Repositori institucional URV
Español Català English
TITLE:
Close Adherence to a Mediterranean Diet during Pregnancy Decreases Childhood Overweight/Obesity: A Prospective Study - imarina:9366479

URV's Author/s:Arija Val, Maria Victoria / Díaz López, Andres
Author, as appears in the article.:Díaz-López, A; Espelt, LR; Abajo, S; Arija, V
Author's mail:andres.diaz@urv.cat
victoria.arija@urv.cat
Author identifier:0000-0002-7500-5629
0000-0002-1758-0975
Journal publication year:2024
Publication Type:Journal Publications
APA:Díaz-López, A; Espelt, LR; Abajo, S; Arija, V (2024). Close Adherence to a Mediterranean Diet during Pregnancy Decreases Childhood Overweight/Obesity: A Prospective Study. Nutrients, 16(4), 532-. DOI: 10.3390/nu16040532
Papper original source:Nutrients. 16 (4): 532-
Abstract:The study of dietary patterns during pregnancy may be of great importance for determining the potential risk of obesity in childhood. We assessed the prospective association between maternal adherence to the Mediterranean diet (MedDiet) during pregnancy and risk of childhood overweight/obesity at 4 years. This prospective analysis involved 272 mother-child pairs from the ECLIPSES study. Maternal diet during pregnancy was assessed using a validated 45-item food-frequency questionnaire and a relative whole-pregnancy MedDiet score (rMedDiet) was calculated. The children's weight and height were measured at the age of 4. Primary outcome was childhood overweight/obesity based on age- and-sex-specific BMI z-score > 85th percentile using the WHO child growth standards. Mean maternal rMedDiet score in pregnancy was 9.8 (+/- standard deviation 2.3) and 25.7% of the children were overweight/obese. Significant differences in anthropometric measurements (weight, height, and BMI) were found according to sex, with higher scores for boys. After controlling for potential confounders, greater maternal adherence to rMedDiet during pregnancy was associated with a lower risk of childhood overweight/obesity, highest vs. lowest quartile (OR = 0.34, 95% CI: 0.12-0.90; p-trend 0.037). Similar trends regarding this association (per 1-point increase rMedDiet score) were observed after stratification by advanced maternal age, maternal early pregnancy BMI, education, socioeconomic status, smoking, and gestational weight gain. Our findings suggest that closer adherence to the MedDiet during pregnancy may protect against the risk of offspring overweight/obesity at 4 years. Further research is needed to explore whether associations persist across the life course.
Article's DOI:10.3390/nu16040532
Link to the original source:https://www.mdpi.com/2072-6643/16/4/532
Papper version:info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
licence for use:https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/es/
Department:Ciències Mèdiques Bàsiques
Licence document URL:https://repositori.urv.cat/ca/proteccio-de-dades/
Thematic Areas:Zootecnia / recursos pesqueiros
Saúde coletiva
Química
Psicología
Planejamento urbano e regional / demografia
Nutrition and dietetics
Nutrition & dietetics
Nutrição
Medicina veterinaria
Medicina iii
Medicina ii
Medicina i
Interdisciplinar
Food science
Farmacia
Engenharias iv
Engenharias ii
Enfermagem
Educação física
Economia
Ciências biológicas iii
Ciências biológicas ii
Ciências biológicas i
Ciências agrárias i
Ciência de alimentos
Biotecnología
Keywords:Trajectories
Risk
Questionnaire
Pregnancy
Mediterranean diet
Maternal diet
Lifestyles
Index
Fetal-growth
Eclipses
Childhood overweight
Childhood obesity
Birth
Abdominal obesity
Entity:Universitat Rovira i Virgili
Record's date:2024-08-03
Search your record at:

Available files
FileDescriptionFormat
DocumentPrincipalDocumentPrincipalapplication/pdf

Information

© 2011 Universitat Rovira i Virgili