An Observational Study Protocol for Assessing Lactation Intensity and Reduction in the Prevalence of Metabolic Syndrome After a Maternal Complication of Pregnancy (LEMON Study)
Maleesa M. Pathirana, Prabha H. Andraweera, Emily Aldridge, Melanie R. Wittwer, Susan Sierp, Gustaaf Dekker, Margaret A. Arstall

TL;DR
This study aims to see if breastfeeding intensity after pregnancy complications is linked to lower metabolic syndrome risk in the early postpartum period.
Contribution
The study introduces a novel observational protocol to assess lactation's impact on metabolic syndrome in individuals with major pregnancy complications.
Findings
Lactation intensity will be measured through 6 months of infant feeding data.
Binary logistic regression will analyze the link between lactation and metabolic syndrome.
Results may guide interventions to reduce cardiovascular disease risk in high-risk groups.
Abstract
Major pregnancy complications, such as hypertensive disorders of pregnancy, gestational diabetes mellitus, delivery of a small for gestational age infant, preterm delivery, and placental abruption, are associated with the development of Type II diabetes mellitus and cardiovascular disease. Improving breastfeeding longevity may reduce long-term risk for cardiovascular disease for those with major pregnancy complications. Metabolic syndrome (i.e., the presence of at least three specific cardiovascular disease risk factors) is an appropriate marker to assess future cardiovascular risk in the early postpartum. To determine whether lactation intensity in the first 6 months postpartum is associated with metabolic syndrome at 6 months postpartum among people who previously had a major pregnancy complication. This is a prospective observational cohort study is being conducted at a tertiary…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGestational Diabetes Research and Management · Birth, Development, and Health · Pregnancy and preeclampsia studies
