Objective: To investigate the association of breastfeeding during adolescence with bone mineral density (BMD) during young adulthood.Methods: Secondary analysis of data from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey III, a nationally representative cross-sectional survey conducted from 1988 through 1994, was performed. The BMDs for 5 regions of the proximal femur as measured by dual energy x-ray absorptiometry were compared for 5 groups of women aged 20 to 25 years (n = 819); the groups included those who had been: (1) adolescent mothers and had breastfed (n=94), (2) adolescent mothers and had not breastfed (n = 151), (3) mothers who first gave birth as adults and breastfed (n = 67), (4) mothers who first gave birth as adults and had not breastfed (n=89), and (5) nulliparous (n=418). SUDAAN software was used to account for the complex sampling design of the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey. Adjusted mean differences in BMD were estimated using least-squares linear regression.Results: During young adulthood, women who breastfed during adolescence had higher adjusted BMDs, which was statistically significant in 4 of the 5 regions, than those who had not breastfed (total proximal femur area difference, 0.049 gm/cm 2 [95% confidence interval, 0.002-0.095]) and BMDs equivalent to nulliparous women (total proximal femur area difference, 0.024 gm/cm 2 [95% confidence interval, −0.023 to 0.071]). Adjusting also for obstetric variables, women who breastfed during adolescence had higher BMDs in all 5 regions compared with their peers who had not breastfed (total proximal femur area difference, 0.053 gm/cm 2 [95% confidence interval, 0.029-0.077]).
Conclusions:In this nationally representative sample, breastfeeding by adolescent mothers was associated with greater BMD in the proximal femur during young adulthood. Lactation was not found to be detrimental and may be protective to the bone health of adolescent mothers. Med. 2004;158:650-656 N EARLY 500 000 ADOLEScents gave birth to live infants in the United States in 2002; approximately 35% of the adolescents were 17 years or younger.
Arch Pediatr Adolesc1 Evidence that growing teenagers bear infants of lower mean birth weight than those no longer growing suggests that the pregnant adolescent's ability to meet the metabolic needs of herself and the fetus may be compromised.2 Parallel information regarding adolescents' ability to breastfeed their infants without compromising their own or their infants' nutritional status is limited. Specifically, the long-term effect of breastfeeding on adolescent mothers' bone mineral density (BMD) is unknown.The relationship between lactation and bone density in adult women is incompletely understood. During lactation, BMD decreases; bone loss during lactation is physiologic, independent of dietary calcium, and associated with parathyroid hormone-related peptide produced by the mammary gland under the influence of prolactin in response to suckling.3-5 A longitudinal study of 69 lactating women in Japan by Hond...