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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Iodine nutrition among pregnant women in B.M.C

Zhabjaku, Edita 17 February 2016 (has links)
Iodine is an essential nutrient for thyroid hormone production. Due to inadequate public health measures, mild-moderate iodine deficiency has become a re-emerging problem in many developed countries in the past decades. Insufficient consumption of iodine in pregnancy may lead to brain damage and a lower Intelligence Quotient (IQ) in children in comparison to children of mothers with adequate intake. Recent National Health and Nutrition Examination Surveys (NHANES) data have shown that even though the non-pregnant United States (U.S) population has adequate iodine intake, U.S pregnant women are currently mildly iodine deficient, with median urinary iodine concentrations (UIC) being 129 μg/L. In 2004 pregnant women who attended the Boston Medical Center (BMC) Antenatal Clinic were also mildly iodine deficient, with median UIC of 149 μg/L. These values were higher than the NHANES median UIC (129 μg/L) Due to national trends of mild-moderate iodine deficiency among pregnant women, and since in 2011 the American Thyroid Association recommended that prenatal vitamins contain 150 μg of iodine, in this study we aimed to determine if the iodine status among the BMC pregnant women has changed. We also aimed to assess consumption of iodine-containing foods, knowledge regarding iodine nutrition, and frequency of use of iodine-containing prenatal vitamins. We conducted a cross-sectional study targeting 125 women living in the Boston area attending the BMC Antenatal Clinic. To date, 61 women have been enrolled. Participants provided urine samples, and completed questionnaires about their recent food intake and demographic characteristics. The participants’ mean age was 31 ± 6.7 years and their median UIC was 145.5 μg/L (range 17.5 μg/L- 886 μg/L). As expected, UIC was positively associated with iodine supplement intake and recent consumption of iodine-rich foods (milk cheese) (p< 0.0001 for each), although these associations were not significant in multivariate analysis. No associations were observed between UIC and other factors such as age, race, education, use of multivitamins containing iodine in the past 24 hours, and whether health providers discussed iodine nutrition, possibly due to a small sample size. Our results indicated that the iodine status of pregnant women attending B.M.C remained mildly iodine deficient in the past decade despite the recommended measures to increase the iodine content in multivitamins. In our sample, 52.5% of the pregnant women who attended BMC were mildly iodine deficient with median UIC <150 μg/L. Thus half of the pregnant women are at risk of brain damage occurring to their infant. It is important that follow up studies are done to determine the neurodevelopment of these children, as they grow older. Also since the intake of multivitamins containing iodine and consumption of dairy foods was positively associated with higher UIC levels, further measures need to be undertaken to ensure that all prenatal vitamins have 150 μg of iodine, and that pregnant women have higher dairy consumption, in order to increase their iodine intake. As well, larger regional and national studies should be undertaken to better understand current iodine status and sources of iodine among pregnant women.
2

Determinants of Prenatal Care and Supplement Use: The Case of Honduras

Henze, Catherine E 01 January 2004 (has links)
Context: Literature suggests that prenatal care and prenatal supplement use improves pregnancy outcomes. However, we do not know the factors associated with prenatal care and supplement use in Honduras.Objective: To identify characteristics of Honduran women who are the least and most likely to use prenatal care and supplements.Methods: Data from a 2001 Honduras cross-sectional survey of women was used to assess their use of prenatal care and supplements. All data was weighted, resulting in a sample size of n = 5647 women who had a live birth since January 1996. Bivariate and multivariate analyses were used to examine factors associated with prenatal care and supplement use.Results: Current education level was highly positively related to prenatal care and supplement use. Women who were 35 years or older at the time of their most recent birth, currently unmarried, of non-Catholic religious affiliation, and of low SES were significantly less likely to have used prenatal care and supplements. Women who reported the intentionality of their most recent birth as unwanted also were significantly less likely to have used prenatal care and supplements. Prenatal care was the most significant determinant of prenatal supplement use.Conclusion: There are significant differences between Honduran women who use prenatal care and supplements and women who do not. Efforts to increase prenatal health services among underserved women, especially women who are older, unmarried, with no formal education, of low SES, of a non-Catholic religious affiliation, and at risk for an unwanted pregnancy, may significantly improve pregnancy outcomes in Honduras.
3

The Pathophysiology of Smoking During Pregnancy: A Systems Biology Approach

Stone, William L., Bailey, Beth, Khraisha, Nesreen 01 June 2014 (has links)
This article focuses on a systems biology approach to studying the pathophysiology of cigarette smoking during pregnancy. Particular emphasis is given to the damaging role of oxidative stress. Cigarette smoking exerts multiple adverse affects but abundant evidence, mostly in adults, suggests that oxidative stress and free radical damage is a major pathophysiological factor. Smoking during pregnancy is known to contribute to numerous poor birth outcomes, such as low birth weight, preterm birth as well as life-long health and developmental problems. It is clinically important to know the separate contributions that cigarette derived-nicotine and smoking-induced free oxidative stress make to these poor outcomes. Surprisingly, the extent to which smoking dependent oxidative stress contributes to these poor outcomes is not well studied but the application of redox proteomics should be useful. Considerable biochemical evidence suggests that antioxidants, such as tocopherols and ascorbate, could be useful in minimizing oxidative stress induced pathology to the developing fetus in those women who, despite medical advice, continue to smoke. Nevertheless, this suggestion has yet to be tested in well-designed clinical studies.

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