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RESEARCH PRODUCT
The Association of Mediterranean Diet during Pregnancy with Longitudinal Body Mass Index Trajectories and Cardiometabolic Risk in Early Childhood.
Ana Jiménez-zabalaIsolina Riaño-galanMartine VrijheidDavid MartinezEva María Navarrete-muñozLoreto Santa-marinaJordi SunyerVictoria ArijaSílvia Fernández-barrésDora RomagueraCarmen IñiguezCyntia B. Manzano-salgadoInfancia Y Medio Ambiente (Inma)Adonina TardónJesús VioqueDamaskini Valvisubject
AdultWaistMediterranean dietOffspringBlood PressureLower riskDiet MediterraneanBody Mass Index03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicinePregnancyRisk Factors030225 pediatricsMedicineHumans030212 general & internal medicineLongitudinal StudiesChildPregnancybusiness.industrymedicine.diseaseCardiovascular DiseasesSpainRelative riskChild PreschoolPediatrics Perinatology and Child HealthCohortFemaleWaist CircumferencebusinessBody mass indexDemographydescription
Objective To evaluate the associations between maternal adherence to the Mediterranean diet during pregnancy and their offspring's longitudinal body mass index (BMI) trajectories and cardiometabolic risk in early childhood. Study design We included mother-child pairs from the Infancia y Medio Ambiente (INMA) longitudinal cohort study in Spain. We measured dietary intake during pregnancy using a validated food frequency questionnaire and calculated the relative Mediterranean diet score (rMED). We estimated offspring's BMI z score trajectories from birth to age 4 years using latent class growth analyses (n = 2195 mother-child pairs). We measured blood pressure, waist circumference, and cardiometabolic biomarkers to construct a cardiometabolic risk score at 4 years (n = 697 mother-child pairs). We used multivariable adjusted linear and multinomial regression models. Results A higher maternal rMED in pregnancy was associated with a lower risk in offspring of larger birth size, followed by accelerated BMI gain (reference trajectory group: children with average birth size and subsequent slower BMI gain) (relative risk of high vs low rMED score, 0.68; 95% CI, 0.47-0.99). rMED score during pregnancy was not associated with the cardiometabolic risk score, its components, or related biomarkers. Conclusions Higher adherence to the Mediterranean diet in pregnancy was associated with lower risk of having offspring with an accelerated growth pattern. This dietary pattern was not associated with the offspring's cardiometabolic risk at 4 years.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2019-03-01 | The Journal of pediatrics |