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Yvonne Thornton, M.D.

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How Much Weight Gain Is Healthy During Pregnancy?

Posted: 02/24/11 09:53 AM ET

Eating for two -- I wish I knew where that phrase came from. I suppose it has been around since the beginning of time, but it is the bane of the obstetrical world. Why? Because pregnant women are getting too fat. You will hear many a pregnant woman say, "I'm having a baby and now I have to eat for two. So, I'm just going to stop by the store and get me a quart of Häagen-Dazs?"

That wasn't always the case. In the 1940s and 1950s, obstetricians were telling their patients to gain no more than 20 pounds during their pregnancies for fear of the patient developing preeclampsia (toxemia), a disorder in pregnancy that leads to seizures and increased complications for mother and baby. However, for the past 25 years, the standard obstetric approach to maternal weight gain during pregnancy has been to follow the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) recommendation which stated, "Regardless of how much women weigh before they become pregnant, gaining between 26-35 pounds during pregnancy can improve the outcome of pregnancy and reduce their chances of having the pregnancy end in fetal death".

After this dictum was announced (to many obstetricians' chagrin), it became common practice for pregnant women to be told "to eat to appetite" with little other dietary direction. Even in 1990, the Institute of Medicine (IOM) recommended a minimum of 15 pounds weight gain for obese women. Even with the updated 2009 IOM guidelines, obese women are asked to gain between 11 and 20 pounds; which, in my opinion, is entirely too much if the patient starts the pregnancy over 200 pounds.

The fact of the matter is that you are not eating for two, you are eating for one and a twentieth. A baby at term weighs six or seven pounds; if you are a 140-pound woman, that seven-pound baby is one-twentieth the size of you, so there is no reason in the world to eat for two you's. Obesity has become endemic in the United States. Over 35 percent of adult women are considered to be obese.

Currently, 20 percent of all American women are obese at the beginning of their pregnancy. Obesity has been recognized as a risk factor in pregnancy for more than 50 years with various pregnancy complications which include gestational diabetes, preeclampsia, large babies, operative risks, wound infections and a two-fold higher risk of primary cesarean delivery.

An important source of complications in pregnancy, in my opinion, is excessive weight gain. In addition to the increased risk of developing gestational diabetes, obesity is more likely to lead to postpartum depression after the baby is born. Several studies have even linked obesity in pregnancy with an increase in the incidence of neural tube defects (spina bifida) and heart defects.

A pregnant woman should gain only two pounds in the first trimester (before 12 weeks). At 12 weeks, the baby weighs 14 grams. An ounce is 30 grams; so a 14-gram fetus is not even half an ounce, which means there is no reason for a 10-pound weight gain. After the first trimester, weight gain should be three-quarters of a pound to one pound per week for the remainder of the pregnancy, for a total weight gain during pregnancy of 24 to 26 pounds.

Why that much even? Because there is a baby in there, which makes for seven pounds. Then there is the weight of the placenta (11/2 lbs), the amniotic fluid (2 lbs), and the increased size and weight of the uterus (21/2 lbs). The breasts, affected by hormones, become about one pound heavier. The blood volume is increased in pregnancy (31/2 lbs), as is the deposition of fat, which should be held to six or seven pounds. A lot of structural changes do occur in pregnancy. But they do not add up to 65 pounds' worth of weight gain.

A 30-pound weight gain for an appropriate-weight pregnant woman is still all right, but, in my experience, if you tell a woman 30 pounds, she will gain 40 or even 50 pounds during her pregnancy. Losing those pounds later may prove to be impossible. Before the baby arrived, you had time and energy to go to the gym. After delivery, however, your whole life changes, and your intention to get back to your pre-pregnancy weight often goes by the board.

Back in the 1970s, Weight Watchers had a pregnancy weight control plan that went a long way in ensuring that the member and her baby were healthy. However, with the medical-legal implications inherent with taking care of pregnant women, they too have backed off regarding healthy eating during pregnancy in obese women. Because of my fascination with obesity and pregnancy, I embarked on a clinical trial back in 1998 that would challenge the dogma that all pregnant women, regardless of their weight, should gain between 26 and 35 pounds. It took me seven years to complete. That study, the first of its kind, was published in 2009 in the Journal of the National Medical Association and it showed that obese women need not gain any weight during their pregnancies. The study (monitored) group gained only 11 pounds during their pregnancies while the control (unmonitored) group gained 31 pounds.

It was a landmark study and rather than focusing on a numerical end-point (numbers on a scale) with respect to weight in obese pregnant women, obstetricians should promote adherence to a monitored, well-balanced nutritional program. The take-home message for obese pregnant women is that they should be eating twice as well, not twice as much.

