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Maternal amino acid supplementation for intrauterine growth restriction
Author(s) -
Paul J. Rozance
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
frontiers in bioscience-scholar
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.606
H-Index - 46
eISSN - 1944-7906
pISSN - 1945-0516
DOI - 10.2741/s162
Subject(s) - intrauterine growth restriction , adverse effect , pregnancy , fetus , medicine , fetal growth , animal studies , clinical trial , physiology , obstetrics , bioinformatics , endocrinology , biology , genetics
Maternal dietary protein supplementation to improve fetal growth has been considered as an option to prevent or treat intrauterine growth restriction. However, in contrast to balanced dietary supplementation, adverse perinatal outcomes in pregnant women who received high amounts of dietary protein supplementation have been observed. The responsible mechanisms for these adverse outcomes are unknown. This review will discuss relevant human and animal data to provide the background necessary for the development of explanatory hypotheses and ultimately for the development therapeutic interventions during pregnancy to improve fetal growth. Relevant aspects of fetal amino acid metabolism during normal pregnancy and those pregnancies affected by IUGR will be discussed. In addition, data from animal experiments which have attempted to determine mechanisms to explain the adverse responses identified in the human trials will be presented. Finally, we will suggest new avenues for investigation into how amino acid supplementation might be used safely to treat and/or prevent IUGR.

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