High-protein diet in lactation leads to a sudden infant death-like syndrome in mice

Autor: Nils Dietrich, Harald M. Hammon, Ulla Renne, Marzena Kucia, Thomas Walther, Martina Langhammer, Wolf-Eberhard Siems, Cornelia C. Metges
Jazyk: angličtina
Rok vydání: 2011
Předmět:
Male
Anatomy and Physiology
Mouse
lcsh:Medicine
High-protein diet
medicine.disease_cause
Nutrition
Blood pressure
Neonates
Pregnancy
Lactation
Body weight
Fats
Diet
Biochemistry
Pediatrics
Mice
lcsh:Science
Adiposity
Protein Metabolism
Neonatalology
Multidisciplinary
Child Health
Animal Models
Milk
medicine.anatomical_structure
Medicine
Female
Dietary Proteins
Public Health
Sudden Infant Death
Research Article
medicine.medical_specialty
Offspring
Endocrine System
Biology
Sudden death
Model Organisms
Population Metrics
Internal medicine
Death Rate
medicine
Animals
Humans
Weaning
Obesity
Population Biology
Endocrine Physiology
Body Weight
Malnutrition
lcsh:R
Infant
Newborn

Sudden infant death syndrome
medicine.disease
Survival Analysis
Infant mortality
Metabolism
Endocrinology
Animals
Newborn

Metabolic Disorders
lcsh:Q
Zdroj: PLoS ONE, Vol 6, Iss 3, p e17443 (2011)
PLoS ONE
PLOS ONE, 6(3): e17443
ISSN: 1932-6203
Popis: Background It is well accepted that reduced foetal growth and development resulting from maternal malnutrition are associated with a number of chronic conditions in later life. On the other hand such generation-transcending effects of over-nutrition and of high-protein consumption in pregnancy and lactation, a proven fact in all developed societies, are widely unknown. Thus, we intended to describe the generation-transcending effects of a high-protein diet, covering most relevant topics of human life like embryonic mortality, infant death, and physical health in later life. Methods Female mice received control food (21% protein) or were fed a high protein diet (42% protein) during mating. After fertilisation, females stayed on their respective diet until weaning. At birth, pups were put to foster mothers who were fed with standard food or with HP diet. After weaning, control diet was fed to all mice. All offspring were monitored up to 360 days after birth. We determined glucose-tolerance and measured cardiovascular parameters using a tip-catheter. Finally, abdominal fat amount was measured. Results and Conclusions We identified a worried impact of high-protein diet during pregnancy on dams' body weight gain, body weight of newborns, number of offspring, and also survival in later life. Even more important is the discovery that high-protein diet during lactation caused a more than eight-fold increase in offspring mortality. The observed higher newborn mortality during lactation is a hitherto non-described, unique link to the still incompletely understood human sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS). Thus, although offspring of lactating mothers on high-protein diet might have the advantage of lower abdominal fat within the second half of life, this benefit seems not to compensate the immense risk of an early sudden death during lactation. Our data may implicate that both pregnant women and lactating mothers should not follow classical high-protein diets.
Databáze: OpenAIRE