Yvonne S. Thornton, M. D., M. P. H., Sc. D. (hon), FACOG, FACS

Note: The above opinions are my own and do not necessarily reflect the policies or practices of my affiliated medical school or medical center.

EDITOR'S NOTE: For another perspective read the The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) first official opinion on obesity during pregnancy.

 
 
 

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Eating for two -- I wish I knew where that phrase came from. I suppose it has been around since the beginning of time, but it is the bane of the obstetrical world. Why? Because pregnant women are gett...
Eating for two -- I wish I knew where that phrase came from. I suppose it has been around since the beginning of time, but it is the bane of the obstetrical world. Why? Because pregnant women are gett...
 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
giant1
I have written what I have written
02:48 PM on 02/26/2011
"A 30-pound weight gain for an appropriate-weight pregnant woman is still all right, but, in my experience, if you tell a woman 30 pounds, she will gain 40 or even 50 pounds during her pregnancy"

In my experience, no woman wishes to gain 40 or 50 pounds during pregnancy and those who do often have a large component of edema in their weight gain.

It also seems to me that weight gain during pregnancy is significantly affected by pre-pregnancy weight. I have often seen very overweight patients gain little or no weight during the course of a normal pregnancy.

I think one should emphasize proper diet rather than specific amounts of weight gain.
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Yvonne Thornton, M.D.
06:27 PM on 02/25/2011
For your information and an update, the ACOG article referred to in the Editor's Note is from 2005 and does not reflect the new 2009 Institute of Medicine (IOM) guidelines. Also, this recommendation was superseded by an August, 2009 newsletter to the members of the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG), which stated that the 1990 IOM guidelines were "out of date". It also stated that there wasn't enough data to recommend stronger policies for obese pregnant women. I agree because the findings from my clinical trial were not published prior to release of the new IOM's recommendations.
02:22 PM on 02/25/2011
i loved being pregnant. it was probably the healthiest i've ever been in my life. i walked an hour to two hours daily, ate all organic, lots of fruit, bison burgers, salmon, walnuts.. the best food ever! i did not touch fast food or junk food and barely craved sweets at all. i attribute this to eating so healthy. when you eat like that, anything else becomes very unappealing. by my ninth month i had only gained 20lbs. everyone kept telling me i'd have a six pound baby.. as if i was starving myself. by the time i gave birth however, i was retaining a lot of water and weighed around 128. my midwives said i needed the water for labor. anyway , my baby was born a healthy 8lbs and i lost all my weight within a week. but the nursing.. geez.. it has made me so thin! i can't keep up! i stuff myself all day and still am 6lbs beneath my pre pregnancy weight. it seems to me maybe there is a reason women gain 50 lbs.. when you nurse you need that extra fat. i wish i had it, honestly!
07:27 PM on 02/25/2011
I LOVED being pregnant too.....although it was nice that my babies were both born 10 days early (second baby was born in 45 minutes from beginning to end of labor) I felt so healthy and loved breast feeding.
Oh well......I have grandkids to look forward to now.....I hope!
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sabelmouse
my micro bio is emty
11:25 AM on 02/26/2011
my daughter was born within 2 hours, though she was 13 days '' late '' and they were about to drag me of to the hospital to be induced.

