Prenatal influences on bone health in children.
Study Goal
The researchers aimed to determine how maternal calcium intake and vitamin D status influence offspring bone mineral density (BMD) and bone health.
Results Summary
Observational and intervention studies suggest maternal calcium and vitamin D status are associated with offspring bone mineralization, but definitive conclusions require high-quality randomized controlled trials like MAVIDOS.
Population
Pregnant women and their offspring.
Effective Dosage
Not specified
Duration
Not specified
Interactions
None mentioned
| Intervention | Direction | Endpoint | Population | Dosage | Impact | Claim # |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
maternal diet | neutral | offspring bone health | - | - | might influence | #1 |
maternal calcium status | neutral | offspring bone mineralization | - | - | are associated with | #2 |
maternal 25-hydroxyvitamin D [25(OH)D] status | neutral | offspring bone mineralization | - | - | are associated with | #3 |
maternal lifestyle | neutral | offspring bone mineralization | - | - | are associated with | #4 |
maternal micronutrient supplementation | neutral | offspring bone mineral density (BMD) | - | - | effects | #5 |
maternal diet | neutral | offspring BMD | - | - | relating | #6 |
INTRODUCTION: Optimising bone health might reduce the burden of both fractures in childhood and fragility fractures in later life. A number of maternal dietary and non-dietary factors have been identified that might influence offspring bone health and represent targets for intervention. AREAS COVERED: This article will outline the accrual of bone mineral throughout the life course and how observational and intervention studies have shown that maternal diet, in particular maternal calcium and 25-hydroxyvitamin D [25(OH)D] status, and lifestyle are associated with offspring bone mineralization. Studies examining the effects of maternal micronutrient supplementation on offspring bone mineral density (BMD) will also be discussed. EXPERT COMMENTARY: There is a wealth of observational evidence relating maternal diet to offspring BMD. However, high quality randomized controlled trials, such as the ongoing MAVIDOS study, are needed before these findings can be definitively translated into public health advice.