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Cutting W A - - 1992
Gunnlaugsson G - - 1992
A prospective study on the timing of breastfeeding start in Bissau was undertaken in a periurban community (n = 734), and at the Central Hospital (n = 414). Only single, full-term, healthy children born by the vaginal route were included, the purpose being to characterize mothers who delay breastfeeding start ...
Das D K - - 1992
A longitudinal study was done on the infant feeding practices in a rural area. One hundred and ten infants were followed up from birth to 1 year of age by alternate day home visits, to inquire about the type of food, and frequency of consuming it. It was found that ...
Debuse P J - - 1992
The classical form of thiamine deficiency in children is comprised of peripheral neuropathy, encephalopathy and high-output cardiac failure, predominantly right-sided. "Shoshin beriberi" cardiac failure has a different presentation, with vasoconstriction, hypotension and severe metabolic acidosis. A three-month breast-fed infant developed these features (biochemical tests confirmed the diagnosis). His mother, although ...
Calvo E B - - 1992
The aim of this study is to evaluate the iron nutritional status of infants breast-fed exclusively and for a prolonged period in relation to their growth rate and dietary changes. Forty subjects (25 breast-fed; 15 formula-fed) were studied from 0 to 9 months of age. Milk (human or formula) was ...
Morrow A L - - 1992
To determine whether breast-feeding protects infants against symptomatic and asymptomatic infection by Giardia lamblia, we followed 197 infants in a poor area of Mexico City from birth to 18 months of age; symptoms and feeding status were recorded weekly. Stool specimens were collected every 1 to 2 weeks and tested ...
Dungy C I - - 1992
The breast-feeding patterns of 146 women who initiated breast-feeding during their hospital stay were evaluated to determine whether those women who received a hospital discharge package containing a manual breast pump breast-fed their infants for a longer period of time than did women who received a discharge package containing an ...
Giroux D - - 1992
The increasing number of women in the workplace has made it more important than ever to ensure a safe work environment, particularly with respect to mothers who choose to breast-feed their babies. The Quebec Commission de la santé et de la sécurité du travail (CSST) Toxicological Index is fully involved ...
Hillervik-Lindquist C - - 1992
Fifty-one mother-infant pairs were followed prospectively by home visits and telephone contacts during the first 6 months post-partum. Comparisons between mothers who experienced lactation crises because of perceived breast-milk insufficiency (crisis group) and those who did not (non-crisis group) revealed differences in attitudes to breast-feeding, breast-feeding behaviour and sexual life. ...
Harmon T - - 1992
Pseudomembranous colitis (PMC) is uncommon in the infant and complications requiring surgical intervention are rare. All prior cases have involved the direct administration of antibiotics to the child. A 2-month-old girl required bowel resection for perforation of a thickened and inflamed left colon. Findings were consistent with PMC and the ...
Launer L J - - 1992
STUDY OBJECTIVE: Retrospective infant feeding data are important to the study of child and adult health patterns. The accuracy of maternal recall of past infant feeding events was examined and specifically the infant's age when breast feeding was stopped and formula feeding and solid foods were introduced. DESIGN AND SETTING: ...
Chia S F - - 1992
This is a study of infant feeding practices of 126 mothers. Seventy-seven mothers or 61.1% practised breast feeding. The typical breast feeding mother was more likely to be a Malay, with lower family income and residing in the rural area. The educational status of the mother was not an important ...
Dewey K G - - 1992
Anthropometric data were collected monthly from birth to 18 months as part of the Davis Area Research on Lactation, Infant Nutrition and Growth study, which followed infants who were either breast-fed or formula-fed during the first 12 months. The two cohorts were matched for parental socioeconomic status, education, ethnic group, ...
Hakim I A - - 1992
In a longitudinal study of infant feeding in rural Giza, Egypt, we found that 68.8% of the recruited mothers initiated early suckling of colostrum, but only 51.2% of the infants were exclusively breast-fed in the first week. Solid foods were introduced much earlier than at the recommended age of 4 ...
Stettler N - - 1992
The aim of the study was to measure the energy used for growth of healthy fullterm and breast-fed Gambian infants. The weight gain (WG) of 14 infants (mean age +/- SEM 17 +/- 1 d, weight 3.581 +/- 0.105 kg) was measured over a 2-week period; the energy intake (EI) ...
Benitez I - - 1992
An experimental breast-feeding education programme conducted at the Philippine General Hospital in Manila demonstrated that women could be motivated to improve their breast-feeding practices and lengthen their period of lactational amenorrhoea in comparison to a control group. Mothers who participated in the programme breast-fed their babies more frequently, delayed the ...
Michaelsen K F - - 1992
Bone gamma-carboxyglutamic acid protein [BGP (osteocalcin)] is a protein synthesized by osteoblasts and incorporated in the bone matrix. Serum BGP is a sensitive marker of bone formation, and it parallels the growth velocity curve during childhood and adolescence. Serum BGP was measured at the age of 2, 6, and 9 ...