i found 2 hours a little fast. no time to adjust.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
KJLSanDiego
12:42 PM on 02/25/2011
I may be wrong, but I heard that it's best not to think in terms of pounds, but in calories.
In the second and third term, I heard that women need about 3 thousand calories a day, if they're active.
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Yvonne Thornton, M.D.
05:59 PM on 02/25/2011
Hi,
3000 calories is too much! The average pregnant woman only needs an extra 100 - 300 calories a day. This translates into a quart of skimmed milk or an extra banana per day. If the pregnant woman is very active then she should be eating in the upper limits of normal, i.e. 300 calories more per day, but definitely NOT 3000 calories. That amount of calories is too much food for the pregnant woman.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
KJLSanDiego
08:40 PM on 02/25/2011
Thanks for the clarification!
There is so much information out there, it's good to talk issues out so we make sure we aren't getting bad information.
08:01 AM on 02/25/2011
I think the typical American system for obstetric care is partly to blaim. The typical care is by an MD who delivers the baby in a hospital. Very little time is given to nutritional counseling because time is money. Patients are scheduled every 15 minutes (if you're lucky). Now, that doesn't mean you will actually see or talk to your doctor for 15 minutes. One OB I know had 60 patients scheduled in a 7-hour period! You do the math. I'm a midwife who does not work in a hospital. I spend 30 minutes to 1 hour during prenatal visits with my patients. Nutritional counseling is discussed at length (among many other things). One lady started care weighing 330 lbs. She lost 15 lbs eating healthy food and had a 9 lb. baby on her due date. Her previous 2 babies were born 4 and 3 wks. early and weighed 6 1/2 to 7 lbs. (with care by an MD at a hospital.) I believe counseling her on nutrition, exercise, and healthy habits led to a better outcome for her baby. So, to just blaim the woman for her typical American lifestyle and using pregnancy as an excuse to be a glutton isn't fair if she hasn't been given the information during prenancy to begin with.
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Yvonne Thornton, M.D.
06:10 PM on 02/25/2011
I totally agree with you. However, the mindset of a pregnant woman is very important. If she has had an eating disorder (and I'm not referring to anorexia) resulting in her obesity, it is virtually impossible to change her lifestyle unless the physician or practitioner makes an exerted effort to explain the negative consequences of her behavior. Most obstetricians do not. Pregnancy is an ideal time for women to rethink their diet. We as physicians have a "captive" audience who wants to do what is best for their unborn child and it would behoove us to take that opportunity to sit down and talk with our patients rather than treating them as cattle on a cattle drive.
07:18 PM on 02/24/2011
I admit....I gained over 100 lbs with my first 6 lb baby and about 65 lbs with my second 8lb 4oz baby.
My doctors never told me to watch my weight. I'm 5'6" and have weighed about 105-110 lbs all my life. I lost all the pregnancy weight within 3 months without dieting.
Both children are healthy.
My mom (5'3" 95 lbs) kept her weight gain at 8-10 lbs for all 3 of her children and bragged how she walked out of the hospital in her pre-pregnancy clothes!
She was also given amphetamines by her doctor the entire pregnancy.
Was that a normal practice back then to give amphetamines to women to prevent weight gain? I wonder if there has been any follow-up as to the health of the babies born then. (40s-50s) Do you know?
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Yvonne Thornton, M.D.
06:07 PM on 02/25/2011
You are very lucky to have lost all of your pregnancy weight. Physicians are not trained to talk about nutrition, which is a pity. You are in the minority of patients who are new mothers. The majority of new moms rarely lose all of their added pregnancy weight after they deliver (unless you are in the public eye as a celebrity). Kudos to you! Yes, some doctors did give their obstetric patients appetite suppressants back then and they also encouraged smoking cigarettes in order to reduce the birthweight. We, as obstetricians, have now come 180 degrees with not bothering to monitor the mom's weight at all, as long as she is gaining, which may be deleterious to some patients' health. To my knowledge, there have been no observational studies to assess the outcome of babies born to mothers who were given appetite suppressants.
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NotEve
Facts are of no use against the irrational
04:48 PM on 02/24/2011
Excellent article, thank you Dr. Thornton. Its unfortunate that in the context of our society's endemic obesity that these issues are not discussed more in the context of pregnancy. Its almost as if sound/definitive medical advice during pregnancy has become taboo and the medical community has shyed away from it for fear of offending expectant mothers.
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Mary Poe
04:11 PM on 02/24/2011
I completely agree with the author's stance in this article. If you want to have a healthy pregnancy, make sure you are at an ideal body weight before conceiving, eat small, frequent meals, and exercise moderately. I feel that obese women should be cautioned to not go hog wild and limit their weight gain during a pregnancy. Also, if you can't physically take care of yourself if you are obese, you should not put added stress on your body by becoming pregnant and risk the health of the fetus. JMHO.
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KJLSanDiego
12:45 PM on 02/25/2011
Sound advice!
A baby can tire a healthy person out!
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ecotopian
I am nerd, hear me geek
02:30 PM on 02/24/2011
No one told me how much I would gain and I still gained 40 lbs. when I was pregnant. I ate well, exercised daily and still gained the weight. I figured my body wanted it for a reason and I didn't try to obsess about it. I did lose most of it.
11:52 AM on 02/24/2011
Really excellent research and advice, unfortunatly I doubt anyone will want to hear it. In the USA pregnancy is an excuse to go hog crazy. It's hard to take stuff away from people when they think that they are entitled to it, no matter how much sense it makes.
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Nicole Dixson
10:27 AM on 02/24/2011
I gained 24 pounds in my pregnancy with my son. I ate a lot, but it was mostly healthy foods. In fact, that is the only period in my life that I can recall where I was super conscious of the type of food and drink I was ingesting. I got to an all time high of 141 pounds.