Maria das Graças Tavares do Carmo
Federal University of Rio de Janeiro
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Nutrition Reviews | 2011
Amanda Santos de Souza; Flávia Spreafico Fernandes; Maria das Graças Tavares do Carmo
Undernutrition still affects mothers and children in developing countries and thus remains the major focus of nutritional intervention efforts. Neuronal development, which classically includes neurogenesis, migration, maturation, and synapse refinement, begins in utero and continues into the early postnatal period. These processes are not only genetically regulated but also clearly susceptible to environmental manipulation. Dietary deprivation during early life is known to have adverse effects on brain anatomy, physiology, and biochemistry, and may even lead to permanent brain damage. Although all nutrients are important for the structural development of the central nervous system, lipids such as long-chain polyunsaturated fatty acids, especially docosahexaenoic acid (22:6 n-3) and arachidonic acid (20:4 n-6), are important for normal brain development. The purpose of this literature review is to examine how early undernutrition involving a deficiency in long-chain polyunsaturated fatty acids can affect brain development and function and produce deficits in spatial cognitive learning ability.
Cadernos De Saude Publica | 2000
Gilza Sandre-Pereira; Luciléia Granhen Tavares Colares; Maria das Graças Tavares do Carmo; Eliane de Abreu Soares
O objetivo deste estudo foi conhecer o nivel de informacao sobre amamentacao entre as mulheres que participam do programa de pre-natal na Maternidade-Escola da Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro. A amostra totalizou 135 puerperas que responderam a questionario estruturado, contendo perguntas objetivas sobre aspectos praticos e teoricos do aleitamento materno. Os resultados mostraram que as mulheres iniciaram o pre-natal, em media, com 16 semanas de gravidez e realizaram cerca de oito consultas. Dentre elas, 53,3% afirmaram ter recebido informacoes sobre aleitamento materno durante o acompanhamento pre-natal e a informacao mais lembrada por 22,2% foi a de amamentar ate os seis meses de vida do bebe. Quanto ao momento ideal para a primeira mamada, 50,4% consideraram ser logo apos o parto e 47,4% apontaram o leite materno como benefico para proteger o bebe contra doencas. Embora as maes tenham conhecimentos basicos sobre aleitamento materno, questoes como o momento ideal para a primeira mamada, a importância do colostro e aspectos nutricionais relacionados a nutriz ainda precisam ser melhor esclarecidos durante o pre-natal e no periodo pos-parto imediato.
Revista De Nutricao-brazilian Journal of Nutrition | 2007
Daniella Esteves Duque Guimarães; Fátima Lúcia de Carvalho Sardinha; Daniella M. Mizurini; Maria das Graças Tavares do Carmo
Leptin is a hormone secreted by adipocytes whose effect on the sympathetic nervous system and endocrine function confers active participation in the control of energy expenditure and appetite. Its identification added to the fat tissues in the human body the role of a multifunctional organ that produces and secretes a number of bioactive peptides and proteins, called adipocytokines. Changes in the amount of fat tissue, such as the ones that occur in obesity, affect the production of most of these factors secreted by adipocytes. Even if these changes are frequently associated with many metabolic disorders and increased risk for cardiovascular diseases, the role of fat tissue in the development of these complications, considered its endocrine function, continue to be investigated. The concentration of various adipocytokines increase in obesity and have been associated with hypertension (angiotensinogen), fibrinolysis impairment (plasminogen activator inhibitor-1) and insulin resistance (protein that stimulates acylation, tumor necrosis factor-alpha, interleukine-6 and resistin). On the other hand, leptin and adiponectin affect insulin sensitivity. In obesity, insulin resistance is also associated with leptin resistance and reduced plasma levels of adiponectin. Leptin and adiponectin still have complementary and distinct organic functions: adiponectin has potent antiatherogenic activity while leptin participates in the control of food intake. Some medications used to control diabetes increase adiponectin production in rodents and humans, suggesting that the development of new medications that target the adipocytokines can represent a new therapeutic alternative to prevent insulin resistance and atherosclerosis in obese individuals.
Nutrition | 2009
Daniella E. Duque-Guimarães; Javier de Castro; Javier Martínez-Botas; Fátima Lúcia de Carvalho Sardinha; M. Pilar Ramos; Emilio Herrera; Maria das Graças Tavares do Carmo
OBJECTIVE Our previous study indicated that partially hydrogenated fat (PHF) diets, rich in trans-isomers, alter plasma lipids and increase the lipogenesis rate on adipose tissue in rats at a young age. In the present study we investigated the effects of dietary PHF on the expression of genes associated with glucose and lipid metabolism in rat adipose tissue. METHODS Female Wistar rats were fed normolipidic diets containing PHF (rich in trans-fatty acids and poor in polyunsaturated fatty acids [PUFAs]), soy oil (rich in omega-6 PUFAs), and fish oil (rich in omega-3 PUFAs) during gestation and lactation; young male pups were fed the same diets from weaning until 120 d of life. The mRNA expression of peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-gamma, tumor necrosis factor-alpha, resistin, adiponectin, and leptin were analyzed in retroperitoneal adipose tissue (RET) using real time polymerase chain reaction. RESULTS The PHF group showed the highest triacylglycerol, glucose, and insulin levels and the lowest plasma adiponectin level. The RET of PHF incorporated trans-fatty acids, whereas fish oil and soy oil groups had increased omega-3 and omega-6 PUFAs, respectively. In the RET the PHF group had the highest resistin and tumor necrosis factor-alpha levels and the lowest adiponectin and peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-gamma gene expressions, whereas the fish oil group had the highest peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-gamma and the lowest leptin gene expression. CONCLUSION Prolonged intake of PHF has a negative effect on the expression of genes in RET when compared with diets with omega-6 and omega-3 PUFAs. These changes may be an effect of the smaller proportions of PUFAs in this fat, instead of being only caused by trans-fatty acids.
