scholarly journals The Role of Physical Activity on Weight Gain and Hypertensive Disorders During Pregnancy

2016 ◽  
Vol 29 (10) ◽  
pp. e3-e3
Author(s):  
Virginia A. Aparicio ◽  
Olga Ocón-Hernández ◽  
Lidia Romero ◽  
Alberto Soriano-Maldonado
2013 ◽  
Vol 27 (4) ◽  
pp. E484-E490 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dorien M. Zelle ◽  
Trijntje Kok ◽  
Manon L. Dontje ◽  
Eva I. Danchell ◽  
Gerjan Navis ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 15 ◽  
pp. 263349412110318
Author(s):  
Mahnaz Bahri Khomami ◽  
Ruth Walker ◽  
Michelle Kilpatrick ◽  
Susan de Jersey ◽  
Helen Skouteris ◽  
...  

Women with maternal obesity, an unhealthy lifestyle before and during pregnancy and excess gestational weight gain have an increased risk of adverse pregnancy and birth outcomes that can also increase the risk of long-term poor health for them and their children. Pregnant women have frequent medical appointments and are highly receptive to health advice. Healthcare professionals who interact with women during pregnancy are in a privileged position to support women to make lasting healthy lifestyle changes that can improve gestational weight gain and pregnancy outcomes and halt the intergenerational nature of obesity. Midwives and obstetrical nurses are key healthcare professionals responsible for providing antenatal care in most countries. Therefore, it is crucial for them to build and enhance their ability to promote healthy lifestyles in pregnant women. Undergraduate midwifery curricula usually lack sufficient lifestyle content to provide emerging midwives and obstetrical nurses with the knowledge, skills, and confidence to effectively assess and support healthy lifestyle behaviours in pregnant women. Consequently, registered midwives and obstetrical nurses may not recognise their role in healthy lifestyle promotion specific to healthy eating and physical activity in practice. In addition, practising midwives and obstetrical nurses do not consistently have access to healthy lifestyle promotion training in the workplace. Therefore, many midwives and obstetrical nurses may not have the confidence and/or skills to support pregnant women to improve their lifestyles. This narrative review summarises the role of midwives and obstetrical nurses in the promotion of healthy lifestyles relating to healthy eating and physical activity and optimising weight in pregnancy, the barriers that they face to deliver optimal care and an overview of what we know works when supporting midwives and obstetrical nurses in their role to support women in achieving a healthy lifestyle.


Author(s):  
Mark J. Haykowsky ◽  
Jessica M. Scott ◽  
Kathryn Hudson ◽  
Neelima Denduluri

As patients are living longer after a cancer diagnosis, survivorship is becoming increasingly important in cancer care. The sequelae of multimodality therapies include weight gain and decreased cardiorespiratory fitness, which increase cardiovascular risk. Evidence suggests that physical activity reduces the risk of breast cancer recurrence and death. Avoidance of weight gain after therapy also improves outcomes after a diagnosis of breast cancer. Prospective randomized trials must be performed to determine the benefits of specific physical activity and dietary habits for survivors of breast cancer. This review outlines the important physiologic changes that occur with antineoplastic therapy and the important role of exercise and diet.


2013 ◽  
Vol 38 (3) ◽  
pp. 360-360 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zachary M. Ferraro

A greater understanding of critical periods of body weight regulation, including pregnancy, may aid in efforts to optimize weight management strategies for the mother and her baby. The gestational period has been implicated to play, in the child, a vital role in the developmental origins of obesity and other cardiometabolic diseases later in life. Therefore, we initially examined existing literature on the role of maternal obesity and its link to pediatric obesity and documented the known underlying physiological mechanisms responsible for this relationship, while suggesting potential intervention targets that may improve maternal–fetal outcomes. In a second paper, we aimed to quantify maternal predictors of large for gestational-age neonates in the Ottawa and Kingston birth cohort with specific hypotheses verifying the independent contribution of maternal prepregnancy body mass index (BMI) and excessive gestational weight gain (GWG) to fetal overgrowth. This paper also highlighted the clinical utility of the revised 2009 Institute of Medicine GWG guidelines and discussed the potential role of physiological factors underlying the observed associations. As follow-ups to our population-level analysis, papers 3 and 4 highlighted how the insulin-like growth factor (IGF) axis, a vital regulator of growth and development, may be compromised at the molecular level in cases of maternal obesity (paper 3) and excessive GWG (paper 4). In paper 3, we showed that maternal obesity is associated with attenuated expression of IGF binding protein-4 (IGFBP-4) in umbilical cord blood and discussed how this may preferentially promote fetal adipogenesis. The effects of excessive GWG on IGF axis protein expression were addressed in paper 4, where we showed that independent of prepregnancy BMI, excessive weight gain during pregnancy is associated with increased expression of IGFBP-3 in maternal circulation in normoglycemic term pregnancies. In that paper we discussed the potential inhibitory role of IGFBP-3 on adipogenesis and how it relates to glucose intolerance during pregnancy. Recognizing that both obesity and excessive GWG can alter physiological processes in a mother and her baby, we concluded that appropriate evidence-based interventions are warranted to best optimize outcomes. In paper 5, we discussed the results of a study that sought to assess patient information channels and knowledge of nutrition and physical activity during pregnancy. The intent was that these findings be applied to best-design efficacious strategies that cater to the needs of our target group of pregnant women. In our analysis we showed that the majority of pregnant women studied would be willing to participate in a lifestyle intervention for their own personal health and that of their child. Of great interest was the observation that most women were not informed of the importance of pregnancy-specific energy intake, or made aware of their own healthy GWG targets. Additionally, many of the respondents reported that they did not receive information that pertained to appropriate physical activity recommendations, even though the vast majority of participants considered this lifestyle modality to be safe during their pregnancy. Finally, in paper 6 we built on the results of our previous work and evaluated the risks and benefits of physical activity during pregnancy on maternal–fetal outcomes through a review of the literature and noted that engaging in nonsedentary pursuits during gestation may aid in maternal weight regulation, protect against metabolic disorders, and optimize neonatal birth weight and body composition. Overall, the collective nature of the papers presented in this dissertation provides qualitative and quantitative evidence to support not only the complexity of body weight regulation in the mother and her baby, but also highlights potential avenues for intervention that may improve maternal–fetal outcomes during this critical period.


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