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Human milk: maternal dietary lipids and infant development

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 July 2007

Sheila M. Innis
Affiliation:
Nutrition Research Program, Child and Family Research Institute, University of British Columbia, 950 West 28th Avenue, Vancouver, BC V5Z 4H4, Canada
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Abstract

Human milk provides all the dietary essential fatty acids, linoleic acid (LA; 18:2n-6) and α-linolenic acid (18:3n-3), as well as their longer-chain more-unsaturated metabolites, including arachidonic acid (20:4n-6) and DHA (22:6n-3) to support the growth and development of the breast-fed infant. Human milk levels of LA have increased in Westernized nations from mean levels (g/100 g total fatty acids) of 6 to 12–16 over the last century, paralleling the increase in dietary intake of LA-rich vegetable oils. DHA levels (g/100 g total milk fatty acids) vary from <0·1 to >1% and are lowest in countries in which the intake of DHA from fish and other animal tissue lipids is low. The role of DHA in infant nutrition is of particular importance because DHA is accumulated specifically in the membrane lipids of the brain and retina, where it is important to visual and neural function. An important question is the extent to which many human diets that contain low amounts of n-3 fatty acids may compromise human development. The present paper reviews current knowledge on maternal diet and human milk fatty acids, the implications of maternal diet as the only source of essential fatty acids for infant development both before and after birth, and recent studies addressing the maternal intakes and milk DHA levels associated with risk of low infant neural system maturation.

Information

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Authors 2007
Figure 0

Fig. 1. Concentration of DHA in milk fat at 30 d postnatally among women with an erythrocyte phosphatidylethanolamine (RBC PE)-DHA of <8·5 or >8·51 g/100 g total fatty acids at 36 weeks of gestation (n 17 and n 22 respectively) who exclusively breast-fed their term-gestation infants. Values are means with their standard errors represented by vertical bars. Mean value was significantly different from that for the higher concentration of maternal RBC PE-DHA: *P<0·05.

Figure 1

Fig. 2. Visual acuity at 60 and 365 d of age among term-gestation infants grouped by tertile of erythrocyte phosphatidylethanolamine (RBC PE)-DHA status at 60 d of age, at which time all infants were breast-fed. The mean DHA in the mothers’ milk of infants in the lower, middle and upper tertile was 0·17, 0·22 and 0·31 g/100 g total milk fatty acids respectively. Visual acuity at 60 and 365 d of age was significantly higher among infants in the highest tertile compared with lowest tertile: *P<0·05. (Adapted from Innis et al.2001.)

Figure 2

Fig. 3. Visual acuity scores at 60 d of age among infants grouped according to their mother's DHA status at 36 weeks of gestation. The no. of infants whose mothers were assigned to placebo or 400 mg DHA/d from 16 weeks of gestation until delivery were respectively (according to tertile of erythrocyte phosphatidylethanolamine (RBC PE)-DHA; g/100 g total fatty acids): <8·50, 21, 1; 8·51–13·56, 27, 33; >13·57, 2, 15. Visual acuity scores were significantly lower among infants in the lowest tertile compared with the highest tertile (P<0·05). Using multivariate regression DHA supplementation was associated with a 2-fold decrease in the risk of a visual acuity score of <2·32 cycles/degree (the mean score of the study population (n 99); OR 2:1).