Introduction: Maternal overweight and obesity during pregnancy have been shown to have multiple negative effects on the mother's health, which can even affect the infant's growth by increasing weight gain and altering various indicators, such as weight for age, length for age and weight for length. While breast milk on the other hand reduces these risks, and it’s the best and most complete food for the newborn. It’s a dynamic fluid capable of being modified to meet the needs of each stage of the newborn, but despite this capacity and the fact that maternal body mass index can have an impact on its components, through complex biological mechanisms, it manages to reduce the negative effects accumulated during pregnancy and even promotes a healthy state in the baby. In a country like Mexico, where overweight and obesity affect a large part of the population, it is important to study their causes and which could be the effect of this increased maternal overweight during pregnancy and lactation on newborns.
Objective: Identify the alterations associated with increased maternal body mass index during pregnancy and breastfeeding on mothers' health and their possible effect on the growth of the newborn during the first six months of life.
Material and methods: This was a prospective cohort study. Forty-two healthy binomials (mother and child), without problems during delivery and without serious illnesses during the breastfeeding period, were included. Maternal body mass index at the beginning of pregnancy allowed us to create two comparison groups between mothers: one with adequate weight, another with overweight or obesity. Follow-up was carried out once a month during the first six months of life, evaluating the somatometric development of mothers and children. All mothers completed the six-month period of exclusive breastfeeding.
Results: There were differences between both groups of women. The one that included overweight and obese women compared to the group of women with adequate weight had a higher number of pregnancies, abortions, plasma glucose levels in the third trimester of pregnancy, and a lower number of prenatal control visits and plasma platelet levels (all with p<0.05). Regarding the baby's growth, there was a difference between the weight for length classification at 60-, 120-, 150- and 180-day follow-ups. The group to which the mother was assigned with respect to her body mass index at the beginning of pregnancy (adequate weight group and overweight/obese group) was the only factor associated with the risk of the baby being overweight according to weight for length indicator at the 180-day follow-up, with an OR = 5.2 (95%CI 1.02-26.59).
Conclusions: Maternal overweight and obesity during pregnancy have a negative effect on the mother's health and baby's weight gain in its weight-for-length classification during the first six months of life. Although breastfeeding has been shown to have a positive effect on the growth of the baby, exposure to a higher m...