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Low-protein formula slows weight gain in infants of overweight mothers.


ABSTRACT: Infant formulas provide more protein than breast milk. High protein intakes, as well as maternal obesity, are risk factors for later obesity. The present study tested whether a formula with lower protein content slows weight gain of infants of overweight mothers (body mass index [BMI]?>25 kg/m).In a randomized double-blind study infants of overweight mothers received from 3 months an experimental (EXPL) formula with 1.65 g of protein/100 kcal (62.8 kcal/100 mL) and containing probiotics, or a control (CTRL) formula with 2.7 g of protein/100 kcal (65.6 kcal/100 mL). Breast-fed infants were studied concurrently. Primary assessment was between 3 and 6 months, although formulas were fed until 12 months. Biomarkers of protein metabolism (blood urea nitrogen, insulin growth factor-1, insulinogenic amino acids) were measured.Infants fed the low-protein EXPL formula gained less weight between 3 and 6 months (-1.77 g/day, P=0.024) than infants fed the CTRL formula. In the subgroup of infants of mothers with BMI>30 kg/m the difference was -4.21 g/day (P=0.017). Weight (P=0.011) and BMI (P=0.027) of EXPL infants remained lower than that of CTRL infants until 2 years but were similar to that of breast-fed infants. Blood urea nitrogen, insulin growth factor-1, and insulinogenic amino acids at 6 months were significantly lower in EXPL compared with CTRL.A low-protein formula with probiotics slowed weight gain between 3 and 6 months in infants of overweight mothers. Weight gain and biomarkers were more like those of breast-fed infants.

SUBMITTER: Inostroza J 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC4086775 | biostudies-literature | 2014 Jul

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Low-protein formula slows weight gain in infants of overweight mothers.

Inostroza Jaime J   Haschke Ferdinand F   Steenhout Philippe P   Grathwohl Dominik D   Nelson Steven E SE   Ziegler Ekhard E EE  

Journal of pediatric gastroenterology and nutrition 20140701 1


<h4>Objectives</h4>Infant formulas provide more protein than breast milk. High protein intakes, as well as maternal obesity, are risk factors for later obesity. The present study tested whether a formula with lower protein content slows weight gain of infants of overweight mothers (body mass index [BMI] >25 kg/m).<h4>Methods</h4>In a randomized double-blind study infants of overweight mothers received from 3 months an experimental (EXPL) formula with 1.65 g of protein/100 kcal (62.8 kcal/100 mL)  ...[more]

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