2014, Number 1
<< Back Next >>
Rev Med MD 2014; 5.6 (1)
Nutrimental recommendation during the adulthood for men and women in reproductive age
Martínez-Ramos EB, García-Águila CA, Castro-Juárez JC, Coronel-García R, Duque-Bautista H, Ordaz-Zurita F, Ramírez-García SA
Language: Spanish
References: 35
Page: 42-49
PDF size: 685.71 Kb.
ABSTRACT
The reproductive age as defined in the context of the World Health Organization is the right the couples have to exercise
their sexuality without the fear of an unwanted pregnancy or acquire a disease that affects the growth of the product. It
includes the regulated fertilization through pre-conception attention in order to perform a preventive labor that
culminates with the development of a healthy adult with reproductive capability and allowing the pregnancy, labor
and puerperium to be carried safely and without complications. This has positive results in survival and wellness for
both parents and children. This paper focuses on analyzing the nutrimental recommendations in the woman and man
during the adulthood oriented to guarantee the functional capabilities of gametic cells. For this, we revise the role the
nutrients in the gonads functional phenotype through the analysis of four monogenic models, as well as analyzing the
nutrimental recommendations determinant on reproductive quality such as fatty acids, omega 6 and 9, vitamin C and
E, zinc, selenium, and new alternatives requiring studies like myoinositol and melatonin.
REFERENCES
Willimas-Netter. Manual de Obstetricia y Ginecología en la Salud de la Mujer, 2007 (2da Ed.) México, México: Doyma-Masson.
Haider, Yakoob, A Bhutta. Effect of multiple micronutrient supplementation during pregnancy on maternal and birth outcomes. BMC Public Health 2011;11(Suppl 3):S19.
Farrel, Kosorok, Axova, Hen, Koscik, Runs et al. Nutritional benefits of neonatal screening for cystic fibrosis. Wisconsin Cystic Fibrosis Neonatal Screening Study Group. Engl J Med. 1997; Oct 2; 337(14): 963-9.
Groman JD, Meyer ME, Wilmott RW, Zeitlin PL, Cutting GR. Variant cystic fibrosis phenotypes in the absence of CFTR mutations. N Engl J Med., 2002 Aug 8; 347(6): 401-7.
Pérez-García G, Ramírez-García SA, Flores- Martínez S, Corona-Hernández JL, Raya-Trigueros A, Rodríguez-Lara SQ, Ornelas-Arana ML. Fibrosis Quística; publicado en Texto de Bioquímica. 6ª. Edición en español: México, México; Cuellar Ayala; ISBN: 978-607-00-4120-4. 2011, 44-45.
Elsas LJ, Langley E, Steele J, Evinger J, Fridovich- Keil A, Brown R et al. Galactosemia: A Strategy to Identify New Biochemical Phenotypes and Molecular Genotypes. Am. J. Hum. Genet., 1995; 56: 630-639.
Pérez-García G, Órnelas-Arana ML, Soto-Blanquel MA y González– Pérez G. Texto de Bioquímica. México, México: JYPEE-HIGLIGHTS/Cuellar Ayala. (2011).
Pérez-García G, Ornelas-Arana M y Pérez-Aranda M. Vía de las pentosas y deficiencia de la enzima glucosa 6-fosfato deshidrogenasa (g6pd). Bioquímica Casos Clínicos. Correlación Clínica, Bioquímica y Genética (1ª ed.). México, México: Gráficos de México; 2005.
Agarwal A, Makker K et al. Clinical relevance of oxidative stress in male factor infertility: an update. Am J Reprod Immunol., 2008; 59: 2-11.
10.Saleh RA, Agarwal A, Nelson DR, Nada EA, El- Tonsy M.H, Alvarez JG et al. Increased damage of sperm nuclear DNA in normozoospermic infertile men: a prospective study. Fertil Steril 2002;78:313- 318.
11.Cocuzza M, Suresh C et al. Clinical Relevance of Oxidative Stress and Sperm Chromatin Damage in Male Infertility: An Evidence Based Analysis. International Braz. J. Urol. 2007;33(5):603-621.
12.Órnelas-Arana ML, Pérez-Órnelas C, Ramirez- García SA, Flores-Alvarado LJ, Cerda F, Espejo I et al. Glucogenosis tipo I; publicado en Texto de Bioquímica. 6ª. Edición en español: México, México; Cuellar Ayala. ISBN: 978-607-00-4120-4., 2011; 48-49.
