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Posted
11/13/2008
Infants can get up to one hour of exercise per day by feeding
at the breast compared to bottle feeding
An infant has to work for nourishment at its mother’s breast, but the
exercise helps build healthier lungs, according to research led by
Arnold School scientists.
Dr. Ikechukwu U. Ogbuanu and Dr. Wilfried Karmaus report that
children who were breastfed for at least four months have a
significantly larger lung capacity at age 10 years compared with a
similar group that had not been breastfed.
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Wilfried Karmaus |
The study involved a group of 1,033 children on the Isle of Wight, an
island off the south coast of England. Karmaus has conducted respiratory
and allergy research on the cohort for several years.
The results of the study are reported in the November 10, 2008 Online
First issue of Thorax, an international journal of respiratory medicine.
Ogbuanu and Karmaus are researchers in the Arnold School’s Department
of Epidemiology and Biostatistics. Both have medical degrees and Ogbuanu
is a doctoral candidate in epidemiology.
The researchers found that the lung volume of ten-year-olds who
nursed for at least four months was 54 milliliters greater than in those
who had not been breastfed at all.
Breastfed infants get about an hour of exercise daily for the first
four months, with six to eight feedings lasting about eight minutes
each. That is nearly twice the length of individual bottle feedings,
which average about 4.4 minutes and require less efforts.
The USC scientists found that children who had been breastfed for less
than four months had improved lung capacity but it wasn't significantly
different from the lung function of children who weren't breastfed at
all.
Karmaus said that based on the study, researchers are in the process of
developing a feeding bottle that will mimic the exercise involved in
suckling at the breast. The bottle may be useful to women who are not
able to directly breastfeed.
Karmaus said that many infants in the United States miss the benefits of
breastfeeding because so many women pump milk from their breasts and
then feed using a bottle. He suggested that the absence of adequate
maternal leave probably encourages the practice. Karmaus noted that in
Canada and Europe maternity leave policies make it possible for women to
directly breastfeed their infants for several months.
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