Kallio M J - - 1992
The total serum cholesterol concentration of infants was investigated at birth (n = 193) and at the ages of 2 (n = 192), 4 (n = 192), 6 (n = 190), 9 (n = 188), and 12 months (n = 196). Concentrations of cholesterol--very-low-density lipoprotein (VLDL), low-density lipoprotein (LDL), high-density ...
Avanzini M A - - 1992
In the present study salivary IgA, anti-Escherichia coli, anti-beta-lactoglobulin and anti-poliovirus type 1 IgA and IgM in serum and saliva were evaluated longitudinally in 13 breast-fed and 14 formula-fed infants over the first six months of life. Salivary IgA was quantified by electroimmunodiffusion; specific IgA and IgM antibodies were determined ...
Fall C H - - 1992
OBJECTIVE: To examine whether method of infant feeding is associated with adult serum lipid concentrations and mortality from ischaemic heart disease. DESIGN: Follow up study of men born during 1911-30. SETTING: Hertfordshire, England. SUBJECTS: 5718 men, for 5471 of whom information on infant feeding had been recorded by health visitors ...
de Steuben C - - 1992
Clinically apparent jaundice occurs in up to 60% of newborns in the first week after birth and represents a significant proportion of prolonged infant hospitalization, increased health care costs, and anxiety for new parents. An association between breast-feeding and hyperbilirubinemia has been suggested by various researchers; however, the results of ...
Gupta A - - 1992
A survey of obstetric and infant feeding practices in 100 mothers showed that only 17% infants were exclusively breast fed. Antenatal advice regarding breast feeding was given to only 13%. Sixty eight per cent infants were put to breast 24 hours after delivery. Campaign against bottle feeding was then launched. ...
Jackson D A - - 1992
Current infant feeding guidelines recommend exclusive breast-feeding until the infant is about 4 months old to reduce the risks of early termination of breast-feeding, undernutrition and infection. In many societies, however, supplementary foods are given well before 4 months of age. The present paper describes weaning practices, factors associated with ...
Yau K I - - 1992
Breast milk jaundice (BMJ) is the most common etiology of prolonged unconjugated hyperbilirubinemia in a newborn infant. The pathogenesis of BMJ has been studied by many investigators, yet the etiology still remains uncertain. A prospective study was done to examine the role of breast milk beta-glucuronidase in BMJ in healthy ...
Håkansson A - - 1992
This population-based study comprised 192 mothers and their infants; 58 mothers were smokers and 134 non-smokers. At the 18-month infant check-up at the child health clinic, mothers were questioned about the length of the breast-feeding period, both exclusively breast-feeding and overall breast-feeding time. The numbers of antibiotic-treated respiratory tract infections ...
Zinaman M J - - 1992
Breast-feeding is today the major form of infant nutrition in the immediate postpartum period. Despite this, recent trends in modern life-styles have raised obstacles to successful lactation. These include infant illness and maternal responsibilities outside the home, both requiring separation from the mother. While the hormonal dynamics of infant suckling ...
Ruel M T - - 1992
An evaluation of the impact of a nationwide clinic-based growth monitoring (GM) programme was done in Lesotho to determine if clinic attendance was associated with improved maternal knowledge of weaning practices and diarrhoea. A total of 907 mothers from eight clinics were included in the study. Our results showed that ...
Tyson J - - 1992
The effect of a low milk fat yield was assessed in a blinded prospective study of healthy term infants and mothers encouraged to breast-feed. Fat yield index was calculated as milk volume collected by Egnell pump multiplied by the "creamatocrit." Two weeks after delivery mothers who had a relatively low ...
Fildes V - - 1992
Medical Officer of Health reports for London boroughs, 1900-19, are analysed to determine the incidence of neonatal breast-feeding, duration of lactation, reasons for early supplementation and premature weaning, and their relationship with infant mortality. In a sample of 222,989 infants, breast-feeding rates were very high. Over 90% were breast-fed in ...
el-Kholy M S - - 1992
Breast milk and formula milk and the corresponding serum samples from 20 breast-fed babies, 20 formula-fed babies, and their mothers were examined at 3 days of age for beta-glucuronidase enzyme. Serum indirect bilirubin levels were also examined for all the infants. Serum indirect bilirubin concentrations were significantly higher (p < ...
Amador M - - 1992
Two groups of mothers with infants between sixty and eighty-nine days of age, from the same Health Area of the city of Havana were studied. The first group's age was nineteen years or less and members of the second one were twenty to twenty-five years old. The sociocultural level of ...