13.López V, Ramirez-Garcia et al. Control metabólico y terapia dietética en severa expresión clínica de la glucosa-6-fosfatasa. Archivos de Ciencia 2012; 4(1): 76.
14.Medycyny Z, Zapobiegawczej I y Warszawa J. Nutrition and fertility. Med Wieku Rozwoj 2011;15(4):431-6.
15.Roth RA. Dieta durante las etapas adultas joven y media. En Nutrición y dietoterapia (9 ed.) New York: Mc Grw Hill; 2009.
16.Pereira-Lancha L, Campos-Ferraz P, Antonio H y Lancha J. Obesity: considerations about etiology, metabolism, and the use of experimental models. Diabetes, Metabolic Syndrome and Obesity: Targets and Therapy 2012; 5: 75-87.
17.Igosheva N, Abramov AY et al. Maternal Diet- Induced Obesity Alters Mitochondrial Activity and Redox Status in Mouse Oocytes and Zygotes. PLoS ONE 2010; 5(4): 107-114.
18.Jancar J. Prader-Willi syndrome (hypotonia, obesity, hypogonadism, growth and mental retardation). J. Ment. Defic. Res. 1971; 15: 20-29.
19.Órnelas-Arana ML, Ramírez-Cuen D, PérezÓrnelas G, Arellano D, Ramirez-Garcia SA y Pérez- García G. Síndrome genético con obesidad: síndrome de Cohen, a propósito de un caso. Archivos de Ciencia 2012; 4(1): 107.
20.Katcher M, Bargman G et. al. Absence of spermatogonia in the Prader-Willi syndrome. Europ. J. Pediat. 1977; 124: 257-260.
21.Filipponi D y Fiel R. Perturbation of genomic imprinting in oligozoospermia. Epigenetics 2009; 4(1): 27-30.
22.Jungheim ES, Macones GA, Odem RR, Patterson BW, Lanzendorf SE, Ratts VS, Moley KH. Associations between free fatty acids, cumulus oocyte complex morphology and ovarian function during in vitro fertilization. Fertil Steril. 2011; May; 95(6):1970-4.
23.Chavarro JE, Furtado J et al. Trans-fatty acid levels in sperm are associated with sperm concentration among men from an infertility clinic. Fertil Steril. 2011; 95(5): 1794-7.
24.Mohammad Reza S y Shiva S. The roles of omega-3 and omega-6 fatty acids in idiopathic male infertility. Asian Journal of Andrology 2012; 14: 514-515.
25.Gharagozloo Aitken. The role of sperm oxidative stress in male infertility and the significance of oral antioxidant therapy. Human Reproduction 2011; 26(7): 1628-1640. 26.Fréderic MV y Wanders RJ. Carnitine biosíntesis. Biochem J. 2002; 361: 417-429.
27.Sinclair S. Male Infertility: Nutritional and Environmental Considerations. Altern Med Rev. 2000; 5(1): 28-38.
28.Ebisch I, Thomas C et al. The importance of folate, zinc and antioxidants in the pathogenesis and prevention of subfertility. Human Reproduction Update 2007; 13(2): 163-174.
29.Robert E. Black. Micronutrients in pregnancy. British Journal of Nutrition 2001; 85: S193S197.
30.Kohrle F, Jakob B y Contempre JE. Selenium, the Thyroid, and the Endocrine System. Endocrine Reviews 2005; 26(7): 944-984.
31.Patrick J, Devine D, Perreault A y Luderer L. Roles of Reactive Oxygen Species and Antioxidants in Ovarian Toxicity. Biology of reproduction 2012; 86(2): 1-10.
32.Hernandez RE, Putzke AP, Myers JP, Margaretha L, Moens CB. Cyp26 enzymes generate the retinoic acid response patter n necessar y for hindbrain development 2007; 134(1):177-87.
33.Margaret C y Knutson D. Vitamin A in Reproduction and Development 2011; Nutrients, 3: 385-428.
34.Ackermans MM, Zhou H et al. Vitamin A and clefting: putative biological mechanisms. Nutr Rev. 2011; 69(10): 613-24.
35.Ramasamy R, Peter J et. al. Medical therapy for spermatogenic failure. Asian Journal of Andrology 2012; 14: 57-60.
36.Carlomagno G, Nordio M et al. Contribution of myo-inositol and melatonin to human reproduction. Eur J Obstet Gynecol Reprod Biol. 2011; 159(2): 267-72.