faculty

Publications

Effects of variations in atmospheric temperature and humidity on the estimation of exclusive breastfeeding status using the deuterium oxide dose-to-mother technique.

Groups and Associations Baby, Jeswin; Kaestel, Pernille; Preston, Tom; Duffull, Stephen B.; Liu, Zheng; Diana, Aly; Houghton, Lisa; Kurpad, Anura V.; Thomas, Tinku
Frontiers in pediatrics 2005

BACKGROUND: The deuterium dose-to-mother (DTM) method measures the human milk intake of breastfed children. Recently, the use of this method has been expanded  to classify babies objectively as exclusively breast fed (EBF) or not (non-EBF)  based on quantification of non-milk oral water intake (NMOI). However, the  calculation of NMOI estimates involves atmospheric temperature and humidity.  OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the effects of atmospheric temperature and humidity on  NMOI calculation and the classification of exclusive breastfeeding. METHODS: The  effect of indoor temperature and relative humidity on NMOI and the estimated  prevalence of non-EBF were examined in two existing data sets of DTM in children  by varying temperature in the range of 15 to 35°C and relative humidity in the  range of 20 to 80% representing the maximum span of indoor conditions expected.  Population-level estimates of NMOI distributions were derived using the rstan  package for R v2.21.2. RESULTS: The NMOI decreased at a rate of -1.15 g/day per  °C increase and at a rate of -1.01 g/day per percent increase in relative  humidity; this was due to variations in non-oral water intake from the  atmosphere, a component of the calculation of NMOI, which is dependent on  temperature and humidity. For the various locations considered, the mean  calculated NMOI varied between 24.6 and 53.3 g/day using the same input data. In  the mixed-fed sample of babies, the prevalence of non-EBF based on the earlier  defined NMOI cut-off of 86.6 g/day was reduced by 19% when relative humidity was  increased by 60%. CONCLUSIONS: Atmospheric conditions are essential factors in  the computation of NMOI, used in the objective classification of babies as  exclusively breast fed or not, and should be considered when the DTM method is  used to classify exclusive breastfeeding.