Pennsylvania [US]: While 80 per cent of mothers nurse their newborns, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reports that only 25 per cent of women exclusively breastfeed their infants for the six months recommended by the United States Dietary Guidelines. Researchers found that social isolation and occupational stress are just two of the many factors contributing to the drop in breastfeeding.
However, it is emphasized that physical problems with producing adequate milk are one of the main reasons mothers stop breastfeeding earlier than expected. A recent study from Penn State and the University of Cincinnati suggests that inflammation may play a role in the decreased milk production of obese breastfeeding women.
The researchers found that obesity is a risk factor for insufficient milk production in lactating mothers. In people with obesity, chronic inflammation starts in the body's fat and spreads via circulation to organs and systems throughout the body, according to the research team. Prior research showed that inflammation may disrupt the absorption of fatty acids from the blood into body tissues.
Fatty acids are essential to creating and accessing energy needed throughout the body. In lactating women, fatty acids serve as the building blocks for the fats needed to feed a growing infant. The researchers hypothesized that inflammation may negatively impact milk production by preventing absorption of the fatty acids into the milk-producing mammary glands.
To test this hypothesis, Rachel Walker, postdoctoral fellow in nutritional sciences at Penn State, led a team of researchers that analyzed whether inflammation prevented the uptake of fatty acids. The researchers analyzed blood and milk from a study conducted at Cincinnati Children's Hospital and the University of Cincinnati.
In the original study, researchers recruited 23 mothers who had very low milk production despite frequent breast emptying (which is the standard medical practice for increasing milk production), 20 mothers with moderate milk production, and 18 mothers who were breastfeeding exclusively and served as a control group for the study. In the current study, the researchers analyzed fatty acid and inflammatory marker profiles in both blood and breast milk. Their results were published in The Journal of Nutrition.