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Human Milk Micronutrients and Child Growth and Body Composition in the First 2 years:A Systematic Review

Authors :
Reyes, Sarah M.
Brockway, Meredith (Merilee)
McDermid, Joann M.
Chan, Deborah
Granger, Matthew
Refvik, Rebecca
Sidhu, Karanbir K.
Musse, Suad
Monnin, Caroline
Lotoski, Larisa
Geddes, Donna T.
Jehan, Fyezah
Kolsteren, Patrick
Allen, Lindsay H.
Hampel, Daniela
Eriksen, Kamilla G.
Rodriguez, Natalie
Azad, Meghan B.
Reyes, Sarah M.
Brockway, Meredith (Merilee)
McDermid, Joann M.
Chan, Deborah
Granger, Matthew
Refvik, Rebecca
Sidhu, Karanbir K.
Musse, Suad
Monnin, Caroline
Lotoski, Larisa
Geddes, Donna T.
Jehan, Fyezah
Kolsteren, Patrick
Allen, Lindsay H.
Hampel, Daniela
Eriksen, Kamilla G.
Rodriguez, Natalie
Azad, Meghan B.
Source :
Reyes , S M , Brockway , M M , McDermid , J M , Chan , D , Granger , M , Refvik , R , Sidhu , K K , Musse , S , Monnin , C , Lotoski , L , Geddes , D T , Jehan , F , Kolsteren , P , Allen , L H , Hampel , D , Eriksen , K G , Rodriguez , N & Azad , M B 2024 , ' Human Milk Micronutrients and Child Growth and Body Composition in the First 2 years : A Systematic Review ' , Advances in Nutrition , vol. 15 , no. 1 , 100082 .
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Human milk (HM) provides a plethora of nutritional and non-nutritional compounds that support infant development. For many compounds, concentrations vary substantially among mothers and across lactation, and their impact on infant growth is poorly understood. We systematically searched MEDLINE, Embase, the Cochrane Library, Scopus, and Web of Science to synthesize evidence published between 1980 and 2022 on HM components and anthropometry through 2 y of age among term-born infants. Outcomes included weight-for-length, length-for-age, weight-for-age, body mass index (in kg/m2)–for–age, and growth velocity. From 9992 abstracts screened, 144 articles were included and categorized based on their reporting of HM micronutrients, macronutrients, or bioactive components. Micronutrients (vitamins and minerals) are reported here, based on 28 articles involving 2526 mother-infant dyads. Studies varied markedly in their designs, sampling times, geographic and socioeconomic settings, reporting practices, and the HM analytes and infant anthropometrics measured. Meta-analysis was not possible because data were sparse for most micronutrients. The most-studied minerals were zinc (15 articles, 1423 dyads) and calcium (7 articles, 714 dyads). HM iodine, manganese, calcium, and zinc concentrations were positively associated with several outcomes (each in ≥2 studies), whereas magnesium (in a single study) was negatively associated with linear growth during early lactation. However, few studies measured HM intake, adjusted for confounders, provided adequate information about complementary and formula feeding, or adequately described HM collection protocols. Only 4 studies (17%) had high overall quality scores. The biological functions of individual HM micronutrients are likely influenced by other HM components; yet, only 1 study analyzed data from multiple micronutrients simultaneously, and few addressed other HM components. Thus, available evidence on this topic is largely

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Reyes , S M , Brockway , M M , McDermid , J M , Chan , D , Granger , M , Refvik , R , Sidhu , K K , Musse , S , Monnin , C , Lotoski , L , Geddes , D T , Jehan , F , Kolsteren , P , Allen , L H , Hampel , D , Eriksen , K G , Rodriguez , N & Azad , M B 2024 , ' Human Milk Micronutrients and Child Growth and Body Composition in the First 2 years : A Systematic Review ' , Advances in Nutrition , vol. 15 , no. 1 , 100082 .
Notes :
application/pdf, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1439558239
Document Type :
Electronic Resource