Skip to content
General News, Medical Health Aged Care

Shift work may cause out of sync breastmilk hormones

La Trobe University 3 mins read

The bond between a mother and infant may be stronger than first thought, a La Trobe University study has found.

Researchers have provided evidence that maternal circadian disruption, from mothers returning to shift work, may have an impact on the timing of their breast milk hormone.

“We observed a change in melatonin in participants’ breast milk, with a significant decrease in mothers who worked multiple night shifts in a row compared to non-workdays, suggesting a shift in circadian timing of the breast milk hormones due to shift work schedules,” lead researcher, Dr Lauren Booker said.

Breast milk clearly exhibits a 24-hour pattern, with melatonin concentrations high during the evening and night (starting about 9pm and peaking between 2 and 3am) but are barely detectable in daytime milk.

Infants are not born with an established circadian rhythm; it develops after three to four months. As a result, the different timed breast milk hormones may impact their sleep.

“If hormone signals in breast milk do indeed help calibrate infant circadian biology, infants that drink breast milk with hormones out of sync may experience difficulties with sleep, digestion and development, potentially having a dramatic effect on an infants’ growth and long-term health,” Dr Booker said.

“Our previous research has shown that infants who are fed ‘mistimed’ expressed breast milk, that is milk expressed during the day and given at nighttime and vice versa, had significantly delayed sleep onset compared to infants who were directly breastfed and slept more during the day. This is the nutritional equivalent of switching the lights on right before bedtime, which could result in feelings associated with jetlag.”

These serious health implications prompted the research team to further unpack mistimed melatonin in breast milk on infants’ sleep, believed to be a first in Australia.

Katrina, a paramedic at Ambulance Victoria and casual nurse from Geelong, was among 11 mothers and shift workers across Victoria and Queensland who participated in the study, between September and December 2022.

Participants were required to collect saliva and breast milk samples at four times per day across five consecutive days. They were also asked to keep a daily log of when they collected each sample as well as when they went to sleep, woke up and worked.

“I’m passionate about breastfeeding and the benefits it provides for babies and children, but I had never considered that my shift work may be contributing to changed hormones in my breast milk,” Katrina said.

“If there’s potential for proven detriments to hormone levels in breast milk that may then affect your baby, I felt it was important to investigate.”

At the time of the study, Katrina was a full-time paramedic and her daughter Maddie was 15 months old. Katrina’s roster was two 10-hour day shifts, followed by two 14-hour night shifts and then four days off.

“As a paramedic - it’s difficult to predict when you’ll be out on a case or not, so I pumped in all sorts of strange places. I was pumping at work, whether that was day or night, and then feeding my daughter at other times,” Katrina said.

“If I had considered the potential impacts, I might have paid more attention to when I expressed the milk. But, at the time, I was just pumping and putting the milk in the fridge, and I wouldn’t have known if it was morning or nighttime milk.”

Katrina said if she had known about preliminary evidence of hormone changes in breast milk, she may have timestamped her breast milk.

“I’d probably label it a bit better … because nobody wants to be promoting sleep or alertness to their baby at the wrong time of day,” Katrina said.

Dr Booker said the research is particularly important as more mothers are returning to work early.

“Largely comprising of females, healthcare shift workers make up a large proportion of Australia’s shift workforce and the need for flexible hours will continue to expand as society moves to a 24-seven economy,” Dr Booker said.

“This study is an important first step in exploring the impact of maternal circadian misalignment disorders in breastmilk hormones and provides preliminary evidence that future research is needed in this area.

“It was an interesting study and just proved our hunch that it’s a plausible theory.”

The study, Maternal circadian disruption from shift work and the impact on the concentration of melatonin in breast milk, can be read here.

Media Contact

Jess Whitty - 0481 383 817, j.whitty@latrobe.edu.au

media@latrobe.edu.au 

More from this category

  • Energy, General News
  • 15/01/2025
  • 05:00
RACV

RACV LAUCHES VIRTUAL POWER PLANT PRODUCT

RACV is pleased to offer Virtual Power Plants (VPPs) as a new product for business customers following its successful installation of one of Australia’s…

  • Contains:
  • General News
  • 14/01/2025
  • 23:11
EnviroGold Global Limited

EnviroGold Global Engages Canadian Investor Relations Firm Investor Cubed (I³)

TORONTO, Jan. 14, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- EnviroGold Global Limited ("EnviroGold" or the "Company"), (CSE: NVRO | OTCQB: ESGLF | FSE: YGK) a technology company enabling the global mining industry to monetize valuable metals contained in mine waste and tailings, reduce environmental liabilities, and improve social and environmental outcomes, is pleased to announce that it has entered into an investor relations agreement dated January 13, 2025 (the “IR Agreement”), with Investor Cubed Inc. (“Investor Cubed”) to provide investor relations and shareholder communications services in Canada.The IR Agreement is for a term of 12 months, but may be terminated by either…

  • General News
  • 14/01/2025
  • 20:11
Digital Science

Samsung Takes Top Spot in U.S. Patents for Third Year Running while TSMC Rises into Second Place; After Four-Year Falloff, Grants Increase Nearly 4%

2024 Rankings Showcase Acceleration of R&D Pursuits: Waste Mitigation Inventions Flourished Last Year. Creating Non-Traditional Protein and Manipulating RNA Viruses Also Appear on the Top 10 Fastest Growing Technologies, According to Annual Patent Study by IFI CLAIMSNEW HAVEN, Conn., Jan. 14, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- After four years of decline, U.S. patent grants headed upward, rising 3.8 percent from calendar year 2023 to 324,043 and Samsung retained the top spot for the third year in a row, according to IFI CLAIMS Patent Services, the world’s most trusted patent data source.IFI CLAIMS Patent Services is a Digital Science company that compiles and tracks…

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.