Micronutrients and fetal growth
Micronutrients and fetal growth
Fetal undernutrition affects large numbers of infants in developing countries, with adverse consequences for their immediate survival and lifelong health. It manifests as intrauterine growth retardation (IUGR), defined as birth weight <10th percentile, which probably underestimates the number failing to achieve full growth potential. Birth weight is a crude measure of the dynamic process of fetal growth and does not capture effects of fetal undernutrition on body composition and the development of specific tissues. The link between maternal nutrition and fetal nutrition is indirect. The fetus is nourished by a complex supply line that includes the mother's diet and absorption, endocrine status and metabolism, cardiovascular adaptations to pregnancy and placental function. Micronutrients are essential for growth, and maternal micronutrient deficiency, frequently multiple in developing countries, may be an important cause of IUGR. Supplementation of undernourished mothers with micronutrients has several benefits but there is little hard evidence of improved fetal growth. However, this has been inadequately tested. Most trials have only used single micronutrients and many were inconclusive because of methodological problems. Several food-based studies (some uncontrolled) suggest benefits from improving maternal dietary quality with micronutrient-dense foods. One trial of a multivitamin supplement (HIV-positive mothers, Tanzania) showed increased birth weight and fewer fetal deaths. Well-conducted randomized controlled trials of adequate sample size and including measures of effectiveness are needed in populations at high risk of micronutrient deficiency and IUGR and should include food-based interventions and better measurements of fetal growth, maternal metabolism, and long-term outcomes in the offspring.
maternal nutrition, micronutrients, fetal growth, fetal death, review
1747S-1756S
Fall, Caroline H. D.
7171a105-34f5-4131-89d7-1aa639893b18
Yajnik, Chittaranjan S.
f5777038-bba7-49bd-80b9-be4e586eecf4
Rao, Shobha
f2b6465e-a502-4f06-861d-d761a3fd6569
Davies, Anna A.
623c95c7-3473-4845-a443-f5f2e0e4b6c5
Brown, Nick
3b180870-5116-4d93-9d28-5a0b5e4b04d6
Farrant, Hannah J. W.
20981a07-f176-465c-879c-5fe51770c911
2003
Fall, Caroline H. D.
7171a105-34f5-4131-89d7-1aa639893b18
Yajnik, Chittaranjan S.
f5777038-bba7-49bd-80b9-be4e586eecf4
Rao, Shobha
f2b6465e-a502-4f06-861d-d761a3fd6569
Davies, Anna A.
623c95c7-3473-4845-a443-f5f2e0e4b6c5
Brown, Nick
3b180870-5116-4d93-9d28-5a0b5e4b04d6
Farrant, Hannah J. W.
20981a07-f176-465c-879c-5fe51770c911
Fall, Caroline H. D., Yajnik, Chittaranjan S., Rao, Shobha, Davies, Anna A., Brown, Nick and Farrant, Hannah J. W.
(2003)
Micronutrients and fetal growth.
Journal of Nutrition, 133 (5 Suppl 2), .
Abstract
Fetal undernutrition affects large numbers of infants in developing countries, with adverse consequences for their immediate survival and lifelong health. It manifests as intrauterine growth retardation (IUGR), defined as birth weight <10th percentile, which probably underestimates the number failing to achieve full growth potential. Birth weight is a crude measure of the dynamic process of fetal growth and does not capture effects of fetal undernutrition on body composition and the development of specific tissues. The link between maternal nutrition and fetal nutrition is indirect. The fetus is nourished by a complex supply line that includes the mother's diet and absorption, endocrine status and metabolism, cardiovascular adaptations to pregnancy and placental function. Micronutrients are essential for growth, and maternal micronutrient deficiency, frequently multiple in developing countries, may be an important cause of IUGR. Supplementation of undernourished mothers with micronutrients has several benefits but there is little hard evidence of improved fetal growth. However, this has been inadequately tested. Most trials have only used single micronutrients and many were inconclusive because of methodological problems. Several food-based studies (some uncontrolled) suggest benefits from improving maternal dietary quality with micronutrient-dense foods. One trial of a multivitamin supplement (HIV-positive mothers, Tanzania) showed increased birth weight and fewer fetal deaths. Well-conducted randomized controlled trials of adequate sample size and including measures of effectiveness are needed in populations at high risk of micronutrient deficiency and IUGR and should include food-based interventions and better measurements of fetal growth, maternal metabolism, and long-term outcomes in the offspring.
This record has no associated files available for download.
More information
Published date: 2003
Keywords:
maternal nutrition, micronutrients, fetal growth, fetal death, review
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 25481
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/25481
ISSN: 0022-3166
PURE UUID: bad93839-82eb-48c7-b451-88bc35d966c3
Catalogue record
Date deposited: 07 Apr 2006
Last modified: 23 Jul 2022 01:33
Export record
Contributors
Author:
Chittaranjan S. Yajnik
Author:
Shobha Rao
Author:
Anna A. Davies
Author:
Nick Brown
Author:
Hannah J. W. Farrant
Download statistics
Downloads from ePrints over the past year. Other digital versions may also be available to download e.g. from the publisher's website.
View more statistics