Health & Medicine - Posted by Stephanie Desmon-JHU on Thursday, August 30, 2012 13:33 - 7 Comments    
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Newborn diet may set the stage for obesity

What's true for rats may also be true for humans, researchers say: Consuming a high-fat diet as a newborn or young child may be the first step on the road to obesity. (Credit: Tatiana Bulyonkova/Flickr)

JOHNS HOPKINS (US) — What we eat as newborns may do more to trigger future obesity than unhealthy nutrition we’re exposed to in the womb.


Experiments in baby rats show that those born to mothers on high-fat diets but fed normal levels of fat right after birth avoid obesity and its related disorders as adults, researchers report.

On the other hand, rat babies exposed to a normal-fat diet in the womb but nursed by rat mothers on high-fat diets become obese by the time they are weaned.

“Our research confirms that exposure to a high-fat diet right after birth has significant consequences for obesity,” says Kellie L.K. Tamashiro, an assistant professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine and leader of the study published online in the journal Diabetes.

“But it also suggests that by putting children on a healthy diet in infancy and early childhood, we can intervene and potentially prevent a future of obesity, diabetes and heart disease,” Tamashiro adds.

Straight from the Source

Read the original study

DOI: 10.2337/db11-0957

Obesity has become a worldwide public health problem that often leads to many other disorders, such as cardiovascular disease, hypertension, type 2 diabetes, some cancers, and arthritis. Skyrocketing obesity rates cost the health care system billions of dollars and reduce longevity, experts say.

Tamashiro and colleagues will next try to determine whether exercise in early rat development, at the equivalent of elementary school age in humans, can reverse the effects of exposure to a high-fat diet.

“These animals—like children—are still developing and responding to their environment, and, as much as possible, we want to make sure they develop properly so bad health consequences don’t occur,” she says.

While her team’s studies may be important steps toward understanding how prenatal and postnatal environments affect development, Tamashiro cautions that data from rats don’t directly translate into human application.

Still, Tamashiro says, obstetricians may be on the right track as they rethink guidelines for pregnant women. Many suggest that obese women limit weight gain during pregnancy by reducing fat and calories.

Obese mothers who switch to healthier diets during pregnancy and then maintain them while nursing may be able to help their children avoid the path to obesity, Tamashiro says.

“Obesity rates have increased threefold over the last 20 years,” she notes. “We know it’s not because of genetics because our genes don’t change that quickly. So we are focusing on the developmental environment.

“Obese children are developing metabolic disorders earlier, affecting their quality of life and health over the long term. Prevention is probably the best strategy we have.”

Rat babies

In the Johns Hopkins experiments, newborn baby rats exposed to a high-fat diet through the breast milk of rat mothers fed high amounts of fat were more likely to gain excessive weight, have impaired tolerance to glucose (a sign of prediabetes), and become insensitive to the hormone leptin, which regulates appetite and body weight in humans and rodents and can be disrupted in obese mammals.

Leptin, secreted by fat cells, signals how much fat is around and controls food intake; obese people often are insensitive to the signals, for reasons so far unclear.

To compare the impact on offspring obesity of prenatal versus postnatal exposure to a maternal high-fat diet, Tamashiro and her team began by feeding half of the pregnant rats a high-fat diet and half a normal diet. After birth, half of the offspring of the high-fat moms were given to the normal-diet moms to nurse and vice versa.

Those exposed to a high-fat diet both before and after birth (through breast milk) gained more weight and were obese by the time they were weaned, as were those who were only nursed by rats on a high-fat diet. Those born to mothers on a high-fat diet but nursed by rats on a normal diet did not suffer the same fate.

The research was supported by the National Institutes of Health’s National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases and National Institute of Child Health and Human Development.

Source: Johns Hopkins University

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7 Comments

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Brad
Aug 30, 2012 22:36

If this true then I’ll tell my wife to stop breast feeding our infant son since human breast milk is made up of 60% or more saturated fat.

Gloria
Aug 31, 2012 14:18

Brad,
I don’t think that’s how it works. Babies need that. It’s when mothers eat unhealthily that it becomes bad for babies. I’m not sure if it increases fat or changes the type of fat but breastfeeding really is always best. It also gives the baby immunities to anything that the mother is around.

Kim
Sep 6, 2012 7:28

Hard and sensitive topic to deal with. Babies and adults all need to eat healthy, but babies need to be fed so it becomes the responsibilty of the adults in a way.

German Kessler
Sep 10, 2012 17:04

if the mother is healthy and has a healthy diet then it is best she breast feeds.

Baltimore Mom
Sep 18, 2012 9:52

Please note that the (rat!) infants in this study were fed their own mother’s milk. This study does not provide any insight to rat pups fed an alternative diet, or formula. We can control and modify our own diets. Formula is exactly the same every meal. Mother’s milk changes according to baby’s needs. This is only one study, and as the researcher notes, can not necessarily be extrapolated to humans. Breast milk is by far the best nutrition for babies. Very, very few breast fed babies become overweight. Very many formula fed babies do become overweight. Breastfeeding protects against overweight well into adolescence.

Another Mom
Sep 18, 2012 9:55

The fat in breast milk is exactly the right fat for your human baby. The fat in cow’s milk based formula is exactly the (altered) fat of milk meant for baby cows.

Ashley
Dec 3, 2012 18:20

Think about it. When a mother drinks, smokes, does drugs or whatever other harmful things you could load your body with, it gets passed to the baby. Why would a high fat, unhealthy diet be any different? I mean your body doesn’t know to “filter” out the extra fat from that big Mac the mother just ate, just as it doesn’t filter out the alcohol or drugs the mother may take. So what happens? The toxins, and extra fat, get transferred to the child. A high fat diet, for big humans AND small are both bad. Obesity is a serious problem in children and babies, I mean its bad for adults, why wouldn’t it be bad for babies? Yea babies need fat, but not as much as they are getting these days, hence why babies are so big! There is no limit to what small children can eat in some people’s minds. The more the merrier! Hence why children have so many health problems and diatry issues! It’s the same with formula, babies are so over fed, they gain so much weight and suddenly the parent has no clue why the doctor is telling them their child is overweight and unhealthy! I’m not saying EVERY parent does this, but the ones who do should be careful how much and WHAT their children eat, babies, toddlers and older kids. Also, yes the body knows everything the child needs, but the added things the mom takes in are STILL passed to the baby, so even of the breast milk contained the perfect amount, it won’t if the mother doesn’t eat healthy foods. Just some food for thought!

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