Lipids | 2006
Ana Paula S. Silva; Daniella Esteves Duque Guimarães; Daniella M. Mizurini; Ingrid da Costa Maia; Susana Ortiz-Costa; Fátima Lúcia de Carvalho Sardinha; Maria das Graças Tavares do Carmo
The purpose of this study was to evaluate the effects of four isoenergetic diets of differing fat composition on blood lipid profile and adiposity in young rats. Diets containing different lipid sources—partially hydrogenated vegetable oil (PHVO), palm oil (PO), canola oil (CO), and soy oil (SO)—were fed to lactating rats during the 21 days of lactation, and then fed to young males following weaning until the 45th, day of life. In vivo lipogenesis rate (LR), lipid content (LC), relative level of FA, and the activity of lipoprotein lipase (LPL) enzyme were measured in epididymal adipose tissue (EPI). Fasting blood lipoproteins and LC in the carcass were also appraised. Body weight of PO and PHVO groups was significantly higher than CO and SO groups from day 14 of lactation to day 45, despite the lower food intake in the PHVO group. PO and PHVO groups presented higher LR and LC in EPI than SO and CO groups. Carcass fat content was significantly higher in PHVO and PO groups than in CO and SO groups. The LPL activity in EPI was unaffected by dietary lipids. PHVO group had increased total cholesterol and TAG concentrations in comparison with the PO group, and significantly lower HDL level compared with the other groups. These results show that the kind of FA in the dietary lipid offered early in life can affect lipid metabolism and adiposity.
American Journal of Physiology-regulatory Integrative and Comparative Physiology | 2013
Fátima Lúcia de Carvalho Sardinha; Flávia Spreafico Fernandes; Maria das Graças Tavares do Carmo; Emilio Herrera
Prenatal and early postnatal nutritional status may predispose offspring to impaired glucose tolerance and changes in insulin sensitivity in adult life. The long-term consequences of changes in maternal dietary fatty acid composition were determined in rats. From day 1 until day 12 of pregnancy, rats were given isocaloric diets containing 9% nonvitamin fat based on soybean, olive, fish (FO), linseed, or palm oil. Thereafter, they were maintained on the standard diet; offspring were studied at different ages. Body weight at 4, 8, and 12 mo and lumbar adipose tissue and liver weights at 12 mo did not differ between females on the different diets, whereas in males the corresponding values were all lower in the offspring from the FO group compared with the other dietary groups. Plasma glucose concentrations (both basal and after an oral glucose load) did not change with sex or dietary group, but plasma insulin concentrations were lower in females than in males and, in males, were lowest in the FO group. Similar relations were found with both the homeostasis model assessment of insulin resistance and insulin sensitivity index. In conclusion, the intake of more n-3 fatty acids (FO diet) during early pregnancy reduced both fat accretion and age-related decline in insulin sensitivity in male offspring but not in females. It is proposed that the lower adiposity caused by the increased n-3 fatty acids during the intrauterine life was responsible of the lower insulin resistance in male offspring.
Nutrition | 2008
Fernanda Silveira Osso; Annie Seixas Bello Moreira; Michelle Teixeira Teixeira; Renata Pereira; Maria das Graças Tavares do Carmo; Anibal Sanchez Moura
OBJECTIVE Trans fatty acids (TFAs) are derived from vegetable oil hydrogenation and can be found in most manufactured food products. Our main objective was to evaluate the effects of TFA consumption by lactating dams on cardiac glucose metabolism of adult offspring by analyzing glucose transporter-4 in the left ventricle. To investigate the energy homeostasis, insulin sensitivity and hepatic glycogen content were also measured. METHODS Lactating Wistar rats were divided into a control group or a TFA group. The control group received a diet containing soybean oil, and the TFA group received a diet containing partially hydrogenated vegetable oil (total trans concentration of about 10.58 mg/g, 11.75%, of total fat) throughout the lactation period. At weaning, pups from both groups received a standard chow until 60 d of age, at which time the quantity of glucose transporter-4 in the left ventricle and hepatic glycogen were measured. Moreover, insulin sensitivity was analyzed by assessing the insulin/glucose ratio and the homeostatic model assessment index. RESULTS TFA consumption by the pups during lactation led to a significant decrease in the cardiac content of glucose transporter-4 (P < 0.05) and in the hepatic content of glycogen (P < 0.05). Moreover, we observed impaired insulin sensitivity in the TFA group (insulin/glucose ratio and homeostatic model assessment index, P < 0.05) in adulthood. CONCLUSION Our data suggest that the consumption of hydrogenated fat, rich in TFAs, by the mothers during the lactation period caused cardiac insulin resistance in the adult progeny, thus reinforcing the hypothesis that early adaptations may cause deleterious consequences later in life.
