Being pregnant is hard work — even metabolically, study shows

Being pregnant is hard work — even metabolically, study shows
JENNIFER: IN THIS MORNING'S WOMAN'S DOCTOR, THE REQUIREMENTS FOR PREGNANT VERSUS NONPREGNANT WOMEN ARE DIFFERENT. IF A WOMAN IS EXPECTING A BABY, SHE SMOO INCREASE HER CALORIE INTAKE BY 300 DLOERS A DAY. TWINS, 600 CALORIES A DAY. TRIPLETS, 900 CALORIES PER DAY. RACHEL ADAMS SAYS PREGNANT WOMEN SHOULD INCREASE PROTEIN CONSUMPTION TO 70 TO 100 GRAMS A YDA DEPENDING ON BODY WEIGHT. DR. ADAMS JOINS US LIVE. 300 CALORIES IS NOT NEARLY AS MUCH ASOU Y THINK. >> GOOD MORNING. THANKS FOR HAVING ME. YOU'RE CORRECT. I JUST WANTED TO HIGHLIT,GH AGAIN, YES, THE 300 CALORIES PER DAY DOESN'T SEEM LIKE A T.LO BUT IT'S EXTREMELY IMPORTANT IN TERMS OF WEIGHT GAIN AND PREGNAY.NC THERE'S A CALCULATION THAT WE DO CALL BMI, AND SO THAT HELPS US FIGURE OUT HOW MANY POUNDS WOMEN SHOULD GAIN PER PREGNANCY. SO IF YOUR BMI IS BETWEEN 18.5 AND 24.9, YOU SHOULD GAIN BETWEEN 25 AND 35 POUNDS FOR PREGNCNAY. IF YOUR BMI IS 25 TO 29.9, YOU SHOULD GAIN 15 TO 25 POUNDS PER PREGNANCY, AND IF YOUR BMI IS 30 OR R HIGHER, YOU SHOULD GAIN 11 TO 20 POUNDS. JENNIFER: IT CAN BE FRUSTRATING FOR SOME WOMEN WHO SAY THEY FEEL HUNGRIER BECAUSE THEY'RE GROWING A WHOLE 'NOTHER HUMAN BEING, BUT YOU DOTN' GET AS MUCH EXTRA FOOD AS YOU MIGHT THINK. >> INCREASING YOUR PROTEIN INTAKE, WHICH WE JUST TALKED ABOUT IS VERY FILLING. AND SOHE T REASON WHY ALL OF THIS IS IMPORTANT IS BECAUSE IT HELPS WITH PREVENTGIN PREGNANCY CONDITIONS SUCH AS PREECLAMPSIA, WHICH IS HIGH BLOOD PRESSUR IEN PREGNANCY, PREVENTGIN GESTATIONAL DIABETES, AND HELP PREVENT PRE-TERM BIRTH OR DECREASE THE LIKELIHOOD OF PRE-TERM OR EARLY BIRTH. INCREASING PROTEIN KEEPS WOMEN MO REFULL. JENNIFER: DO YOU ADVISE WOMEN GET A FOOD SCALE TO KNOW HOW CHMU PROTEIN THEY'RE GETTING? >> ABSOLUTELY. AND THE OTHER THING IS CHECKING NUTRITION LABELS. THERE'S SPECIFICALLY A CALCULATION YOUR O.B. CAN HELP YOU TO DO TELL YOU HOW MANY GRAMS OF PROTEIN YOU CAN TAKEN I A DAY. A FOOD SCALE IS HELPFUL, AS WELL AS LOOKING ATHE TK BAC OF A NUTRITIONAL LABEL. >> DOCTOR, THANK YOU FOR JOINING THUS MORNING. APPRECIATE IT. >> YOU'RE VERY WELCOME. ONE OTHER THING. IF WOMEN WANT SAMEPLL MEA PLANS OR RESOURCES ABOUT NUTRITION IN PREGNANCY, LOOK ON THE ACOG WEBSITE, WHICH IS ACOG OR THE U.S.D.A. WEBSITE, WHICH HAS SAMPLE MEAL PLANS OR RESOURCES FOR YOU. JENNIFER: THANKS FOR AINGDD THAT. >> YEAH, YOU'RE VERY WELCOME. HAVE A LOVELY MORNING. >> YOU O.TO IF YOU HAVE QUEST
Advertisement
Being pregnant is hard work — even metabolically, study shows
Having a baby is energetically much more expensive than commonly thought, according to new research.In fact, over the course of a pregnancy, creating and carrying a little one takes 49,753 dietary calories — the equivalent of 199 Snickers candy bars each containing 250 calories, said Dr. Dustin Marshall, a coauthor of the study published May 16 in the journal Science.For the meta-analysis, Marshall, a professor of evolutionary biology at Monash University in Melbourne, Australia, and a team of researchers used data from thousands of existing scientific articles to look at the energy cost of several species.Related video above: Pregnant women need to increase caloric, protein intake"While most folks probably intuit, or have actually experienced the high energy demands that come from gestating a baby, our work assigns explicit values to these costs across a wide range of species — from insects to lizards to humans," said lead study author Dr. Samuel Ginther, a postdoctoral researcher of biological sciences at Monash University, in an email."We found that the total energy it takes to reproduce is much more substantial than