Human milk: maternal dietary lipids and infant development
Open Access
- 16 July 2007
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Proceedings Of The Nutrition Society
- Vol. 66 (3), 397-404
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0029665107005666
Abstract
Human milk provides all the dietary essential fatty acids, linoleic acid (LA; 18:2n-6) and α-linolenic acid (18:3n-3), as well as their longer-chain more-unsaturated metabolites, including arachidonic acid (20:4n-6) and DHA (22:6n-3) to support the growth and development of the breast-fed infant. Human milk levels of LA have increased in Westernized nations from mean levels (g/100 g total fatty acids) of 6 to 12–16 over the last century, paralleling the increase in dietary intake of LA-rich vegetable oils. DHA levels (g/100 g total milk fatty acids) vary from 1% and are lowest in countries in which the intake of DHA from fish and other animal tissue lipids is low. The role of DHA in infant nutrition is of particular importance because DHA is accumulated specifically in the membrane lipids of the brain and retina, where it is important to visual and neural function. An important question is the extent to which many human diets that contain low amounts of n-3 fatty acids may compromise human development. The present paper reviews current knowledge on maternal diet and human milk fatty acids, the implications of maternal diet as the only source of essential fatty acids for infant development both before and after birth, and recent studies addressing the maternal intakes and milk DHA levels associated with risk of low infant neural system maturation.Keywords
This publication has 53 references indexed in Scilit:
- Evidence for Specificity in Lipid-Rhodopsin InteractionsPublished by Elsevier ,2006
- Trans Fatty Acids in Human Milk in Canada Declined with the Introduction of Trans Fat Food LabelingJournal of Nutrition, 2006
- Nutrition in Brain Development and Aging: Role of Essential Fatty AcidsNutrition Reviews, 2006
- Maternal fish oil supplementation in lactation: Effect on visual acuity and n−3 fatty acid content of infant erythrocytesLipids, 2004
- Evolutionary aspects of omega-3 fatty acids in the food supplyProstaglandins, Leukotrienes & Essential Fatty Acids, 1999
- An update on the pathways of polyunsaturated fatty acid metabolismCurrent Opinion in Clinical Nutrition and Metabolic Care, 1999
- Effect of increasing breast milk docosahexaenoic acid on plasma and erythrocyte phospholipid fatty acids and neural indices of exclusively breast fed infantsEuropean Journal of Clinical Nutrition, 1997
- Visual Acuity and Fatty Acid Status of Term Infants Fed Human Milk and Formulas with and without Docosahexaenoate and Arachidonate from Egg Yolk Lecithin1Pediatric Research, 1996
- Essential fatty acids in growth and developmentProgress in Lipid Research, 1991
- Human Lactation II: Endogenous Fatty Acid Synthesis by the Mammary GlandPediatric Research, 1989