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      Maternal and fetal responses to the stresses of lactation concurrent with pregnancy and of short recuperative intervals.

      1 , ,
      The American journal of clinical nutrition
      Oxford University Press (OUP)
      Americas, Anthropometry, Biology, Birth Intervals, Birth Weight, Body Weight, Breast Feeding, Central America, Child Development, Data Analysis, Delivery Of Health Care, Demographic Factors, Developing Countries, Fertility, Fertility Measurements, Fetus, Food Supplementation, Growth, Guatemala, Health, Health Services, Infant Nutrition, Lactation, Latin America, Maternal Nutrition, Maternal Physiology, Measurement, North America, Nutrition, Nutrition Programs, Nutrition Surveys, Physiology, Population, Population Characteristics, Population Dynamics, Pregnancy, Pregnancy Intervals, Prevalence, Primary Health Care, Reproduction, Research Methodology, Rural Population, Statistical Regression, Time Factors

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          Abstract

          In many regions of the world, women breastfeed one child while pregnant with the next. Among rural Guatemalan women participating in a nutrition-supplementation trial, lactation overlapped with pregnancy in 253 of 504 (50.2%) of the pregnancies. For cases where overlap occurred, 41.4% continued to breast-feed into the second trimester and 3.2%, in the third trimester. The maternal and fetal responses to the energetic stresses of overlap and of the duration of the recuperative (nonpregnant, nonlactating) interval were assessed. Overlap resulted in increased supplement intake. Short recuperative periods (less than 6 mo) resulted in increased supplement intake and reduced maternal fat stores. The energetic stresses of overlap and short recuperative periods did not significantly affect fetal growth. The mother appears to buffer the energetic stress, protecting fetal growth. This research demonstrates that evidence of depletion of maternal nutrient stores caused by a demanding reproductive history is found when reproductive stress is characterized adequately.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Am J Clin Nutr
          The American journal of clinical nutrition
          Oxford University Press (OUP)
          0002-9165
          0002-9165
          Aug 1990
          : 52
          : 2
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Food Research Institute, Stanford University, CA 94305.
          Article
          10.1093/ajcn/52.2.280
          2375294
          6a54a15a-038f-48ec-8948-ac9085bb56fb
          History

          Americas,Anthropometry,Biology,Birth Intervals,Birth Weight,Body Weight,Breast Feeding,Central America,Child Development,Data Analysis,Delivery Of Health Care,Demographic Factors,Developing Countries,Fertility,Fertility Measurements,Fetus,Food Supplementation,Growth,Guatemala,Health,Health Services,Infant Nutrition,Lactation,Latin America,Maternal Nutrition,Maternal Physiology,Measurement,North America,Nutrition,Nutrition Programs,Nutrition Surveys,Physiology,Population,Population Characteristics,Population Dynamics,Pregnancy,Pregnancy Intervals,Prevalence,Primary Health Care,Reproduction,Research Methodology,Rural Population,Statistical Regression,Time Factors

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