previously considered."The bulk of the additional energy a pregnant person needs goes toward developing and carrying the fetus, Ginther added."Most of (the) energy that mammals put into reproduction is 'boiled off' as metabolic heat, only 10% ends up in the actual baby," Marshall said in an email. "When both lactation and metabolic loads are accounted for, the baby itself represents less than 1/20th of the total reproductive investment."The research could make a big difference in perceptions of pregnancy needs, said Dr. Eve Feinberg, associate professor of obstetrics and gynecology at Northwestern University's Feinberg School of Medicine in Chicago. She was not involved in the research."I think this study is groundbreaking," she said. "Any working pregnant woman could tell you the sheer level of exhaustion when you are pregnant … and how it consumes your life."How to break down what you needThe extra calorie needs were not equal across the term of the pregnancy — you need less early on and much more as time goes on, Marshall said.A person would need about 182.48 extra calories daily over the approximately 272.65 days of their pregnancy, the researchers found.The current recommendations break down differently by trimester of the pregnancy, said dietitian Natalie Mokari. In the beginning, you may not need many more daily calories, she said.Once you get to the second trimester, you need about 350 extra calories a day, while you need 450 more calories daily in the third trimester, said Mokari, who lives in Charlotte, North Carolina.The calories recommended by dietitians add up to even more than the almost 50,000 the researchers mentioned, Mokari said.If you breastfeed after the baby is born, you will need to add 450 to 500 more calories to your prepregnancy diet, she added.You can think of it as an additional substantial snack or mini meal in your day around the second trimester, Mokari said. And by the third trimester and breastfeeding, the additional calories amount to a meal."Your body is in overdrive. Your metabolism is working hard to build another human," she said. "That's pretty monumental."What to eatHow you eat will depend on your pregnancy, Mokari said.She recommends trying to eat every three to four hours or add smaller snacks every two hours throughout the day if that works better for your pregnancy symptoms, she said."It doesn't have to necessarily be three standard meals with a few snacks in between, because sometimes you can't handle that in pregnancy if you've got nausea or anything like that," Mokari said.Mokari stressed the importance of carbs for energy, protein and healthy fat — "those high-quality fats that are going to promote good brain health for the baby."What constitutes a healthy fat? Fatty fish such as salmon, olive oil, avocados, avocado oil, peanut butter and almond butter are all great examples, Mokari said.Milk and dairy can also provide that fat along with other vitamins, and eggs can be a good source of both protein and fat, she added."You really want your energy to come from good, whole foods," Feinberg added.Get some sleepThis study also suggests that sleep is probably especially important during pregnancy, Feinberg said."If you feel tired, go to sleep, and really understand that you're not being a wimp, that you're exhausted in pregnancy," Feinberg said.Video below: Woman's Doctor: Body changes during first trimester of pregnancyUnfortunately, there can be a stigma around pregnant people having higher sleep needs, but the study's findings should work against that, she said."These data really give some solid numbers to say that the exhaustion women feel is very real and probably needs to be paid more attention to," Feinberg said.

