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Multivitamins can raise birthweight


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#1 doug123

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Posted 03 January 2007 - 11:04 PM


News source: HindustanTimes.com

Multivitamins can raise birthweight

Sanchita Sharma

New Delhi, January 3, 2006

Giving undernourished women multivitamins during pregnancy increases the newborns' birthweight, found a study done at the University College of Medicals Sciences and Guru Teg Bahadur Hospital in New Delhi.

Babies born to mothers on multivitamins are also less likely to die in the first week of life, reports the study in the Archives of Pediatrics and Adolescent Medicine, a publication of Journal of American Medical Association.


The study found that taking vitamin and mineral supplement by pregnant women is far more effective in increasing birth weight and lowering infant death than just relying on iron and folic acid supplements. Anaemia and multivitamin and minerals deficiency — including vitamins C and E, vitamin B complex and folate — effects over 50 per cent pregnant women in India. Low birth weight — weight of less than 2.5 kg — is a leading cause of death in newborns. It also increases the risk of newborn developing coronary heart disease, diabetes, stroke or high blood pressure in adulthood.

Piyush Gupta, reader in the department of pediatrics at the University College of Medical Sciences, Delhi, and colleagues did the study involving 200 women who were 24 to 32 weeks pregnant. All the women in the study were either underweight or had low haemoglobin, which indicates malnourishment.

On an average, women in the micronutrient group gained 9.2 kg during their pregnancies, compared with 8.7 kg in the placebo group. After the researchers adjusted for other factors that affect birth weight, babies whose mothers took micronutrients weighed 98 grams more than the placebo group. Rate of low birth weight was 43.1 per cent in the placebo group versus 15.2 percent in the micronutrient supplements group.

Email Sanchita Sharma: sanchitasharma@hindustantimes.com

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#2 doug123

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Posted 05 January 2007 - 06:35 PM

Here is another article on the same topic -- however, this article is somehow worthy of CME accreditation -- maybe it is a peer reviewed article...I'm not sure...I haven't read it (yet). I guess there is a difference between normal multivitamins and "prenatal" multivitamins... [huh]

Definition of CME

CME: Stands for Continuing Medical Education. CME programs are intended, literally, to continue the medical education of physicians. Doctors are required to earn CME credits to retain their medical licenses. They may do so by taking courses, attending medical conferences where they learn about new developments, or in some cases by reading and taking a test.


MedPage Today: News source

Prenatal Vitamins for Malnourished Moms Improve Birth Weight

By Crystal Phend, Staff Writer, MedPage Today
Reviewed by Robert Jasmer, MD; Associate Clinical Professor of Medicine, University of California, San Francisco


January 03, 2007

MedPage Today Action Points

o Explain to interested patients that the findings were among a specific group of women who were likely not getting enough nutrients from their diet.

o Point out that folic acid supplementation may benefit all pregnant women, according to other studies.

Review


DELHI, India, Jan. 3 -- Prenatal vitamin and mineral supplements may benefit babies born to undernourished pregnant women, researchers here have found.

Among 200 pregnant women in a resource-poor area, micronutrient supplements reduced the rate of low birth weight by 70% and early neonatal morbidity by 58%, said Piyush Gupta, M.D., M.A.M.S., of the University College of Medical Sciences here, and colleagues.

Although the primary study endpoint of mean birth weight was not significantly affected by multivitamin supplements, reducing the incidence of low birth weight (under 2,500 g) may improve later health, the researchers said in the January issue of the Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine.


"Infants who are small or disproportionate in size at birth also have an increased risk of developing coronary heart disease, type 2 diabetes mellitus, stroke, and hypertension during adult life," they wrote. "It is postulated that these diseases are programmed by inadequate supply of nutrients to the developing fetuses."

Previous trials of vitamins for pregnant women in developing countries have not targeted undernourished pregnant women, who are at greater risk for delivering undersize infants.

So, the researchers randomized 200 women who had a low body mass index (18.5 or less) or anemia (hemoglobin count 7 to 9 g/dL) to once-daily supplements containing 29 vitamins and minerals or to receive placebo containing only calcium. Both groups also received iron and folic acid supplements.

