Breast-feeding vs Formula-feeding for Infants Born Small-for-Gestational-Age: Divergent Effects on Fat Mass and on Circulating IGF-I and High-Molecular-Weight Adiponectin in Late Infancy
Author(s) -
Francis de Zegher,
Giorgia Sebastiani,
Marta Díaz,
María Dolores GómezRoig,
Abel LópezBermejo,
Lourdes Ibáñez
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
the journal of clinical endocrinology and metabolism
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.206
H-Index - 353
eISSN - 1945-7197
pISSN - 0021-972X
DOI - 10.1210/jc.2012-3480
Subject(s) - small for gestational age , adiponectin , medicine , endocrinology , weight gain , insulin , birth weight , pregnancy , insulin resistance , body weight , biology , genetics
Fetal growth restraint, if followed by rapid weight gain, confers risk for adult disease including diabetes. How breast-feeding may lower such risk is poorly understood. OBJECTIVE, STUDY PARTICIPANTS, INTERVENTION, OUTCOMES: In infants born small-for-gestational-age (SGA), we studied the effects of nutrition in early infancy (breast-feeding vs formula-feeding; BRF vs FOF) on weight partitioning and endocrine markers in late infancy. Body composition (by absorptiometry), fasting glycemia, insulin, IGF-I, and high-molecular-weight (HMW) adiponectin were assessed at 4 and 12 months in BRF controls born appropriate-for-GA (N = 31) and in SGA infants receiving BRF (N = 48) or FOF (N = 51), the latter being randomized to receive a standard formula (FOF1) or a protein-rich formula (FOF2).
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