Iran Daily

Nutrient supplement ‘boosts growth of breastfed premature babies’

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A supplement given to breastfed premature babies after they leave hospital can prevent weight loss at a crucial time in their developmen­t, a small study suggested.

Doctors in Southampto­n, England, found eight weeks of extra nutrients led to better growth in babies a year later, BBC wrote.

It also gave mothers confidence and encouraged them to continue breastfeed­ing, they report.

Larger studies are now needed to confirm the findings.

Breast milk alone does not always meet the dietary needs of vulnerable babies born before 37 weeks, with about half failing to grow properly.

Dr. Luise Marino, clinical academic pediatric dietician at Southampto­n Children’s Hospital, said all babies’ weights dip by about 10 percent soon after birth, through water loss.

“But you don’t want preterm babies to do that,” she said.

“They don’t have as much fat, minerals or iron, so they need extra nutrients.”

Currently, in the UK, breastfed premature babies are given a supplement packed with proteins and minerals, such as calcium, during their stay on neonatal units.

At this stage, the supplement­s, also known as breast milk fortifier, are mixed with breast milk and given to babies through feeding tubes.

However, once premature babies are sent home, when they have reached an acceptable weight, the supplement­s stop.

GPS cannot prescribe them, and so any additional nutrients these babies need are often obtained from formula milk, the researcher­s from Southampto­n Children’s Hospital said.

They looked at the effects of giving the supplement­s to 32 mothers and their babies for eight weeks at home and found improvemen­ts in the newborns’ weight, head growth and length, at eight weeks and again at 12 months, compared with premature babies who were only breastfed.

The average weight of babies in the study was 2.8 pound (1.3 kilograms) at birth, and most were born at about 30 weeks of pregnancy.

When they went home, the babies weighed 5.5 pound on average.

The supplement sachets can be added to a small amount of expressed breast milk and given to babies by cup or syringe before each breastfeed.

Marino said parents involved in the study said they felt less worried about their baby’s growth and found it easy to give the supplement­s to their babies.

She said larger studies were now needed to see if the results could be repeated.

The study is published in Archives of Disease in Childhood.

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