
Breast-Fed
Babies Have Lower Blood Pressure -Study
By
Maggie Fox, Health and Science Correspondent
February 2, 2004
WASHINGTON
(Reuters) - Breast-fed babies grow up to have lower
blood pressure than bottle-fed children, British researchers
reported on Monday.
This
could mean they will have lower blood pressure as adults,
and thus a lower risk of heart disease, the No. 1 killer
in the industrialized world, the researchers said.
For
every three months a child was breast fed, his or her
systolic blood pressure reading -- the top number --
went down 0.2 points, on average. Breast-feeding time
did not significantly affect diastolic blood pressure
-- the lower number.
"Even
this small reduction may have important population-health
implications," said Richard Martin, a senior lecturer
in epidemiology and public health at the University
of Bristol in Britain, who led the study.
"A
one percent reduction in population systolic blood
pressure levels is associated with about a 1.5 percent
reduction in all-cause mortality," Martin added,
equivalent to a reduction in premature death of about
8,000 deaths per year in the United States and 2,000
deaths per year in the United Kingdom.
Lower
blood pressure is directly linked to lower risk of
heart attack, stroke, kidney disease and other related
illnesses.
Breast-fed
babies are also less likely to be overweight, have
fewer behavioral problems and may show differences
in intelligence, other studies have shown. Therefore,
groups such as the American Academy of Pediatrics recommend
that all mothers breast-feed their babies for the first
year, and two years if possible.
Writing
in the journal Circulation, the researchers said the
nutritional content of breast milk may be responsible.
Breast-fed
children tend to consume less sodium, which is one
factor that can influence blood pressure. Breast milk
also contains long-chain polyunsaturated fatty acids,
which are compounds that can affect the development
of blood vessels.
Infant
formula supplemented with these fatty acids has been
associated with lower blood pressure.
Formula
feeding can also cause babies to eat more than they
need and can, in some babies, cause too-rapid weight
gain.
"Excess
weight is also associated with higher blood pressures
and promotes insulin resistance, which often precedes
development of diabetes in adulthood," the American
Heart Association, which publishes Circulation, said
in a statement.
"There
is some weak evidence that there is a small lowering
of blood pressure in adulthood (among children who
were breast fed), but the evidence is inconsistent," Martin
said.
"No
one has investigated in a prospective study whether
the association changes with age."
Martin
and his colleagues examined 4,763 7-year-old children
in a long-term health study.
The
children who were breast fed for any length of time
had lower blood pressure than did formula-fed children.
After
adjusting for factors such as mother's education, socioeconomic
status and birth weight, the researchers still found
lower blood pressure in the breast-fed children.
It
was 0.8 mm Hg lower for systolic pressure and 0.6 mm
Hg lower on average on the diastolic pressure reading.
The
findings held regardless of the child's sex, body mass,
or pulse. Family social status, income, number of siblings,
whether the mother drank alcohol, the child's health,
and the child's ethnicity did not change the association
between breast feeding and blood pressure.
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