SOME ASPECTS OF NEONATAL ESSENTIAL FATTY-ACID STATUS ARE ALTERED BY LINOLEIC-ACID SUPPLEMENTATION OF WOMEN DURING PREGNANCY

被引:0
作者
AL, MD
VONHOUWELINGEN, AC
BADARTSMOOK, A
HORNSTRA, G
机构
关键词
LINOLEIC ACID; PREGNANCY; ESSENTIAL FATTY ACID STATUS; UMBILICAL CORD; HUMANS;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
R15 [营养卫生、食品卫生]; TS201 [基础科学];
学科分类号
100403 ;
摘要
To study the effect of maternal linoleic acid [18:2(n-6), LA] supplementation during pregnancy on neonatal essential fatty acid status, pregnant women with relatively low plasma linoleic acid concentrations before 16 wk of gestation (n = 21) were supplied with foods rich in linoleic acid, resulting in an additional intake of 10 g/d of linoleic acid from the 20th week of gestation until delivery. One of the two control groups consisted of pregnant women with comparably low plasma linoleic acid concentrations at the start of the study (LL-control group, n = 22); the other consisted of women with habitually high plasma linoleic acid concentrations (HL-control group, n = 21). The neonatal essential fatty acid status was assessed by determining the fatty acid composition of phospholipids (PL) isolated from umbilical plasma and umbilical vessel walls, The maternal linoleic acid status in the LA-supplemented group increased to a level comparable to that of the HL-control group, but the neonatal linoleic acid status did not differ from that of either control group. Linoleic acid supplementation did result in slightly, but significantly, higher total amounts of (n-6) long-chain polyenes in umbilical plasma and vein vessel wall phospholipids compared with the LL-control group. This increase was associated with significantly lower total amounts of (n-3) long-chain polyenes. In the HL-control group, the concentration of (n-3) long-chain polyenes in umbilical plasma and vessel walls was significantly lower than in the LA-supplemented and the LL-control group. The results of this study indicate that maternal linoleic acid supplementation can affect some aspects of neonatal essential fatty acid status.
引用
收藏
页码:2822 / 2830
页数:9
相关论文
共 50 条
[21]   Increased consumption of salmon during pregnancy partly prevents the decline of some plasma essential amino acid concentrations in pregnant women [J].
Rossary, Adrien ;
Farges, Marie-Chantal ;
Lamas, Bruno ;
Miles, Elizabeth A. ;
Noakes, Paul S. ;
Kremmyda, Lefkothea-Stella ;
Vlachava, Maria ;
Diaper, Norma D. ;
Robinson, Sian M. ;
Godfrey, Keith M. ;
Calder, Philip C. ;
Vasson, Marie-Paule .
CLINICAL NUTRITION, 2014, 33 (02) :267-273
[22]   Effect of omega-3 lcpufa supplementation on maternal fatty acid and oxylipin concentrations during pregnancy [J].
Best, K. P. ;
Gibson, R. A. ;
Yelland, L. N. ;
Leernaqz, S. ;
Gomersall, J. ;
Liu, G. ;
Makrides, M. .
PROSTAGLANDINS LEUKOTRIENES AND ESSENTIAL FATTY ACIDS, 2020, 162
[23]   Docosahexaenoic acid supplementation during pregnancy as phospholipids did not improve the incorporation of this fatty acid into rat fetal brain compared with the triglyceride form [J].
Gazquez, Antonio ;
Hernandez-Albaladejo, Inmaculada ;
Larque, Elvira .
NUTRITION RESEARCH, 2017, 37 :78-86
[24]   Supplementation of essential fatty acids to Holstein calves during late uterine life and first month of life alters hepatic fatty acid profile and gene expression [J].
Garcia, M. ;
Greco, L. F. ;
Lock, A. L. ;
Block, E. ;
Santos, J. E. R. ;
Thatcher, W. W. ;
Staples, C. R. .
JOURNAL OF DAIRY SCIENCE, 2016, 99 (09) :7085-7101
[25]   Polyunsaturated Fatty Acid Levels in Maternal Erythrocytes of Japanese Women during Pregnancy and after Childbirth [J].
Kawabata, Terue ;
Kagawa, Yasuo ;
Kimura, Fumiko ;
Miyazawa, Teruo ;
Saito, Shoji ;
Arima, Takahiro ;
Nakai, Kunihiko ;
Yaegashi, Nobuo .
NUTRIENTS, 2017, 9 (03)
[26]   Folic acid supplementation in European women of reproductive age and during pregnancy with excessive weight: a systematic review [J].
Loperfido, Federica ;
Sottotetti, Francesca ;
Bianco, Irene ;
El Masri, Dana ;
Maccarini, Beatrice ;
Ferrara, Chiara ;
Limitone, Antonio ;
Cena, Hellas ;
De Giuseppe, Rachele .
REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH, 2025, 22 (01)
[27]   Altered Preconception Fatty Acid Intake Is Associated with Improved Pregnancy Rates in Overweight and Obese Women Undertaking in Vitro Fertilisation [J].
Moran, Lisa J. ;
Tsagareli, Victoria ;
Noakes, Manny ;
Norman, Robert .
NUTRIENTS, 2016, 8 (01)
[28]   Folic acid supplementation in Italian women during pregnancy: A cross-sectional study conducted in general practice [J].
Gazzino, Roberta ;
Marrocco, Walter ;
D'Ingianna, Antonio Pio ;
Poggiogalle, Eleonora ;
Giusti, Anna Maria ;
Pinto, Alessandro ;
Lenzi, Andrea ;
Donini, Lorenzo M. .
NUTRITION, 2020, 79-80
[29]   Fatty acid status and antioxidant defense system in mothers and their newborns after salmon intake during late pregnancy [J].
Garcia-Rodriguez, Cruz E. ;
Olza, Josune ;
Mesa, Maria D. ;
Aguilera, Concepcion M. ;
Miles, Elizabeth A. ;
Noakes, Paul S. ;
Vlachava, Maria ;
Kremmyda, Lefkothea-Stella ;
Diaper, Norma D. ;
Godfrey, Keith M. ;
Calder, Philip C. ;
Gil, Angel .
NUTRITION, 2017, 33 :157-162
[30]   Dietary Determinants of Polyunsaturated Fatty Acid (PUFA) Status in a High Fish-Eating Cohort during Pregnancy [J].
Conway, Marie C. ;
Mulhern, Maria S. ;
McSorley, Emeir M. ;
van Wijngaarden, Edwin ;
Strain, J. J. ;
Myers, Gary J. ;
Davidson, Philip W. ;
Shamlaye, Conrad F. ;
Yeates, Alison J. .
NUTRIENTS, 2018, 10 (07)