ABSTRACT.Objective. The population subgroups with the highest proportion of overweight and obese women often are characterized by the lowest rates of initiation and shortest durations of breastfeeding. We previously documented that these 2 population-level trends may be related. In a population of white women who lived in a rural area, we observed that prepregnant overweight and obesity were associated with failure to initiate and also to sustain lactation. The means by which being overweight or obese negatively affect lactational performance is unknown and likely to be multifactorial in origin, including the simple mechanical difficulties of latching on and proper positioning of the infant. In addition, we have shown that prepregnant body mass index (BMI) is negatively associated with the timing of lactogenesis II, the onset of copious milk secretion. Although the effects of obesity on the prolactin response to infant suckling have never been studied, we postulated that maternal obesity could compromise this important response. We proposed that this might occur because obesity alters the 24-hour spontaneous release of prolactin and also because prolactin secretion is blunted in response to various stimuli among obese subjects. The fall in progesterone concentration that occurs immediately postpartum is the trigger for the onset of copious milk secretion, but maintenance of prolactin and cortisol concentrations is necessary for this trigger to be effective. Adipose tissue concentrates progesterone. We proposed that this additional source of progesterone would lead to consistently higher progesterone concentrations among obese compared with normal-weight women. This, in turn, would lead to a delay in reaching the appropriate concentration to trigger the onset of lactogenesis II. We tested the hypotheses that a reduced prolactin response to suckling and higher-than-normal progesterone concentration in the first week after delivery might be among the means by which maternal overweight could compromise early lactation.Methods. We enrolled 40 mothers of term infants from the same population that we studied previously. We measured serum prolactin and progesterone concentrations by radioimmunoassay before and 30 minutes after the beginning of a suckling episode at 48 hours and 7 days after delivery. We used path analysis to develop a parsimonious multivariate prediction of the prolactin response to suckling at 48 hours and 7 days postpartum.Results. As expected, prolactin values decreased from 48 hours to 7 days postpartum. Women who were overweight or obese (using the Institute of Medicine's cutoff for women of a BMI >26 kg/m 2 ) before conception had a lower prolactin response to suckling than normal-weight women at 48 hours but not at day 7. In multivariate analyses, overweight/obesity, primiparity, and birth weight were negatively associated with the prolactin response to suckling at 48 hours. After adjustment for confounding by time since delivery and the duration of the nursing episode, only overweight/obesity re...
To determine whether high prepregnant body mass index (BMI) is associated with later onset of lactogenesis II (LGII) and shorter duration of breastfeeding, we questioned 151 women about their demographic and psychosocial characteristics during pregnancy and about the onset of LGII during days 1 to 5 postpartum. Compared to women with earlier (< 72 hours) onset of LGII, those with later onset had a higher BMI (P < .05), a higher proportion of primiparity (P < .01), and a lower infant score on the Mother-Baby Assessment (P < .05). Prepregnant BMI (P < .04) and primiparity (P < .005) were each associated with later onset of LGII, but only primiparity remained significant when both factors were considered simultaneously. These results suggest that, in addition to those who have just delivered their first infant, those with higher prepregnant BMI values also warrant extra support to decrease their risk of early discontinuation of breastfeeding.
High prepregnant BMI is associated with reduced initiation and duration of breast-feeding (BF). To examine how gestational weight gain (GWG) might modify this association, over a 9-y period, we identified all women (n = 2783) who had attempted to breast-feed their newborns. From their medical records, we categorized them by prepregnant BMI [as underweight (<19.8 kg/m2), normal-weight (19.8-26.0 kg/m2), overweight (26.1-29.0 kg/m2) or obese ( >29.0 kg/m2)] and GWG [as below, within, or above the amount recommended by the Institute of Medicine]. Women with a normal BMI who gained within these recommendations served as the reference group in regression analyses, which were adjusted for confounding factors. Both normal-weight (P < 0.05) and obese (P < 0.01) women who exceeded the recommended GWG had higher odds of failing to initiate BF (defined as continuing to breast-feed at 4 d postpartum). Underweight (P < 0.05), overweight (P < 0.05), and obese (P < 0.01) women who exceeded the recommendations for GWG as well as obese women who gained within the recommendations (P < 0.01) had a higher risk of early discontinuation of exclusive BF. Only obese women who gained within or exceeded the recommendations (P < 0.01) for GWG had a higher risk of early discontinuation of any BF. Excessive GWG was associated with a measure of failure to initiate and/or sustain BF in all categories of prepregnant BMI. Thus, in addition to conceiving at a healthy weight, gaining the recommended amount of weight during pregnancy is also important for successful BF.
Maternal obesity interferes with the initiation and maintenance of lactation in animal models but it has not been investigated widely in women. We reviewed medical records from a white population to examine the relation between prepregnant overweight [body mass index (BMI; in kg/m2) 26.1-29.0] and obesity (BMI > 29.0) on initiation and duration of breast-feeding. Logistic regression revealed that of those who ever put their infants to the breast (n = 810), women who were overweight [odds ratio (OR) = 2.54, P < 0.05] or obese (OR = 3.65, P < 0.0008) had less success initiating breast-feeding than did their normal-weight counterparts (BMI < 26.1). Proportional-hazards regression revealed higher rates of discontinuation of exclusive breast-feeding in overweight (RR = 1.42, P < 0.04) and obese (RR = 1.43, P < 0.02) women and higher discontinuation of breast-feeding to any extent in overweight (RR = 1.68, P < 0.006) and obese (RR = 1.73, P = 0.001) women. Controlling for parity, socioeconomic status, maternal education, and other factors that often covary with maternal obesity and breast-feeding did not change these results. These results suggest that excessive fatness in the reproductive period may inhibit lactational performance in women.
In future studies of obese women, stratified randomization may be necessary. Further development of interventions to help obese women achieve optimal breastfeeding outcomes is required.
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