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Variation in urine osmolality throughout pregnancy: a longitudinal, randomized-control trial among women with overweight and obesity

Authors :
Alysha Kelyman
Danielle Symons Downs
Emily E. Hohman
Celine Latona
Katherine M McNitt
Abigail M. Pauley
Alison D. Gernand
Krista S. Leonard
Jennifer S. Savage
Jason John
Asher Y. Rosinger
Hilary J. Bethancourt
Source :
Eur J Nutr
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2021.

Abstract

PURPOSE: Water needs increase during pregnancy, and proper hydration is critical for maternal and fetal health. This study characterized weekly hydration status changes throughout pregnancy and examined change in response to a randomized, behavioral intervention. An exploratory analysis tested how underhydration during pregnancy was associated with birth outcomes. METHODS: The Healthy Mom Zone Study is a longitudinal, randomized-control trial intervention aiming to regulate gestational weight gain (GWG) in pregnant women with overweight/obesity (n=27). Fourteen women received standard of care; 13 women additionally received weekly guidance on nutrition, physical activity, water intake, and health-promoting behaviors. Hydration status was measured weekly via overnight urine osmolality (Uosm) from ~8–36 weeks gestation; underhydration was dichotomized (Uosm≥500 mOsm/kg). Gestational age- and sex-standardized birth weight and length z scores and percentiles were calculated. We used mixed-effect and linear regression models to test covariate-adjusted relationships. RESULTS: No differences existed in Uosm or other characteristics between control and intervention women at baseline. Significant interactions (p=0.01) between intervention and week of pregnancy on Uosm indicated intervention women maintained lower Uosm, whereas control women had a significant quadratic (inverse-U) relationship and greater Uosm in the second and early third trimesters. Results were consistent across robustness and sensitivity checks. Exploratory analyses suggest underhydration was associated with birth weight, but not length, in opposite ways in the second vs. third trimester. CONCLUSION: A multi-component behavioral intervention helped women with overweight/obesity maintain better hydration throughout pregnancy. Future studies should confirm birth outcome results as they have important implications for early life nutrition. Trial Registration ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT03945266; registered May 10, 2019 retrospectively

Details

ISSN :
14366215 and 14366207
Volume :
61
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
European Journal of Nutrition
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ab9a70d5697dc05769e5af5e114f59fc
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00394-021-02616-x