Is it safe to have a calorie deficit whilst pregnant?
bumblebeez86
Posts: 208 Member
Ok before I start I am not pregnant however we are trying to get pregnant. I am doing well so far on here and if I got pregnant I would like to try and not revert back to my old ways and not put on excessive weight. Obviously the child's health and well being are far more important than my goals and I would get medical advice about this but i just thought i would ask everyone's opinion on this subject....
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Replies
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This is touchy. Consult a doctor, not a bunch of *kitten* on the internet.0
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I will do when the time comes0
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No.
When you are pregnant, you should be eating at maintenance for you and then an extra few hundreds calories for the baby.
Talk to your doctor about it though.0 -
Thanks - I will get medical advice - I know people overestimate how much more you should eat whilst pregnant - but your suggestion sounds sensible/logical0
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According to my GP you only need a couple of extra calories in the third trimester. Otherwise eating at maintenance while pregnant seems a good idea.
I presume you already know what to avoid, and to take folic acid :-) If you're trying, it's a good idea to take the folic acid now.0 -
Eep, didn't mean to post again.0
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According to my GP you only need a couple of extra calories in the third trimester. Otherwise eating at maintenance while pregnant seems a good idea.
I presume you already know what to avoid, and to take folic acid :-) If you're trying, it's a good idea to take the folic acid now.
great advice thanks0 -
It also depends on your current bodyweight. Being overweight can cause complications during pregnancy or at least make you more susceptible to them.
Your doctor should be able to provide better guidance when the time comes.0 -
With both of my pregancies I actually lost 20 lbs being I was aware of eatting yummy healthy food for my babies to grow. I usually just make sure I ate great food and then did not even watch the calories. More carbs in the beginning and then more protien in the end. I think what you are eating is more key then the calories.0
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NOOOOOOOOOOOOO just eat healthy foods until you are full.0
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When I was pregnant, I was sick the entire time and either threw up or couldn't eat at all. I logged a few days and only got 1000 calories or, on a good day,1500. I asked my OB if this was OK and she said that I should try to eat more, but as long as I was taking my multivitamins, it wasn't horrible horrible. I ended up losing 3 lb instead of gaining anything during pregnancy and lost 20 lb upon leaving the hospital. My doctor was never concerned at any point about my weight or nutrition. I am required by social rules and regulations, though, to tell you to consult your own physician. :P
ETA: My calorie goal during pregnancy was about 2300, BTW.0 -
Really do need to start eating a bit healthier so far i have just been making sure (trying to) be under calories - i think a good plan of maintenence full of healthy foods is the way to go + i might just have to go and get some folic acid tomorrow too0
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and such a gorgeous baby too...0
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FWIW, when I was pregnant, I always just listened to my body. I ate when I was hungry, and didn't when I wasn't, and tried hard to get a good variety of nutrients in. That said, I have wicked morning sickness, starting the moment implantation occurs, so with my successful pregnancies, I ate very little in the first tri because it all came back up - in that situation, you eat whatever appeals and stays down. After that ended, I just did my best to eat well nutritionally speaking and not indulge in pregnancy as an excuse for crap.
I lost weight with both successful pregnancies - I had stabilized (no loss for 2 weeks) when my son was born prematurely, and I stalled out on loss around 24 weeks with my daughter and then gained about 10 lbs during the rest of the pregnancy, so that I was at a 17 lb deficit to my starting weight. My doctor were unconcerned because I was morbidly obese going into the pregnancies and I was monitored 18 ways to Sunday because I'm extremely high risk (unrelated to my weight - I have incompetent cervix and require a cerclage and near bed-rest to make it to term).