Nutritional Neuroscience | 2008
Amanda Santos de Souza; Luciana da Camara Pacheco; Priscila da Silva Castro; Jan Nora Hokoç; Monica Santos Rocha; Maria das Graças Tavares do Carmo
Abstract The aim of the present study was to determine the effects of malnutrition and nutritional rehabilitation on learning and memory performance and brain fatty acid composition. Pregnant and lactating Wistar rats were either fed ad libitum on a commercial laboratory chow or a multideficient diet from north-eastern Brazil (regional basic diet; RBD). After weaning, RBD offspring either continued on the multideficient diet (malnourished group) or switched to a control diet (rehabilitated group), until day 70. There was no difference in the passive avoidance test among the experimental groups, but malnourished rats showed important deficits in performance of the Morris water maze which were improved in the rehabilitated group. The hippocampus and cerebellum of the malnourished rats showed important changes in fatty acid profile obtained by gas-liquid chromatography, but the rehabilitated group had decreased n-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids and an increase in the proportion of arachidonic acid. The data suggest that nutritional rehabilitation results in partial restoration of fatty acid profiles and cognitive performance.
PLOS ONE | 2015
Patricia Casas-Agustench; Flávia Spreafico Fernandes; Maria das Graças Tavares do Carmo; Francesco Visioli; Emilio Herrera; Alberto Dávalos
Diet during pregnancy and lactation influences the offspring’s health in the long-term. Indeed, human epidemiological studies and animal experiments suggest that different type of fatty acids consumption during pregnancy affect offspring development and susceptibility to metabolic disorders. Epigenetic changes are thought to be elicited by dietary factors during critical timing of development. microRNAs (miRNAs) are versatile regulators of gene expression. Thus, we aimed to determine the influence of different fatty acids on miRNA expression in offspring when given during early pregnancy. We fed pregnant either soybean (SO), olive (OO), fish (FO), linseed (LO), or palm-oil (PO) diets from conception to day 12 of gestation; and standard diet thereafter. miRNA expression was assessed in liver an adipose tissue of pregnant rats and their virgin counterparts. While liver concentrations of fatty acids in pregnant or virgin rats replicated those of the diets consumed during early pregnancy, their pups’ liver tissue marginally reflected those of the respective experimental feeds. By contrast, the liver fatty acid profile of adult offsprings was similar, regardless of the diet fed during gestation. Different parental miRNAs were modulated by the different type of fatty acid: in adult offspring, miR-215, miR-10b, miR-26, miR-377-3p, miR-21, and miR-192 among others, were differentially modulated by the different fatty acids fed during early pregnancy. Overall, our results show that maternal consumption of different types of fatty acids during early pregnancy influences miRNA expression in both maternal and offspring tissues, which may epigenetically explain the long-term phenotypic changes of the offspring.
International Journal of Food Sciences and Nutrition | 2003
Roseli de Souza Santos da Costa; Maria das Graças Tavares do Carmo; Cláudia Saunders; Edgar Francisco Oliveira de Jesus; R.T. Lopes; Silvana M. Simabuco
Pasteurization is a thermal treatment applied to the milk used in human milk banks so as to provoke the thermic inactivation of pathogenic micro-organisms, with the aim of avoiding contamination of milk that will be offered to new-born infants in clinical conditions very often demanding special care. The literature has very little data available relating to the effect of pasteurization on the concentration of oligo-elements in human milk. The objective of this study was to evaluate the effect of pasteurization on the concentrations of iron (Fe), copper (Cu) and zinc (Zn) in the colostrum of mothers of pre-term (PT) and term (T) infants. Samples were collected from the day of birth to the seventh day after birth. The oligo-elements were analyzed using the total reflection X-ray fluorescence technique with synchrotron radiation. The following results of Fe, Cu and Zn (means±SD) were obtained for the PT and T colostrum samples, non-pasteurized and pasteurized, respectively: PT: 1.96±0.73 mg/l Fe/1.71±0.70 mg/l Fe, 0.67±0.28 mg/l Cu/0.64±0.28 mg/l Cu, 5.55±2.71 mg/l Zn/5.39±2.73 mg/l Zn; T: 1.71±1.01 mg/l Fe/1.46±0.99 mg/l Fe, 0.54±0.29 mg/l Cu/0.49±0.19 mg/l Cu, 6.97±2.82 mg/l Zn/6.75±2.62 mg/l Zn. There was a significant reduction in the levels of Fe, Cu and Zn in the samples of pasteurized colostrum. These results suggest that, despite the observance of a diminution in the levels of Fe, Cu and Zn in the samples of pasteurized colostrum, the values fell within the acceptable range for the specific nutritional needs of new-born infants during this period of lactation.
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Priscila de Mattos Machado Andrade
Federal University of Rio de Janeiro
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