McCann M F - - 1992
Seventy-four members of mothers' clubs in a rural area outside of La Paz, Bolivia, were interviewed in order to learn more about maternal and infant nutritional practices and use of child health services. Most of the women used a combination of western and traditional child health services, though a substantial ...
Wilson D C - - 1992
Breast-feeding is associated with jaundice in the early neonatal period. Previous work has shown levels of the enzyme beta-glucuronidase in maternal breast milk to be related to infant serum bilirubin on postnatal day 21. Our aim was to establish if there was a correlation between the level of breast milk ...
Heacock H J - - 1992
The effect of milk type on physiological, gastroesophageal reflux (GER) was studied in 37 breast-fed and 37 formula-fed, healthy, term neonates aged 2-8 days. The neonates were randomly selected from the public maternity ward and studied for 4 h after their morning milk feed. GER was recorded by a pH ...
Chalmers J W - - 1991
Although 65% of mothers start breast feeding their baby, at six weeks after birth this proportion has dropped to 40%. It is postulated that one of the causes of this decrease might be that women receive conflicting advice from professionals. To examine this hypothesis, a telephone survey was designed to ...
Anbazhagan R - - 1991
Seventy-two samples of infant breasts, aged from newborn to 2 years, were collected at necropsy. Whole-mount preparations and histological sections were made. A system of classification was devised to study the extent of the structural development of the ductal system (morphological types I, II, and III) and the functional differentiation ...
Porter R H - - 1991
Olfactory preferences of two-week-old bottle-fed infants were assessed in a series of simultaneous two-choice tests. Infants of each sex displayed preferential orientation to a stimulus pad worn on their mother's breast over a clean control pad. When maternal breast odor was paired with the odor of the infants' formula, however, ...
Naggan L - - 1991
A longitudinal study of infant feeding practices, growth and morbidity among Bedouin Arab infants residing in the Negev, Israel, was conducted during a 3-year period (1981-1983). Follow-up samples were restricted to healthy newborns. The majority of newborns are breast fed at birth but, by 2 months, 50% are also introduced ...
Ryan A S - - 1991
Ongoing surveys performed by Ross Laboratories demonstrate recent declines both in the initiation of breast-feeding and continued breast-feeding at 6 months of age. Comparing rates in 1984 and 1989, the initiation of breast-feeding declined approximately 13% (from 59.7% to 52.2%), and there was a 24% decline in the rate of ...
Dewey K G - - 1991
Breast-fed infants grow less rapidly after the first 2 to 3 months of age than current standards. The DARLING study (Davis Area Research on Lactation, Infant Nutrition and Growth) was designed to evaluate whether this pattern should be considered "faltering" or is a normal outcome even under optimal conditions. Data ...
Mo-Suwan L - - 1991
Weight and length of 67 breast-fed infants were followed every two weeks from birth to 6 months. All infants were healthy and developed normally. Weight curves were found to be parallel to the NCHS and Bangkok curves up to 4 months then bending slightly but not statistically significant. This supports ...
O'Malley B - - 1991
The purpose of this study was to provide descriptive information on migrant farm laborers' infant feeding practices in northern Colorado. We used a survey questionnaire to interview 49 families with a 6- to 23-month-old child who was enrolled in the Migrant Head Start Center. Sixteen (33%) of the mothers breast-fed ...
Haddock R L - - 1991
BACKGROUND: The Island of Guam has experienced a high incidence of infant salmonellosis for a number of years (age-specific incidence rate of approximately 3700 cases per 100,000 infants in 1984). Interviews of case parents suggested that the use of high-iron infant formula was associated with this problem. METHODS: A case-control ...
Jooste P L - - 1991
The effect of breast-feeding on plasma cholesterol, body weight, and body length was studied longitudinally in a large free-living cohort of infants (n = 512) from birth until the age of 1 year. Of the cohort, 21.4% were exclusively breast-fed for at least 3 months, 39.3% received bottle-feeding, and 39.3% ...
Tudehope D - - 1991
This study establishes the association between early onset severe hyperbilirubinaemia (serum bilirubin (SBR) level greater than or equal to 272 mumol/L) with no assigned cause and breast feeding. The rates of breast feeding at hospital discharge increased from 46.4 to 75.4% in non-insured (public) women and 58.6 to 89.2% in ...
Majumder A K - - 1991
The 1975-76 Bangladesh Fertility Survey data show little evidence that breast-feeding is the intermediate factor through which birth intervals influence child survival in Bangladesh. Preceding birth interval, subsequent pregnancy and breast-feeding duration each have an independent influence on early mortality risk. Within a specific interval the risk of dying decreases ...
Kanto J - - 1991
A critical evaluation of anaesthetic agents in the puerperium is difficult because systematic, relevant studies are still lacking. Current knowledge of the effects of different agents used in labour and caesarean section indicates that significant residual effects on the mother and newborn are limited. In the early puerperium, based on ...
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