What you will want to do is talk to your doctor when you conceive and find one who supports logical weight gains based on good nutrition and not based on a stupid chart. What you will want to do is make healthful, responsible choices the same way you are (presumably) currently doing.0 -
great reply 'easjer' - to be honest i dont really know what to expect - have been trying for a year so a trip to the doctors is due i think just to get some info/advice.0
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Really do need to start eating a bit healthier so far i have just been making sure (trying to) be under calories - i think a good plan of maintenence full of healthy foods is the way to go + i might just have to go and get some folic acid tomorrow too
Folic acid is exceptionally important - please start taking it now! You'll hit your minimum if you are taking a multi-vitamin. Be careful of taking it as a separate supplement - you want a complimentary balance of B-vitamins. And thanks for the reminder - I need to start up my b-cocktail (otherwise known as Folgaard) again in case we decide we are going to ttc this summer after all. I've been slacking, but I don't process folic acid correctly/efficiently and need a good reserve built up.0 -
It is not safe to continue dieting once you know you are pregnant. The only exception to that is if you are morbidly obese. While pregnant a woman in a normal weight range should gain 25-35lbs, through the pregnancy. As far as how many calories above maintenance you need, it only 300. My doctors told me a safe calorie range for me would be 2000. But I stopped tracking a few months in and just ate... Some days I was hungrier, some days I didn't feel like eating at all.
~ Lost 20lbs before getting pregnant,... currently holding a 2 week old.
also, make sure you are taking a women's prenatal. the sooner you start it the better. And its best to be taking it before you are pregnant.0 -
great reply 'easjer' - to be honest i dont really know what to expect - have been trying for a year so a trip to the doctors is due i think just to get some info/advice.
Are you actively trying to time sex to fertile days? Do you use opk's or chart at all? I hate to call it a hobby, but I'm pretty good with this area due to all the difficulties we faced, and am happy to give advice if you like. If you don't chart or use any opt's I would highly recommend doing so while you get your doctor's appointment, so you can begin to get a sense of what is going on (forgive me if you are already on top of this) - so many women in the US are very poorly educated about how the menstrual cycle works and how to best time sex to achieve pregnancy and so end up wasting months of trying or money on testing when the issue is just poor timing.
It's great that you are losing weight though - that can only help things with ttc and with pregnancy. I'm very hopeful this weight loss (which has helped regulate my cycle back to a normal length and ovulation timeframe) will help me with the next pregnancy.0 -
Sorry the dog keeps on leaning on the laptop
All advice is appreciated - dont really know much about getting pregnant in terms of ovulation etc - always been trying to avoid pregnancy before. Stopped the pill last March but not actively trying but feel like we should try a bit more now
currently 5'4'' and 137lb so i think i am in the upper end of healthy range or just slightly over now0 -
Sorry the dog keeps on leaning on the laptop
All advice is appreciated - dont really know much about getting pregnant in terms of ovulation etc - always been trying to avoid pregnancy before. Stopped the pill last March but not actively trying but feel like we should try a bit more now
currently 5'4'' and 137lb so i think i am in the upper end of healthy range or just slightly over now
Here is where I would start: www.fertilityfriend.com
Take their free online charting course. It's going to explain how to chart and the benefits of charting (which I will sum up as learning your body's natural fertility signs to help you time sex near ovulation and to help you find out whether or not you are ovulating at all). I would start practicing charting immediately and really get into it with your next cycle (unless you've just started a new cycle). Some people feel like it's obsessive, but I charted for years before ttc (to avoid pregnancy - I'm very limited as to birth control options) and throughout the 4 years of ttc. I'm getting back to charting temps this summer if we start ttc again. Until then, I just chart cervical fluid and opk's.
Charting can tell you if you have normal cycles, can tell you whether or not you are probably ovulating (only blood tests and hormone levels can tell you for 100% certain), when ovulation has occurred and when you are most fertile. It can also tell you whether or not your luteal phase is long enough (if it's short - which is a hormonal issue - you may not have time for implantation to occur). This is all really useful information when you approach your doctor about not having conceived in a normal time-frame.
Coming off hormonal birth control can screw up your cycles for months, unfortunately, though that is not universally true. The most common reason couples don't get pregnant within a year is because they aren't timing sex correctly. If you are having frequent/well-timed sex and are ovulating, then you definitely want to get checked out by the doc. Charting can help you figure out if both of those things are true, kwim?
