PMID: 9174468Jun 1, 1997Paper

Maternal anthropometry and infant feeding practices in Israel in relation to growth in infancy: the North African Infant Feeding Study

The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition
W W FawziH W Berendes

Abstract

Relations between maternal anthropometric status during pregnancy and infant feeding practices and growth from birth through the first 6 mo of life were examined in a cohort of 351 Israeli mother-infant pairs of North African descent. Maternal weight, height, and triceps skinfold thicknesses were determined at 6 and 9 mo of pregnancy, while infants' weights and lengths were measured at birth and at 1, 2, 3, and 6 mo of age with concurrent collection of age-specific maternal-reported infant feeding data. On the basis of multiple-linear-regression analysis that adjusted for potential covariates, mean maternal weight at the first prenatal visit and at 6 and 9 mo of pregnancy were positively associated with birth length (P for trend in all cases < 0.0001) and with linear growth between birth and 1, 3, and 6 mo of age. Maternal skinfold thickness at 9 mo of pregnancy and maternal height were also significantly associated with birth length. Moreover, maternal height, weight, and skinfold thickness at 6 and 9 mo of pregnancy were positively associated with mean birth weight. After adjustment for morbidity in the past month and other covariates, infants breast-fed exclusively had greater attained weight and weight gain in the first 3 m...Continue Reading

Citations

Sep 1, 2007·Environmental Health and Preventive Medicine·Mean-Heng NgyTakehito Takano
Aug 12, 2015·Maternal & Child Nutrition·Chiza KumwendaKathryn G Dewey
Apr 16, 2019·The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition·Laural K EnglishEve E Stoody
Sep 16, 2010·Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences·G ValsamakisG Mastorakos
Mar 15, 2003·Gastroenterology Clinics of North America·Elie Hamaoui, Michal Hamaoui

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