Jump to: Page Content, Site Navigation, Site Search,
You are seeing this message because your web browser does not support basic web standards. Find out more about why this message is appearing and what you can do to make your experience on this site better.
Maybe
but not enough to counter current support for breast
feeding
Any suggestion that breast feeding could confer long
term disadvantage seems immediately counterintuitive. It is also
controversial. A paper in this week's BMJ contains
evidence to suggest, however, that extended breast feeding may lead to
later adverse cardiovascular outcomes (p 643).1
In developing countries exclusive breast feeding is associated with
reduced mortality and improved growth. In developed countries it also
confers advantages: in addition to reducing childhood infections,
breast feeding may also protect against later diseases such as insulin
dependent diabetes mellitus, inflammatory bowel disease, coeliac
disease, and lymphoma.2 More recently, breast milk
consumption by preterm infants has been shown to be associated with
lower blood pressure in early teens.3 The superiority of
breast feeding is therefore unchallenged, but its optimal duration has
not been adequately investigated, and breast feeding is currently recommended for "as long as is mutually desired."2
Several challenging strands of evidence now point to the need to
reappraise that view.
Over a decade ago epidemiological studies showed an association between
disproportionate fetal growth resulting from fetal undernutrition and
an increased incidence of an unfavourable constellation of adult
cardiovascular disease, hypertension, glucose intolerance, and
hyperlipidaemia.4 They also showed an increased risk of death from ischaemic heart disease in men who had been breast fed and
not weaned at one year (standardised mortality ratio 97) compared with
those who were weaned at one year (SMR 79) and those who had been
breast and bottle fed (SMR 73).5
Similarly, late weaned men also had higher total
cholesterol, low density lipoprotein cholesterol, and apolipoprotein B
concentrations. Those infants not weaned at 1 year weighed less at 12 months and had fewer teeth than weaned infants, indicating a possible
difference in nutritional status between the two groups. However,
unweaned infants had a similar standardised mortality ratio at all
weights at 1 year, including large infants, suggesting that nutritional status at 1 year was unlikely to be a causal factor. In fact, among the
late weaned men, those with a high birth weight and lower weights at 1 year had the higher death rates from ischaemic heart disease and the
more unfavourable lipid profiles.5
The second line of evidence came from studies in the baboon which
showed that the method of infant feeding programmed cholesterol metabolism in the adult. Exclusive breast feeding throughout infancy, followed by a diet high in saturated fats, was associated with an
abnormal lipid profile and more arterial fatty streaks in mature animals.6
Leeson et al have now contributed a third line of
evidence.1 Using high resolution ultrasound, they found
that in 331 young adults a history of breast feeding for four months or
more was associated with significantly lower brachial artery
distensibility (greater stiffness) than in those breast fed for less
than four months or exclusively formula fed. They also confirmed a
previous observation that reduced distensibility was associated with
increased cholesterol and systemic blood pressure. Intriguingly, Leeson et al showed that a longer duration of breast feeding was not associated with high cholesterol or lipoprotein concentrations; nor was
the strength of the association between breast feeding duration and
distensibility affected by inclusion of lipid profile, body mass index,
height, weight, or social class in the regression model. They did not
mention the impact of birth weight or weight at 1 year, presumably
because the data were not available, although this group has shown that
increased carotid stiffness is present in children of low birth weight.
The impact of prolonged breast feeding could be biologically as well as
statistically significant: the authors point out that each two months
extension of breast feeding is equivalent to a 1 mmol/l rise in
cholesterol concentration or a 4 mm Hg increase in blood pressure.
These observations raise important questions about the validity of
extrapolating changes in the dynamic properties of blood vessels in
early life to altered cardiovascular outcomes in middle age. Completely
convincing evidence would require longitudinal study of various
vascular risk factors, beginning in early life, together with
examination of whether abnormal characteristics track between childhood
and early and late adult life. Meanwhile, how valid are the method
Leeson et al used, and other related methods, to investigate
cardiovascular programming?
Three non-invasive methods have so far been used, two of which are
endothelium-dependent. Endothelial dysfunction (characterised by an
inability to release nitric oxide) occurs early in atherosclerosis, before plaque formation. It also predisposes to thrombosis, leucocyte adhesion, and mural smooth muscle proliferation. In 1992 a non-invasive method of following changes in arterial diameter in response to increased flow using high resolution ultrasound was
described.7 Flow mediated dilatation has been shown to be
impaired in the presence of classic risk factors for the development of
atherosclerotic disease: cigarette smoking, established coronary artery
disease, diabetes, and familial hypercholesterolaemia.7
Subsequently, endothelium-dependent flow mediated dilatation was shown
to be positively associated with birth weight when studied in 9-11 year old children; the relation was not affected by adjusting for childhood body build, parity, cardiovascular risk factors, social class, or
ethnicity.8
Further information on endothelial function has been obtained
using laser Doppler to follow local changes in skin perfusion after
application of acetylcholine, a potent inducer of
endothelial-dependent vasodilatation. Impaired responses to
acetylcholine were present in schoolchildren who were small for
gestational age at birth and in small for gestational age
neonates.