Something you can do independently of or in addition to charting that can also help is to use ovulation predictor tests. Back in the day, I loved Clearblue's digital opk's. Really easy to use. They are pricey though! I used to get them on eBay for much less, but last I looked, they weren't much cheaper. You can get bulk tests inexpensively on Amazon that are just as accurate (but can be a learning curve to read correctly). OPT's track the hormone LH (luteinzing hormone), which spikes dramatically just before ovulation (it is what triggers ovulation to occur, actually. Estrogen preps/grows the ovum and when estrogen hits a certain point, it triggers the increase in LH and the increase in LH triggers ovulation, which triggers the increase in progesterone and aren't synchronized hormones lovely?). Anyway, the tests are looking for a threshold amount of LH, and when you get a positive test, ovulation is imminent so you want to have sex if you can. The one thing that OPT's don't do is confirm that ovulation actually occurs - it's rare to have a spike and no ovulation, but it does happen.
There are other things too, but those are the cheap, easy way to get started tracking your fertility and can really help down the road with regard to testing and doctors.
It sounds like you are going to be entering pregnancy in a pretty healthy state, which is ideal!1 -
Disclaimer - follow your doctors orders - this is just my opinion - worth as much as internet opinions cost. At your size, I would not eat at deficit. You do not have that much weight to lose. It makes no sense to me to try and diet and lose weight while pregnant. You are growing a human being in there and it is time limited. Eat at maintenance (and a couple hundred more if you are hungry) and expect to gain a little bit of weight.
I gained a lot more weight than needed in my pregnancies and lost it all except the last time. The last time I discovered it was twins and the weight gain was intentional because at that time the things I read showed a correlation between what and how much you ate and the chances of full term healthy weight twins. No idea if that still holds true or if it made any difference in my case but either way - I don't regret a pound of it.0 -
Thanks everyone0
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The midwives in the UK advise a healthly well balanced diet that isn't kcal resitrictive (I've just come out the other side of a twin pregnancy) the guidelines I followed after a little research was to listen to my body when it came to working out and worked out what my maintenance kcals and stuck to that the whole way through my twin pregnancy until the last few weeks (which fell over Christmas) and then I just went kcal happy LOL0
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unless you're already so obese that a midwife or doctor tells you that you should eat at a deficit, then you shouldn't eat at a deficit while pregnant.
Your baby needs food. It's not like breastfeeding where you can tell if you're producing enough milk or not, if your baby's not getting enough food, you won't know.0 -
This is touchy. Consult a doctor, not a bunch of *kitten* on the internet.
^^^THIS^^^ (except for maybe the a-hole part)
This is a serious medical question - both for the safety and well-being of you and your baby.
The last thing you want is to listen to the advice of some "e-doc" on this site, only to lose your baby and then to wonder whether it was because of poor nutritional choices you made based on some teenager's advice in this thread.
Any response in this thread other than "you need to speak to your doctor" should be ignored.
That said, speak to your doctor.0 -
You do not need any extra calories in the first 2 trimesters. I believe I remember you only need about 100 extra calories in the 3rd trimester. But yeah consult your doc! xxx0
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Eat healthy foods. Take multivitamins.0
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In 1969, when pregnant for out daughter my doctor told me that as long as I ate a healthy normal diet I could continue to lose weight while pregnant.. We have to remember that if we are very overweight that a lot of the things we have been eating is not really healthy for us or a baby. Daughter was the easiest birth I had and she was by far the easiest baby to care for of the three I had. In the end I gained a total of 6 pounds and that was all the last 20 days over Christmas and New Years. But as said by many consult with your doctor0
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According to my GP you only need a couple of extra calories in the third trimester. Otherwise eating at maintenance while pregnant seems a good idea.
I presume you already know what to avoid, and to take folic acid :-) If you're trying, it's a good idea to take the folic acid now.
great advice thanks
This is the advice your GP will give you. They will also emphasise that this is why it's important you become a healthy weight before becoming pregnant.
Taking folic acid will help prevent neural tube defects also during preconception.
Abstaining from alcohol and becoming a healthy weight will both lead to a healthier baby and improve fertility.0 -
Not actually pregnant yet but wanted some opinions - of course I will take the advice from the doctor - however have been given some good advice here too - so thanks guys :flowerforyou:0
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