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Anthropometry and body composition of 18 year old men according to duration of breast feeding: birth cohort study from Brazil

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TLDR
The findings indicate that, in this population, breast feeding has no marked protective effect against adolescent adiposity, and the association between duration of breast feeding and measures of adiposity in adolescence is assessed.
Abstract
Objective To assess the association between duration of breast feeding and measures of adiposity in adolescence. Design Population based birth cohort study. Setting Pelotas, a city of 320 000 inhabitants in a relatively developed area in southern Brazil. Participants All newborn infants in the city's hospitals were enrolled in 1982; 78.8% (2250) of all male participants were located at age 18 years when enrolling in the national army. Main outcome measures Weight, height, sitting height, subscapular and triceps skinfolds, and body composition (body fat, lean mass). Results Neither the duration of total breast feeding nor that of predominant breast feeding (breast milk plus non-nutritive fluids) showed consistent associations with anthropometric or body composition indices. After adjustment for confounding factors, the only significant associations were a greater than 50% reduction in obesity among participants breast fed for three to five months compared with all other breastfeeding categories (P = 0.007) and a linear decreasing trend in obesity with increasing duration of predominant breast feeding (P = 0.03). Similar significant effects were not observed for other measures of adiposity. Borderline direct associations also occurred between total duration of breast feeding and adult height (P = 0.06). Conclusions The significant reduction in obesity among children breast fed for three to five months is difficult to interpret, as no a priori hypothesis existed regarding a protective effect of intermediate duration of breast feeding. The findings indicate that, in this population, breast feeding has no marked protective effect against adolescent adiposity.

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References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Effect of breastfeeding on infant and child mortality due to infectious diseases in less developed countries: a pooled analysis.

TL;DR: A pooled analysis of studies that assessed the effect of not breastfeeding on the risk of death due to infectious diseases in Africa found that protection provided by breastmilk declined steadily with age during infancy, and protection was highest when maternal education was low.
Journal ArticleDOI

Risk of overweight among adolescents who were breastfed as infants

TL;DR: Infants who were fed breast milk more than infant formula, or who were breastfed for longer periods, had a lower risk of being overweight during older childhood and adolescence.
Journal ArticleDOI

Height-normalized indices of the body's fat-free mass and fat mass: potentially useful indicators of nutritional status.

TL;DR: These findings indicate that FFMI and BFMI may be useful in nutritional assessment, and use of height-normalized indices, namely, a FFM index and a BFM index, together with basal oxygen-consumption rate, diagnosed PEM in 27 of the 32 Minnesota Study subjects after 12 wk of semi-starvation.
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Association between infant breastfeeding and overweight in young children.

TL;DR: There are inconsistent associations among breastfeeding, its duration, and the risk of being overweight in young children, and breastfeeding continues to be strongly recommended, but may not be as effective as moderating familial factors, such as dietary habits and physical activity, in preventing children from becoming overweight.
Journal ArticleDOI

Is breastfeeding protective against child obesity

TL;DR: The effect of breastfeeding is probably small compared to other factors that influence child obesity, such as parental overweight, Nonetheless, it may be of public health significance considering the current epidemic of child overweight.
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