Having a baby is energetically much more expensive than commonly thought, according to new research.

In fact, over the course of a pregnancy, creating and carrying a little one takes 49,753 dietary calories — the equivalent of 199 Snickers candy bars each containing 250 calories, said Dr. Dustin Marshall, a coauthor of the study published May 16 in the journal Science.

Advertisement

For the meta-analysis, Marshall, a professor of evolutionary biology at Monash University in Melbourne, Australia, and a team of researchers used data from thousands of existing scientific articles to look at the energy cost of several species.

Related video above: Pregnant women need to increase caloric, protein intake

"While most folks probably intuit, or have actually experienced the high energy demands that come from gestating a baby, our work assigns explicit values to these costs across a wide range of species — from insects to lizards to humans," said lead study author Dr. Samuel Ginther, a postdoctoral researcher of biological sciences at Monash University, in an email.

"We found that the total energy it takes to reproduce is much more substantial than previously considered."

The bulk of the additional energy a pregnant person needs goes toward developing and carrying the fetus, Ginther added.

"Most of (the) energy that mammals put into reproduction is 'boiled off' as metabolic heat, only 10% ends up in the actual baby," Marshall said in an email. "When both lactation and metabolic loads are accounted for, the baby itself represents less than 1/20th of the total reproductive investment."

The research could make a big difference in perceptions of pregnancy needs, said Dr. Eve Feinberg, associate professor of obstetrics and gynecology at Northwestern University's Feinberg School of Medicine in Chicago. She was not involved in the research.

"I think this study is groundbreaking," she said. "Any working pregnant woman could tell you the sheer level of exhaustion when you are pregnant … and how it consumes your life."

How to break down what you need

The extra calorie needs were not equal across the term of the pregnancy — you need less early on and much more as time goes on, Marshall said.

A person would need about 182.48 extra calories daily over the approximately 272.65 days of their pregnancy, the researchers found.

The current recommendations break down differently by trimester of the pregnancy, said dietitian Natalie Mokari. In the beginning, you may not need many more daily calories, she said.

Once you get to the second trimester, you need about 350 extra calories a day, while you need 450 more calories daily in the third trimester, said Mokari, who lives in Charlotte, North Carolina.

The calories recommended by dietitians add up to even more than the almost 50,000 the researchers mentioned, Mokari said.

If you breastfeed after the baby is born, you will need to add 450 to 500 more calories to your prepregnancy diet, she added.

You can think of it as an additional substantial snack or mini meal in your day around the second trimester, Mokari said. And by the third trimester and breastfeeding, the additional calories amount to a meal.

"Your body is in overdrive. Your metabolism is working hard to build another human," she said. "That's pretty monumental."

What to eat

How you eat will depend on your pregnancy, Mokari said.

She recommends trying to eat every three to four hours or add smaller snacks every two hours throughout the day if that works better for your pregnancy symptoms, she said.

"It doesn't have to necessarily be three standard meals with a few snacks in between, because sometimes you can't handle that in pregnancy if you've got nausea or anything like that," Mokari said.

Mokari stressed the importance of carbs for energy, protein and healthy fat — "those high-quality fats that are going to promote good brain health for the baby."

What constitutes a healthy fat? Fatty fish such as salmon, olive oil, avocados, avocado oil, peanut butter and almond butter are all great examples, Mokari said.

Milk and dairy can also provide that fat along with other vitamins, and eggs can be a good source of both protein and fat, she added.

"You really want your energy to come from good, whole foods," Feinberg added.

Get some sleep

This study also suggests that sleep is probably especially important during pregnancy, Feinberg said.

"If you feel tired, go to sleep, and really understand that you're not being a wimp, that you're exhausted in pregnancy," Feinberg said.

Video below: Woman's Doctor: Body changes during first trimester of pregnancy


Unfortunately, there can be a stigma around pregnant people having higher sleep needs, but the study's findings should work against that, she said.

"These data really give some solid numbers to say that the exhaustion women feel is very real and probably needs to be paid more attention to," Feinberg said.

Top Picks