Ethanol and Lactation: Effects on Milk Lipids and Serum Constituents
โ Scribed by Sarah H Heil; Basalingappa L Hungund; Zhihong H Zheng; K.-L.Catherine Jen; Marappa G Subramanian
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1999
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 113 KB
- Volume
- 18
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0741-8329
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
To determine how chronic alcohol administration during lactation affects milk composition and the nutritional status of the dam, EtOH (3 g/kg) as a 20% solution was administered by intubation to Sprague-Dawley rats from days 2 through 15 of lactation. Control dams were pair fed to account for the reduction in food intake observed in the alcohol group, while another control group maintained ad lib food intake. Dams and their litters were weighed daily throughout the study. On day 16, dams were sacrificed and samples taken for further analysis. Blood alcohol levels as well as serum levels of calcium, cholesterol, glucose, iron, lipids, phosphorous, and triglycerides were measured. Liver lipid levels and the total composition and fatty acid profile of the phospholipids in milk were also measured. Results indicate that EtOH administration and pair feeding reduced dam body weight, but not litter growth. Serum iron levels was increased in both EtOH-exposed and pair-fed controls, whereas serum cholesterol was elevated only in EtOH-exposed dams. Finally, of the phospholipids in milk, only one, phosphatidylserine, was slightly but significantly increased by EtOH. If and how these changes impact the development of the offspring remain to be studied.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
The effect of feeding with human milk and commercially available milk substitutes was studied in a group of 154 healthy infants during the first 3 months of life by assessment of body weight, body length, head circumference, skinfold thickness, serum lipid and lipoprotein concentrations. Human milk