Maternal Dietary Carbohydrate Intake and Newborn Aortic Wall Thickness.
Kirsty M MckenzieReeja NasirYang KongHasthi U DissanayakeRowena McMullanAdrienne GordonAlice MeroniMelinda PhangMichael R SkiltonPublished in: Nutrients (2021)
Evidence from animal models indicates that maternal diet during pregnancy affects offspring cardiometabolic health. Improving carbohydrate quality during high-risk pregnancies reduces aortic intima-medial thickness; a marker for early atherosclerosis; in the infant offspring. We sought to determine whether maternal carbohydrate quantity and quality are associated with newborn aortic intima-medial thickness in healthy pregnancies. Maternal diet throughout pregnancy was evaluated in 139 mother-child dyads using a validated food frequency questionnaire. Carbohydrate intake was expressed as quantity (% total energy), quality (fibre, glycaemic index), and glycaemic burden (glycaemic load). Aortic intima-medial thickness was measured by high-frequency ultrasound of the neonatal abdominal aorta. Neither quantity nor quality of maternal carbohydrate intake during pregnancy was associated with meaningful differences in offspring maximum aortic intima-medial thickness with the exception of fibre intake in women with overweight or obesity which was inversely associated (-8 μm [95% CI -14, -1] per g fibre, p = 0.04). In healthy pregnancy, the quantity and quality of maternal carbohydrate intake is likely not a meaningful modifiable lifestyle factor for influencing offspring vascular health. The effect of carbohydrate quality may only be evident in high-risk pregnancies, consistent with previous findings. These findings may be confirmed in prospective dietary trials in pregnancy.
Keyphrases
- pregnancy outcomes
- birth weight
- aortic valve
- weight gain
- preterm birth
- high frequency
- weight loss
- type diabetes
- optical coherence tomography
- gestational age
- pulmonary artery
- healthcare
- mental health
- high fat diet
- left ventricular
- pregnant women
- physical activity
- public health
- quality improvement
- metabolic syndrome
- insulin resistance
- heart failure
- cardiovascular risk factors
- aortic dissection
- computed tomography
- risk assessment