The double-blind study was conducted at a tertiary care hospital that serves poor residents from nearby urban slums and rural communities. Only women who lived within three miles of the hospital were enrolled. They were all given routine antenatal and dietary advice, immunization, and health education.

The women averaged about seven to eight weeks of treatment before delivery, with 87% and 85% compliance in the micronutrient and placebo groups, respectively.

The low birth weight incidence was 16.2% in the supplement group versus 43.1% in the control group (relative risk 0.30, 95% CI 0.13 to 0.71, P=0.006).

Neonatal morbidity during the first week of life was also significantly less common among infants in the micronutrient group (14.8% versus 28.0%, RR 0.42, 95% CI 0.19 to 0.94, P=0.04).

After adjusting for confounding factors, infants in the micronutrient group weighed 98 grams more (about 0.22 pounds, 95% confidence interval -−16 to 213 g) and were 0.8 centimeters longer (about 0.31 inches, 95% CI 0.03 to 1.57 cm) compared with infants in the control group. Mid arm circumference was also larger by 0.20 cm (about 0.80 inches, 95% CI 0.04 to 0.36 cm).

Pregnancy weight gain was no different between groups (9.2 versus 8.7 kg, P=0.26) nor was mean gestational age at delivery (39.6 versus 39.6 weeks, P=0.9) in the micronutrient and placebo groups, respectively.

The proportion born small for gestational age, though, was 55% lower in the micronutrient group (31.1% versus 51.4%, adjusted RR 0.61 0.45, 95% CI 0.21 to 0.97, P=0.04). Only one infant in each group was born preterm (gestational age less than 37 weeks).

Birth weight correlated very strongly with neonatal morbidity in the multivariate model and eliminated the group effect (P<0.001). Mortality was similar between groups (RR 0.93, 95% CI 0.24 to 3.61, P=0.92) as were causes of death.

Delivery details were available for 170 cases. Delivery complications among the 170 cases with details available occurred at a similar rate between groups (15% micronutrient versus 12% placebo P=0.66).

About 27% of women dropped out of the study and those who did were significantly more likely to have a lower family income (P<0.001) though no other baseline factors differed between these women and the overall groups.

Adverse effects of the intervention were no more common among women in the supplement group than in the control group (seven versus 13). They included nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, abdominal pain, and anorexia, but none required discontinuation.

The multimicronutrient supplement used in the study contained all 15 micronutrients suggested by the WHO and United Nations Children's Fund for pregnant women as well as the FDA recommended daily intake of 14 other nutrients.

However, it was an "unconventional formulation," commented Rachel A. Haws, M.H.S., and Gary L. Darmstadt, M.D., M.S., both of Johns Hopkins in Baltimore, in an accompanying editorial. This and other design flaws limited generalizability as did the targeted population studied, they said.

"Design flaws (e.g., restricted outcome assessment, inadequate sample size, insufficient duration/timing of nutrient exposure) and questionable severity of deficiencies in tested populations have precluded a clear evidence base to support widespread antenatal multiple-micronutrient supplementation at this time."

Furthermore, it was given only during the last trimester of pregnancy due to logistic constraints," they added. "Duration of supplementation (regression coefficient 9.24, P<0.001) and compliance (regression coefficient 12.35, P=0.001) both were significantly correlated with birth size, so supplementation throughout the pregnancy would be expected to have a greater effect.

Further studies will need to evaluate the impact of longer duration supplementation as well as to corroborate the findings, the researchers said.

In the study, drugs were supplied by Ranbaxy India Ltd. None of the study or editorial authors reported financial disclosures.

Primary source: Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine
Source reference:
Gupta P, et al "Multimicronutrient Supplementation for Undernourished Pregnant Women and the Birth Size of Their Offspring: A Double-blind, Randomized, Placebo-Controlled Trial" Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med 2007; 161:58-64.

Additional source: Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine
Source reference:
Haws RA, Darmstadt GL "Integrated, Evidence-Based Approaches to Save Newborn Lives in Developing Countries" Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med 2007; 161:99-102.


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