29 research outputs found

    Man. second ed. By Richard J. Harrison and William Montagna. viii + 458 pp., figures, tables, bibliography, index. Prentice-Hall, Englewood Cliffs, N.J. $5.25 (paper)

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    No Abstract.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/37564/1/1330440317_ftp.pd

    Origins of differences in hemoglobin concentration between Himalayan and Andean populations

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    Mean hemoglobin concentration of 3511 adult males derived from 19 studies of Andean male permanent residents and 10 studies of Himalayan male permanent residents were compared with reference to partial pressure of inspired oxygen. The regression equation (weighted for sample size) of PO2 and hemoglobin concentration of the Andean miners is significantly (P O2 and Hb is similar in the non-mining Andean and Himalayan samples. These findings suggest that the observed differences in hemoglobin concentration between Andean and Himalayan samples are due, in part, to the inclusion of miners in the Andean samples. The higher barometric pressure associated with the north latitude location of the Himalayans may also contribute to decrease the hypoxic stress in the Himalayas. The present data suggest that Andeans and Himalayans have a similar hemopoetic response to hypoxic stress.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/27340/1/0000365.pd

    Heritability and components of phenotypic expression in skin reflectance of Mestizos from the Peruvian Lowlands

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    Skin reflectance was measured on the inner upper arm and forehead of a sample of 209 Mestizos ranging in age from 2 to 64 years living in the town of Lamas in the Eastern Peruvian Lowlands. The sample consisted of 43 father-son, 42 father-daughter, 62 mother-son, and 70 mother-daughter pairs. The sample also consisted of 57 brother-brother, 60 sister-sister and 139 brother-sister pairs. The reflectance measurements were made with a Photovolt Reflection Meter, model 670. Stepwise polynomial regression techniques were used to derive standardized residual values. Then using these residual values parent-offspring, sibling intraclass correlations and components of the phenotypic expression of skin reflectance were calculated. The study indicates that 1) the parent-offspring and sibling correlation coefficients conformed with the theoretical correlations expected assuming polygenic inheritance; 2) the husband-wife correlations indicate a high degree of assortative mating for skin color, but despite this effect the parent-offspring and sibling correlation coefficients are lower than the values expected under the influence of autosomal genes; 3) estimates of heritability and components of phenotypic expression indicate that about 55% of the total variability in skin reflectance could be attributed to the influence of additive genetic factors; and 4) there is no evidence of X-linkage in the inheritance of skin color.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/37604/1/1330550207_ftp.pd

    Influence of maternal nutritional status on prenatal growth in a Peruvian urban population

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    Anthropometric measurements were made on 4,952 mothers and their neonates from a Peruvian urban population. Based on age-specific percentiles, the mothers were separated into categories of short and tall stature, high and low fat, and high and low muscle. The study indicates that: (1) tall and short mothers characterized by similar subcutaneous fat and upper arm muscle area (whether high or low) had newborns with similar birth weight and recumbent length; (2) mothers characterized by high subcutaneous fat had heavier and fatter, but not longer, newborns than mothers with low subcutaneous fat; (3) mothers characterized by high upper arm muscle area had heavier, leaner and longer newborns than mothers with low upper arm muscle area; (4) mothers characterized by high muscle and high fat had heavier and longer newborns than mothers with high muscle and low fat; but (5) mothers characterized by high muscle and low fat had heavier and longer newborns than mothers with low muscle and high fat. Considering that subcutaneous fat and arm muscle area reflect calorie and protein reserves respectively, it is concluded that an increase in maternal calorie reserves results in increased infant fatness, but a lesser increase in linear growth. In contrast, an increase in maternal protein reserves does enhance both birth weight and prenatal linear growth.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/37573/1/1330460207_ftp.pd

    Small for gestational age associated with short stature during adolescence

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    This study examined the relationship between intrauterine growth retardation and adolescent stature in a sample of 1510 White subjects (754 males and 756 females) who were evaluated at birth and at the ages of 15, 16, and 17 years. The subjects were classified into two groups based on birthweight, small for gestational age (SGA) and appropriate for gestational age (AGA), corresponding respectively to values below the 10th, and between the 11th and 99th, percentiles of gestational age and sex. Results showed that boys and girls born prematurely (gestational age 37 weeks of gestation). In contrast, those born SGA were significantly shorter than their counterparts born AGA. The average reduction in stature was 4.9 cm for males and 2.9 cm for females. When the analysis included adjustments for parental stature (and adolescent's age at menarche for females), the average reduction in stature equaled about 3.5 cm for males and 2.0 cm for females. It is thus concluded that the stature deficit reflects a reduction in growth rate rather than delay in maturation. © 1994 Wiley-Liss, Inc.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/38559/1/1310060305_ftp.pd

