Infants should double their birth weight by 4 months of age on average, rapid weight gain in the first 4 months is associated with a greater risk of obesity.
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Because African Americans have among the highest U.S. rates of adulthood obesity, Roy and her colleagues studied African-American infants, specifically 53 healthy, full-term babies who are participating in the Infant Growth and Microbiome Study. This National Institutes of Health-funded study, which is being conducted at The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, is evaluating maternal and infant factors contributing to growth during the first two years of life in African-American infants.
"Although birth weight and infant feeding practices are known risk factors for obesity, it is not clear whether an infant's intensity of sucking while feeding is a factor," said Roy, who is a 2015 recipient of the Endocrine Society's Endocrine Scholars Award in Growth Hormone Research.
Such information is important, according to the study's principal investigator, Babette Zemel, PhD, of The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia. "Preventing obesity early on is more effective than treating obesity once it occurs," she said.
In this preliminary study, the researchers evaluated the infants' sucking intensity, which is the maximal sucking pressure and the number of sucks on a baby bottle in a two-minute period. They used a standardized test developed at The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia called the Neonur feeding device. This device uses a flow sensor attached to the nipple of a baby bottle filled with the infant's formula or mother's breast milk. The infants--25 males and 28 females--had this test when they were 1 month old. At that age, 26 of the 53 infants were receiving only formula, and the rest received some or exclusively breast milk, although three months later, 39 infants were receiving only formula.
The researchers also assessed infants' body composition and body fat at 1 and 3 months of age, and weighed the babies again at 4 months. About half of the infants had obese mothers.
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Whether early feeding behavior remains a marker for excess weight gain in the first two years of life is currently under study, Roy said. "It will be interesting to see if these differences hold up with time in this group at high risk of obesity," she commented.
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