Anne Sütünde İlaç Kalıntısı ve Postpartum Depresyon İlişkisi
Özet
Breastmilk is a natural and unique food that is high bioavailability and easy
digestion which contains all the liquids, energy and nutrients required for optimum
growth and development of the newborn. Mothers are also exposed to unknown
sources as well as medical reasons. Postpartum depression (PPD) is a non-psychotic
disorder seen postnatally, which can have serious consequences for the baby and the
mother. Its etiology is not fully known. The aim of the study is to examine the
relationship between the presence of drug residues in mother's milk and maternalinfant
characteristics, breastfeeding problems and postpartum depression.
Overall, 90 breastfeeding mothers and infants aged between 15 days and 4
months, who applied for child health monitoring, were taken into the study. Maternal
height and weight measurements were taken with the mother and information form
including maternal-infant characteristics, maternal nutrition characteristics and baby
crying and sleep characteristics were filled and maternal milk sample was taken.
The average of the mother and infant’s age was 31.5 ± 4.2 years, 57.8 ± 18.1
days, respectively. According to the results of the breast milk residue analysis, 30.0%
of the anti-inflammatory drug remnants were found in breastmilk and all of these
cases had tolfenamic acid. Quinolone was found in 94.4% of cases, beta-lactam in
93.3%, aminoglycoside in 31.1%, and polymyxin in 13.3%. Spectinomycin remained
in 27 out of 28 cases that detected aminoglycoside. There was no effect of the drugs
on the residual analysis that used by the mother during pregnancy or lactation. Less
postpartum BMI changes observed in mothers who in their’s brest milk antiinflammatory
drug residues detected. This was also observed when maternal chronic
disease presence, height, weight at birth and birth BMI, smoking history, postnatal
period, breastfeeding (alone, mixed nutrition) were controlled (p = 0.049). Higher
rate of low birth weight history were found in infants with anti-inflammatory drug
residues detected in brestmilk (22.2%, 4.8%, p = 0.011). Despite the fact that more
maternal breastfeeding problems were found in the mother who had antiinflammatory
drug residues in the mother's milk, this was not statistically significant
(48.1%, 28.1%, p = 0.073). Baby's crying and sleeping characteristics did not differ
according to the breast milk residue status. Edinburgh postpartum depression score
was similar in two groups with and without drug residues in the mothermilk.
Our study suggests that there are unpredictable drug residues in the mother's
milk, which indicates that mother and baby may affect anthropometric
measurements. In this regard, larger participatory studies and contacts are needed.
The greater involvement studies are required in this context to contact to resources