    Relationship of skinfolds and muscle size to growth of children. I. Costa Rica

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    The relationships between triceps skinfolds and stature and between upper arm muscle size and stature were studied on 874 pairs matched for age derived from a cross-sectional sample of 2,445 Costa Rican rural subjects, aged 0 to 20 years. The results indicate that fatter children for their age, on the average, are not taller than their leaner counterparts. On the other hand, more muscular children, on the average, are taller than their less muscular counterparts of the same age.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/37511/1/1330350110_ftp.pd

    Adaptive significance of small body size under poor socio-economic conditions in southern Peru

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    The relationship of variations in parental body size to offspring survival has been studied in a population of poor socio-economic conditions (“Barriada”) in the southern highland of Peru. Parents of small body size, especially mothers, had significantly greater per cent offspring survival than parents with larger body size. In other words, the offspring survival effectiveness of subjects of small body size was greater than that of subjects of large body size. It is postulated that the greater offspring survival effectiveness associated with small parental body size may reflect possible adaptive responses to poor socio-economic conditions.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/37538/1/1330390216_ftp.pd

    Behavioral, Environmental, Metabolic and Intergenerational Components of Early Life Undernutrition Leading to Later Obesity in Developing Nations and in Minority Groups in the USA

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    Nutritional transition, urbanization, and physical inactivity are primary factors responsible for the worldwide epidemic of overweight/obesity (OW/OB). However, these factors fail to explain the epidemic of OW/OB in developing countries and in recent-migrants to developed countries. Among these, OW/OB is associated with short/stunted stature and coexists with undernutrition at much higher rates than is statistically expected. Changes in metabolic pathways toward reduced fat oxidation and increased metabolism of carbohydrate may explain, in part, this phenomenon. Also, intergenerational consequences of malnutrition and poor health of the mothers may lead to impaired phenotypes in their offspring. We propose a novel methodology to assess the history of early life malnutrition by assessing the sitting height ratio of the mothers. The degree of »short leggedness« reflects undernutrition when the mother was an infant/child. Collectively, behavioral, environmental, metabolic and intergenerational components of early life undernutrition may provide a more satisfactory explanation for later life obesity

    Neandertals and modern humans in Western Asia.

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    Edited by Takeru Akazawa, Kenichi Aoki, and Ofer Bar-Yosef. 1998. New York: Plenum Press. 552 pp. ISBN 0-306-45924-8. $79.50 (cloth).Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/34265/1/10_ftp.pd

    Role of genetic and environmental factors in the increased blood pressures of Bolivian blacks

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    The tendency toward hypertension or higher blood pressure is more common in blacks than whites. The factors that account for these differences are attributed to both environmental and genetic factors. To clarify this issue, an anthropological study of black and nonblack populations in the lowland village of Chicaloma, northeastern Bolivia at a midaltitude of 1,800 m was conducted. The study included 159 subjects, of which 79 were black and 80 were nonblack, 17–78 years. The study suggests the following: (1) the socioeconomic status of blacks as measured by an ownership index is greater than that of nonblacks, (2) blacks had higher average systolic and diastolic blood pressures than nonblacks and showed an age-associated increase in blood pressures, (3) the prevalence of hypertension was higher for blacks (7–6%) than nonblacks (1.3%), but three times lower than among blacks in the United States, (4) skin reflectance is inversely related to blood pressures so that contrary to what has been suggested the darker the skin color, the higher the blood pressures even at comparable levels of affluence. These findings together suggest that genetic factors predispose black individuals to increased blood pressures, but the expression of clinical hypertension is influenced by adverse unaccounted environmental factors. Am. J. Hum. Biol. 11:489–498, 1999. © 1999 Wiley-Liss, Inc.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/35096/1/8_ftp.pd
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