Food allergens in maternal diet during breastfeeding and outcome of elimination diet on infant allergy development: A systematic review

Introduction: Breastfeeding is recommended to provide sufficient nutrition source to infants. Although adverse reactions to allergenic food in exclusively breastfed infants have been identified yet the assessment among lactation mothers is still lacking. Hence, this study aims to review the effects...

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Main Authors: Mat Tena'ain, Nur Alya Hannani, Mohd Shukri, Nor Azwani
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Kulliyyah of Allied Health Sciences, International Islamic University Malaysia 2020
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Online Access:http://irep.iium.edu.my/87229/1/Nur%20Alya%20Hannani%20%26%20Nor%20Azwani%20%282020%29.pdf
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spelling my.iium.irep.872292020-12-31T07:21:27Z http://irep.iium.edu.my/87229/ Food allergens in maternal diet during breastfeeding and outcome of elimination diet on infant allergy development: A systematic review Mat Tena'ain, Nur Alya Hannani Mohd Shukri, Nor Azwani RM214 Diet therapy. Diet and dietectics in disease Introduction: Breastfeeding is recommended to provide sufficient nutrition source to infants. Although adverse reactions to allergenic food in exclusively breastfed infants have been identified yet the assessment among lactation mothers is still lacking. Hence, this study aims to review the effects of food allergens manipulation in maternal diet towards infant allergy reaction. Methods: A systematic review was conducted in accordance with the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) statement. Studies were identified through five electronic databases using 15 keywords and were included if they met the following criteria: published in English, assessed mothers free from chronic diseases and included full term infants aged less than 24 months who were exclusively breastfed for at least four months. Results: A total of 1,094 relevant abstracts were screened and 8 full text articles, describing observational studies were reviewed and summarized. All studies reported responsible foods that trigger allergy reaction in infants. Nine food allergens were recognized in the maternal diet such as fish, shellfish, peanut, soy, cow’s milk, tree nuts (chocolate and coffee beans), fermented foods (cheese, yogurt, bread, soy sauce, miso soup and fermented soy beans), egg and pork. All but one study presented significant association between maternal dietary intake and allergy outcome. Nevertheless, only one study recommended maternal dietary elimination during breastfeeding, two agreed but with a few conditions, two rejected the recommendation and the remaining did not give any comment. Conclusion: Food allergens in maternal diet can indeed be transferred through breastmilk. However, maternal elimination diet is not recommended for breastfeeding mothers as some foods are good sources of important nutrients unless the relationship is established. Even then the maternal elimination diet practice must be guided by clinicians so as not to jeopardize the growth and development of infants. Kulliyyah of Allied Health Sciences, International Islamic University Malaysia 2020-12-23 Article PeerReviewed application/pdf en http://irep.iium.edu.my/87229/1/Nur%20Alya%20Hannani%20%26%20Nor%20Azwani%20%282020%29.pdf Mat Tena'ain, Nur Alya Hannani and Mohd Shukri, Nor Azwani (2020) Food allergens in maternal diet during breastfeeding and outcome of elimination diet on infant allergy development: A systematic review. International Journal of Allied Health Sciences, 4 (3). pp. 1216-1228. E-ISSN 2600-8491 https://journals.iium.edu.my/ijahs/index.php/IJAHS
institution Universiti Islam Antarabangsa Malaysia
building IIUM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider International Islamic University Malaysia
content_source IIUM Repository (IREP)
url_provider http://irep.iium.edu.my/
language English
topic RM214 Diet therapy. Diet and dietectics in disease
spellingShingle RM214 Diet therapy. Diet and dietectics in disease
Mat Tena'ain, Nur Alya Hannani
Mohd Shukri, Nor Azwani
Food allergens in maternal diet during breastfeeding and outcome of elimination diet on infant allergy development: A systematic review
description Introduction: Breastfeeding is recommended to provide sufficient nutrition source to infants. Although adverse reactions to allergenic food in exclusively breastfed infants have been identified yet the assessment among lactation mothers is still lacking. Hence, this study aims to review the effects of food allergens manipulation in maternal diet towards infant allergy reaction. Methods: A systematic review was conducted in accordance with the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) statement. Studies were identified through five electronic databases using 15 keywords and were included if they met the following criteria: published in English, assessed mothers free from chronic diseases and included full term infants aged less than 24 months who were exclusively breastfed for at least four months. Results: A total of 1,094 relevant abstracts were screened and 8 full text articles, describing observational studies were reviewed and summarized. All studies reported responsible foods that trigger allergy reaction in infants. Nine food allergens were recognized in the maternal diet such as fish, shellfish, peanut, soy, cow’s milk, tree nuts (chocolate and coffee beans), fermented foods (cheese, yogurt, bread, soy sauce, miso soup and fermented soy beans), egg and pork. All but one study presented significant association between maternal dietary intake and allergy outcome. Nevertheless, only one study recommended maternal dietary elimination during breastfeeding, two agreed but with a few conditions, two rejected the recommendation and the remaining did not give any comment. Conclusion: Food allergens in maternal diet can indeed be transferred through breastmilk. However, maternal elimination diet is not recommended for breastfeeding mothers as some foods are good sources of important nutrients unless the relationship is established. Even then the maternal elimination diet practice must be guided by clinicians so as not to jeopardize the growth and development of infants.
format Article
author Mat Tena'ain, Nur Alya Hannani
Mohd Shukri, Nor Azwani
author_facet Mat Tena'ain, Nur Alya Hannani
Mohd Shukri, Nor Azwani
author_sort Mat Tena'ain, Nur Alya Hannani
title Food allergens in maternal diet during breastfeeding and outcome of elimination diet on infant allergy development: A systematic review
title_short Food allergens in maternal diet during breastfeeding and outcome of elimination diet on infant allergy development: A systematic review
title_full Food allergens in maternal diet during breastfeeding and outcome of elimination diet on infant allergy development: A systematic review
title_fullStr Food allergens in maternal diet during breastfeeding and outcome of elimination diet on infant allergy development: A systematic review
title_full_unstemmed Food allergens in maternal diet during breastfeeding and outcome of elimination diet on infant allergy development: A systematic review
title_sort food allergens in maternal diet during breastfeeding and outcome of elimination diet on infant allergy development: a systematic review
publisher Kulliyyah of Allied Health Sciences, International Islamic University Malaysia
publishDate 2020
url http://irep.iium.edu.my/87229/1/Nur%20Alya%20Hannani%20%26%20Nor%20Azwani%20%282020%29.pdf
http://irep.iium.edu.my/87229/
https://journals.iium.edu.my/ijahs/index.php/IJAHS
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