 711 of whom delivered at term (> or =37 wk). Fifty-eight percent (n = 409) of all term deliveries and 74% of the high-BMI adolescents (n = 126) had gains in the upper half of or above the recommended ranges. For all BMI groups, the most significant differences in birth outcomes were found in comparisons of teens who gained below the recommended ranges with those who gained in the lower half of the recommendation range. Further gains were not clearly beneficial, particularly for infants of high-BMI mothers. CONCLUSIONS African American adolescents entering pregnancy underweight or at average weight should be counseled to gain within the recommended ranges, whereas overweight adolescents need support to avoid excessive gestational weight gain. Such advice would be prudent in light of the known associations between obesity and the increased likelihood of chronic diseases.
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