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The dietary composition of women who delivered preterm and full-term infants.

Applied nursing research : ANR
June 1, 2017
Wioletta Waksmańska et al. (5 authors)
Comparative StudyJournal ArticleHuman Study
Study Details

Study Goal

The researchers aimed to determine differences in average daily consumption of iron and other nutrients during pregnancy and evaluate their influence on pre-term delivery and hypertension.

Results Summary

The study found statistically significant differences in average daily intake of iron between women with vaginal delivery at term and those with diagnosed hypertension who delivered preterm.

Population

Pregnant women, divided into groups based on delivery outcomes (full-term, pre-term, with or without hypertension).

Effective Dosage

Not specified

Duration

Not specified

Interactions

None mentioned

Extracted Claims (10)
InterventionDirectionEndpointPopulationDosageImpactClaim #
iodine intake
increase
average intake of iodine
women with vaginal delivery at term
-
was always higher
#1
folates intake
increase
average daily intake of folates
women who gave birth to full-term neonates with proper neonatal weight
-
revealed a higher intake
#2
folates intake
neutral
average daily intake of folates
women with vaginal delivery at term vs. women with diagnosed hypertension who delivered preterm
-
significant differences
#3
iodine intake
neutral
average daily intake of iodine
women with vaginal delivery at term vs. women with diagnosed hypertension who delivered preterm
-
significant differences
#4
retinol intake
neutral
average daily intake of retinol
women with vaginal delivery at term vs. women with diagnosed hypertension who delivered preterm
-
significant differences
#5
magnesium intake
neutral
average daily intake of magnesium
women with vaginal delivery at term vs. women with diagnosed hypertension who delivered preterm
-
significant differences
#6
iron intake
neutral
average daily intake of iron
women with vaginal delivery at term vs. women with diagnosed hypertension who delivered preterm
-
significant differences
#7
iodine intake
neutral
occurrence of arterial hypertension
-
-
correlation was demonstrated
#8
vitamin D intake
neutral
occurrence of arterial hypertension
-
-
correlation was demonstrated
#9
supplementation of the diet with minerals and vitamins
neutral
-
women in the preconception and prenatal period
-
should be considered
#10
Abstract

OBJECTIVES: Literature data show that excess and primary deficiency in particular nutrients, vitamins and minerals may lead to pre-eclampsia, gestational diabetes, hypertension and neural tube defects in the foetus. The aim of the study was to determine differences in average daily consumption of selected nutrients during pregnancy in women who did not supplement their diet and to evaluate the influence of dietary habits on the occurrence of pre-term delivery and hypertension in pregnant women. SAMPLE GROUP AND METHODS: Information on the course of pregnancy and the newborn's health status at birth was derived from the Charter of Pregnancy and documents recorded by the hospital. Women's eating habits and dietary composition were analyzed on the basis of a dietary questionnaire. The sample group was divided into four groups: women who delivered neonates appropriate for gestational age (AGA), women with gestosis who delivered AGA neonates by means of caesarean sections, women who delivered pre-term neonates (PTB) and women with gestosis who delivered PTB by means of caesarean sections. RESULTS: In the case of women with vaginal delivery at term the average intake of iodine was always higher than in other groups. Analysis of average daily intake of folates revealed a higher intake in the group of women who gave birth to full-term neonates with proper neonatal weight in comparison with the groups of women with pre-term delivery. P≤0.05. CONCLUSIONS: Statistically significant differences in average daily intake of folates, iodine, retinol, magnesium and iron were observed between the group of women with vaginal delivery at term and the groups of women with diagnosed hypertension who delivered preterm. Correlation was demonstrated between average daily intake of iodine and vitamin D and the occurrence of arterial hypertension. Supplementation of the diet of women in the preconception and prenatal period with minerals and vitamins should be considered.

Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
AdultDietFeeding BehaviorFemaleHumansInfantInfant, NewbornMaternal Nutritional Physiological PhenomenaPregnancyPregnant PeoplePremature BirthTerm Birth
Study Links
Quality Scores
SafetyNot Assessed
Efficacy65/10
Quality70/10
Citation Metrics
Total Citations3
Citations/Year0.4
Relative Citation Ratio0.23
NIH Percentile11.7%
Research Impact Scores
APT Score0.25
Weight Score1.60
Normalized Score0.60
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