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First-trimester diet quality in association with maternal subcutaneous and visceral adipose tissue thicknesses and glucose homeostasis during pregnancy.

Emilie BernierAnne-Sophie PlanteJulie RobitailleSimone LemieuxMario GirardEmmanuel BujoldClaudia GagnonS John WeisnagelAndré TchernofAnne-Sophie Plante
Published in: International journal of food sciences and nutrition (2023)
We aimed to characterise the associations between first-trimester diet quality, adiposity, and glucose homeostasis measurements throughout pregnancy in a sample of 104 healthy pregnant women. Three Web-based 24-h recalls were completed, from which the Alternate Healthy Eating Index (AHEI) was calculated. At each trimester (12.5 ± 0.7, 22.8 ± 1.0, and 33.6 ± 1.3 weeks of gestation), fasting glucose and insulin were measured to compute an insulin resistance index (HOMA-IR). Subcutaneous and visceral adipose tissue thicknesses were estimated by ultrasound at the end of the first trimester. Inverse associations were observed between the first-trimester AHEI and first-trimester fasting insulin ( r =  0.24; p  < 0.05), and HOMA-IR ( r  = -0.22; p  < 0.05), as well as third-trimester fasting insulin ( r  = -0.20; p  < 0.05). A trend was also observed between first-trimester AHEI and first-trimester SAT thickness ( r  = -0.17; p  < 0.1). Pre- and early-pregnancy adiposity measurements were identified as high predictors fasting insulin concentrations throughout pregnancy. Higher early-pregnancy diet quality is associated with more favourable metabolic measurements during pregnancy.
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