Maternal dietary restriction during pregnancy and lactation: Effect on digestive organ development in suckling rats

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Abstract

To examine the relative effects of maternal malnutrition during pregnancy and lactation on development of the pancreas and small intestine in suckling pups, rats were restricted to 50% of control (C) intake beginning at day 5 of pregnancy. Immediately after birth, some litters were exchanged such that some C dams were suckling pups born to 50%-restricted dams (C/50) and vice versa (50/C). Other litters were allowed to stay with their own mothers, which received a control or restricted diet as during pregnancy (C/C and 50/50). Pups nurtured by restricted dams had reduced body weights, intestinal lengths, hepatic and pancreatic weights, and specific activities of pancreatic lipase and small intestinal brush border sucrase and maltase. Small intestinal lactase levels were higher in the groups of pups from mothers restricted during lactation. In nearly all cases, the 50/C group was the most severely affected while the C/50 group was intermediate between the C/C and 50/50 groups.

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Young, C. M., Lee, P. C., & Lebenthal, E. (1987). Maternal dietary restriction during pregnancy and lactation: Effect on digestive organ development in suckling rats. American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, 46(1), 36–40. https://doi.org/10.1093/ajcn/46.1.36

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