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Weight Gain in Pregnancy Has Obesity Risk
Women who gain more than 35 pounds during
pregnancy have a higher risk of becoming overweight or obese,
Swedish scientists said.
Expectant mothers put on an average
of about 26 pounds and most of it disappears in the first year
after birth.
Dr. Yvonne Linne, an obesity specialist
at the Karolinka University Hospital in Stockholm, told a medical
conference here that 26-30 pounds is fine but gaining more can
cause problems.
"Over 16 kilos (35 pounds) you
are at risk of retaining the weight and starting a trend toward
obesity," she said.
Linne stressed that women should
not diet during pregnancy or restrict their food intake but should
eat sensibly.
She and her colleagues monitored
the weight gain of 2,342 pregnant women in Stockholm and followed
up their progress at one year and 15 years later.
Women who had gained less than
35 pounds were about three pounds heavier a year after the birth
but those who put on more weight had retained 12 pounds at one
year and weighed 37 pounds more 15 years later.
"Pregnancy is the only lifetime
event where you are allowed to gain weight," said Linne.
She added that some women put on
too much weight and think it will easily disappear during breastfeeding,
but it usually doesn't happen.
"Our study showed there is no effect
of breastfeeding on weight development," said Linne.
Research has also shown that weight
gain is cumulative with each pregnancy and is highest between
the fifth and sixth pregnancy, although most modern families are
not that large.
About seven percent of the women
at the start of the study were overweight. The number increased
to 12 percent a year after the birth and rose to 31 percent by
15 years.
Women who were overweight or obese
before the pregnancy maintained their increased weight after the
birth.
"Women should try to maintain the
lifestyle they had before the pregnancy and go back to their usual
habits," she added.
Linne and her colleagues are now
studying the children of the women who took part in the study
to determine whether weight gain during pregnancy has an impact
on them.
About 2,500 doctors, scientists
and obesity experts are attending the four-day European Congress
on Obesity.
Reference
Source 89
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