9 10
Neonatal responses to heat induced
vasodilatation (non-endothelial-dependent) were unimpaired.9
The third method, again using high resolution ultrasound, measures
arterial distensibility, an index of vascular elastic
behaviour.11 It is affected early in arterial cholesterol
accumulation in animal models, and in adults loss of distensibility has
been reported to be an early marker of the accelerated vascular ageing
seen in prediabetic and prehypertensive states in young adults.
Arterial distensibility is also reduced in 9 year olds born small for
gestational age, and in school age children there is an inverse
relation between brachial artery distension and cholesterol, low
density lipoprotein, and apolipoprotein
concentrations.
10 11
Measures of arterial behaviour as early predictors of atherosclerosis
or ischaemic heart disease therefore appear to have biological
plausibility, and abnormalities are associated with classic predictors
of atherosclerosis as well as the relatively novel risk factor of low
birth weight for gestational age. In contrast to previous
epidemiological and animal studies, the current study linking breast
feeding and arterial distensibility does not suggest that later
arterial disease is caused by abnormal blood lipids. As the authors
point out, the observations are more consistent with the higher
circulating cholesterol concentrations seen in breast fed babies
leading to increased cholesterol deposition in the vessel wall, which
then does not spontaneously regress because of interference from a high
saturated fat, Western diet.1
Today's paper should not alter current recommendations about breast
feeding being the best way to promote infant and maternal health.
Independent corroboration in different populations is required before
the potential impact of these observations can be assessed. In
developing countries the massive benefits of prolonged breast feeding
for infant survival and health, together with child spacing, will
probably never be outweighed by considerations of ischaemic heart
disease 50 years later.
University of Birmingham, Birmingham B4 6NH
Footnotes
IWB received a contribution from Mead Johnson, Nutricia, and SHS towards attending the Indian Society for Parenteral and Enteral Nutrition meeting.
| 1. |
Leeson CPM, Katternhorn M, Deanfield JE, Lucas A.
Duration of breast feeding and arterial distensibility in early adult life: population based study.
BMJ
2001;
322:
643-647 |
| 2. | American Academy of Pediatrics Working Group on Breastfeeding. Breastfeeding and the use of human milk. Pediatrics 1997; 6: 1035-1039. |
| 3. | Singhal A, Cole TJ, Lucas A. Early nutrition in preterm infants and later blood pressure: two cohorts after randomised trials. Lancet 2001; 357: 413-419[CrossRef][Medline]. |
| 4. | Barker DJP, Winter PD, Osmond C, Migetts B, Simmonds SJ. Weight in infancy and death from ischaemic heart disease. Lancet 1989; 2: 577-580[Medline]. |
| 5. | Fall CHD, Barker DJP, Osmond C, Winter PD, Clark PMS, Hales CN. Relation of infant feeding to adult serum cholesterol concentration and death from ischaemic heart disease. BMJ 1992; 304: 801-805. |
| 6. | Mott GE, Jackson EM, McMahan CA, McGill HZ. Cholesterol metabolism in adult baboons is influenced by infant diet. J Nutrition 1990; 120: 243-251. |
| 7. | Celermajer DS, Sorensen KE, Gooch VM, Speigelhalter DJ, Miller OI, Sullivan ID, et al. Non-invasive detection of endothelial dysfunction in children and adults at risk of atherosclerosis. Lancet 1992; 340: 1111-1115[CrossRef][Medline]. |
| 8. |
Leeson CPM, Whincup PH, Cook DG, Donald AE, Papacosta O, Lucas A, et al.
Flow-mediated dilation in 9- to 11-year old children.
Circulation
1997;
96:
2233-2238 |
| 9. | Martin H, Gazelius B, Norman M. Impaired acetylcholine-induced vascular relaxation in low birth weight infants: implications for adult hypertension. Pediatr Res 2000; 47: 457-462[Medline]. |
| 10. |
Martin H, Hu J, Gennser G, Normal M.
Impaired endothelial function and increased carotid stiffness in 9-year-old children with low birthweight.
Circulation
2000;
102:
2739 |
| 11. |
Leeson CPM, Whincup PH, Cook DG, Mullen MJ, Donald AE, Seymour CA, Deanfield JE.
Cholesterol and arterial distensibility in the first decade of life.
Circulation
2000;
101:
1533-1538 |
Read all Rapid Responses
What can you learn from this BMJ paper? Read Leanne Tite's Paper+