Dietary patterns and their associations with gestational weight gain in the United Arab Emirates: Results from the MISC cohort
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BioMed Central Ltd.
Abstract
Background: Suboptimum weight gain during pregnancy may carry long term health consequences for the infant or mother. Nutritional imbalances are well recognized as a determinant of gestational weight gain. Few studies examined the effect of dietary patterns on gestational weight gain, especially in countries undergoing nutrition transition, such as the United Arab Emirates. Objectives: To characterize dietary patterns among pregnant women living in the UAE and examine their associations with gestational weight gain and gestational weight rate. Methodology: Data were drawn from the Mother-Infant Study Cohort, a two-year prospective cohort study of pregnant women living in the United Arab Emirates, recruited during their third trimester (n = 242). Weight gain during pregnancy was calculated using data from medical records. The Institute of Medicine's recommendations were used to categorize gestational weight gain and gestational weight gain rate into insufficient, adequate, and excessive. During face-to-face interviews, dietary intake was assessed using an 89-item culture-specific semiquantitative food frequency questionnaire that referred to usual intake during pregnancy. Dietary patterns were derived by principal component analysis. Multiple logistic regression analyses were used to evaluate the associations of derived dietary patterns with gestational weight gain/gestational weight gain rate. Results: Two dietary patterns were derived, a Diverse and a Western pattern. The Diverse pattern was characterized by higher intake of fruits, vegetables, mixed dishes while the Western pattern consisted of sweets and fast food. The Western pattern was associated with excessive gestational weight gain (OR:4.04,95% CI:1.07- 15.24) and gestational weight gain rate (OR: 4.38, 95% CI:1.28-15.03) while the Diverse pattern decreased the risk of inadequate gestational weight gain (OR:0.24, 95% CI:0.06-0.97) and gestational weight gain rate (OR:0.28, 95% CI: 0.09-0.90). Conclusion: The findings of this study showed that adherence to a Diverse pattern reduced the risk of insufficient gestational weight gain/gestational weight gain rate, while higher consumption of the Western pattern increased the risk of excessive gestational weight gain/gestational weight gain rate. In view of the established consequences of gestational weight gain on the health of the mother and child, there is a critical need for health policies and interventions to promote a healthy lifestyle eating through a life course approach. © The Author(s).
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Dietary patterns, Gestational weight gain, Gestational weight gain rate, Nutrient intake, Social determinants, Adult, Cohort studies, Diet, Diet surveys, Diet, western, Energy intake, Female, Humans, Pregnancy, Pregnancy trimester, third, Prenatal nutritional physiological phenomena, United arab emirates, Young adult, Article, Candy, Child, Cohort analysis, Controlled study, Dietary pattern, Eating, Fast food, Food frequency questionnaire, Fruit, Health care policy, Healthy lifestyle, Human, Human experiment, Infant, Interview, Major clinical study, Medical record, Pregnant woman, Principal component analysis, Prospective study, Quantitative analysis, Social determinants of health, Third trimester pregnancy, Vegetable, Adverse event, Caloric intake, Epidemiology, Maternal nutrition, Western diet