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International Journal of Food Science, Nutrition and Dietetics (IJFS)    IJFS-2326-3350-09-002e

Mother's Own Milk - Best Food For Infants



S Sarkar*

Head (Quality Assurance), Keventer Agro Limited, Barrackpore-Barasat Link Road, Subhasnagar, Neelgunj Bazar, Kolkata, West Bengal, India.

*Corresponding Author

S. Sarkar,
Head (Quality Assurance), Keventer Agro Limited, Barrackpore-Barasat Link Road, Subhasnagar, Neelgunj Bazar, Kolkata, West Bengal, India.
E-mail: drsurajitsarkar@yahoo.co.in

Received: September 07, 2020; Published: September 11, 2020

Citation:S. Sarkar. Mother's Own Milk - Best Food For Infants. Int J Food Sci Nutr Diet. 2020;9(02e):1-2. doi: dx.doi.org/10.19070/2326-3350-2000010e

Copyright: S. Sarkar© 2020. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.



Mother’s milk is the first and most ideal food for both normal as well as preterm infants, owing to its nutrition attributes, immune factors, growth factors, digestive enzymes, hormones, bioactive factors and antibacterial proteins/peptides. Advantages extended due to breast feeding of infants are reduction in the risk of gastrointestinal tract infections, respiratory tract infections, atopic dermatitis, childhood asthma, childhood leukaemia, type I diabetes, obesity, necrotising enterocolitis and sudden infant death syndrome.

WHO and UNICEF recommend early initiation of breastfeeding within an hour of birth [15] and American Academy of Pediatrics recommended exclusive breast feeding for the first 6 months of life and to be continued for the second 6 months [1] or two or more years [15] along with the gradual introduction of solid foods.

Many infants are deprived of getting theirown mother’s milk due to insufficient breast milk secretion from mothers [16] due to illness, severe medical conditions or those undergoing tremendous stress [7] or death of mothers. Under these conditions, breast milk from several well-established human milk banks (HMB) is the practical alternate for supplying breast milk [5, 12].

Breast milk from willing donor mothers are accepted by HMB after careful screening and donor human milk (DHM) are stored, processed to render it microbiologically safe [9]. Techniques employed for preservation of DHM are pasteurization, boiling or refrigerated storage. DHM may be pasteurised either by lowtemperature, long-time (LTLT) or High Temperature Short Time (HTST) methods. Pasteurization of donor milk adopting HTST technique instead of LTLT technique would be a better compromise between microbiological safety and nutritional and biological quality of donor milk [2, 4]. Expressed breast milk can be safely stored up to 96 h at 6.8ºC [10] or 6 weeks at -20ºC [8] but frozen storage results degradation of immunological component [10]. Recent research suggest that high-pressure processing may be a promising alternative to pasteurization in human milk banking for preserving the immunological protective capacity of breast milk.

Nutritional composition of human milk may not completely meet the high nutrient demands for growth very low birth-weight preterm infant [11], thereforeDHM may not be nutritionally adequate and required to be fortified with commercially available fortifiers [6]. Supplementation of breast milk with protein, energy, calcium, phosphates and vitamin D through parenteral or/and enteral nutrition for bone growth and mineralization is suggested.

Fortification of breast milk can be done by Standard Fortification (SF), where the amount of added fortifier is the same for all infants, Adjustable Fortification (AF), where the amount of fortifier is adjusted based on a surrogate marker of protein nutriture and Targeted Fortification (TF), where the amount of fortifier is adjusted after poor infant growth and/or results from analysis of the milk show the inadequacy of nutrients. Recently, AF and TF methods have been reported be more practical for adoption in neonatal intensive care units [3, 13] due to improve body weight, length and head circumference percentiles of preterm infants, whereas SF method was found unsatisfactory [13]. In case availability of sufficient quantum of maternal breast milk, feeding of preterm infant with fortified preterm infant formula or pasteurized donor human milk is recommended [14].

Breast milk from donor mothers can be a practical substitute for feeding infants in absence of mother’s own milk. Safety and nutritional aspect of donor milk from human milk banks must be ensured prior to infant feeding.



References

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  2. Arslanoglu S, Bertino E, Tonetto P, De Nisi G, Ambruzzi AM, Biasini A, et al. Guidelines for the establishment and operation of a donor human milk bank Italian, Association of Human Milk Banks (AIBLUD). J. Matern. Fetal Neonatal Med. 2010; 23: 1-20. PMID: 20840052.
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  12. Sisk PM, Lambeth TM, Rojas MA, Lightbourne T, Barahona M, Anthony E, et al. Necrotizing enterocolitis and growth in preterm infants fed predominantly maternal milk, pasteurized donor milk, or preterm formula: a retrospective study. Am. J. Perinatol. 2017; 34: 676-683.
  13. Sximsxek GK, Dizdar EA, Arayıc S, Canpolat FE, Sarı FN, Urasx N, et al. Comparison of the effect of three different fortification methods on growth of very low birth weight infants. Breastfeeding Med. 2019; 14:63- 68. PMID: 30484683.
  14. Underwood MA. Human milk for the premature infant. Pediat. Clin. North Am. 2013; 60: 189-207. PMID: 23178065.
  15. UNICEF. From the First Hour of Life: Making the Case for Improved Infant and Young Child Feeding Everywhere. New York, 2016.
  16. Walker M. Breastfeeding management for the clinician: Using the evidence. Jones & Bartlett Publishers; 2013 May 20.

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