45 research outputs found
In utero exposure to cigarette smoking, environmental tobacco smoke and reproductive hormones in US girls approaching puberty
BACKGROUND/AIMS: Evidence is unclear whether prenatal smoking affects age at menarche and pubertal development, and its impact upon hormones has not been well studied. We aim to identify potential pathways through which prenatal smoking and environmental tobacco smoke (ETS) affect reproductive hormones in girls approaching puberty.
METHODS: We examined the association between prenatal smoking, current ETS and luteinizing hormone (LH) and inhibin B (InB) in 6- to 11-year-old girls in the 3rd National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey, 1988-1994. Parents/guardians completed interviewer-assisted questionnaires on health and demographics at the time of physical examination. Residual blood samples were analyzed for reproductive hormones in 2008.
RESULTS: Of 660 girls, 19 and 39% were exposed to prenatal smoke and current ETS, respectively. Accounting for multiple pathways in structural equation models, prenatally exposed girls had significantly lower LH (β = -0.205 log-mIU/ml, p < 0.0001) and InB (β = -0.162, log-pg/ml, p < 0.0001). Prenatal smoking also influenced LH positively and InB negatively indirectly through BMI-for-age. ETS was positively associated with LH, but not with InB.
CONCLUSION: Exposure to maternal smoking may disrupt reproductive development manifesting in altered hormone levels near puberty
Prenatal DDT Exposure in Relation to Anthropometric and Pubertal Measures in Adolescent Males
DDT (dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane), a pesticide once used widely in agriculture and now limited to public health use, remains a controversial chemical because of a combination of benefits and risks. DDT or its breakdown products are ubiquitous in the environment and in humans. Compounds in the DDT family have endocrine actions and have been associated with reproductive toxicity. A previous study reported associations between prenatal exposure to p,p′-DDE [1,1-dichloro-2,2-bis(p-chlorophenyl)-ethylene] and increased height and weight in adolescent boys. We examined a group with higher exposures to see whether similar associations would occur. Our study group was 304 males born in Philadelphia in the early 1960s who had participated in a previous study. Anthropometric and pubertal measures from one to six visits during their adolescent years were available, as were stored maternal serum samples from pregnancy. We measured p,p′-DDE, p,p′-DDT [1,1,1-trichloro-2,2-bis(p-chlorophenyl)-ethane], and o,p′-DDT [1,1,1-trichloro-2-(o-chlorophenyl)-2-(p-chlorophenyl)-ethane] in the maternal serum. Outcomes examined in the boys were height, ratio of sitting height to height, body mass index, triceps skinfold thickness, ratio of subscapular to the sum of triceps and subscapular skinfold thicknesses, skeletal age, serum testosterone, and serum dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate. No associations between prenatal exposure to any of the DDT compounds and any outcome measure were seen
Persistent Lipophilic Environmental Chemicals and Endometriosis: The ENDO Study
Background: An equivocal literature exists regarding the relation between persistent organochlorine pollutants (POPs) and endometriosis in women, with differences attributed to methodologies
Dichorionic twin trajectories: the NICHD Fetal Growth Studies
BACKGROUND: Systematic evaluation and estimation of growth trajectories in twins require ultrasound measurements across gestation, performed in controlled clinical settings. Currently there are few such data for contemporary populations. There is also controversy about whether twin fetal growth should be evaluated using the same benchmarks as singleton growth. OBJECTIVES: Our objective was to empirically define the trajectory of fetal growth in dichorionic twins using longitudinal two-dimensional ultrasonography and to compare the fetal growth trajectories for dichorionic twins with those based on a growth standard developed by our group for singletons. STUDY DESIGN: A prospective cohort of 171 women with twin gestations was recruited from eight U.S. sites from 2012 to 2013. After an initial sonogram at 11w0d–13w6d where dichorionicity was confirmed, women were randomized to one of two serial ultrasonology schedules. Growth curves and percentiles were estimated using linear mixed models with cubic splines. Percentiles were compared statistically at each gestational week between the twins and 1,731 singletons, after adjustment for maternal age, race/ethnicity, height, weight, parity, employment, marital status, insurance, income, education and infant sex. Linear mixed models were used to test for overall differences between the twin and singleton trajectories using likelihood ratio tests of interaction terms between spline mean structure terms and twin-singleton indicator variables. Singleton standards were weighted to correspond to the distribution of maternal race in twins. For those ultrasound measurements where there were significant global tests for differences between twins and singletons, we tested for week-specific differences using Wald tests computed at each gestational age. In a separate analysis, we evaluated the degree of reclassification in small for gestational age, defined as below the 10(th) percentile that would be introduced if fetal growth estimation for twins was based upon an unweighted singleton standard. RESULTS: Women underwent a median of 5 ultrasounds. The 50(th) percentile abdominal circumference and estimated fetal weight trajectories of twin fetuses diverged significantly beginning at 32 weeks, while biparietal diameter in twins was smaller from 34 through 36 weeks. There were no differences in head circumference or femur length. The mean head circumference/abdominal circumference ratio was progressively larger for twins compared with singletons beginning at 33 weeks, indicating a comparatively asymmetric growth pattern. At 35 weeks, the average gestational age at delivery for twins, the estimated fetal weights for the 10(th), 50(th) and 90(th) percentiles were 1960, 2376, and 2879 g for dichorionic twins and 2180, 2567, and 3022 g for the singletons. At 32 weeks, the initial week when the mean estimated fetal weight for twins was smaller than that of singletons, 34% of twins would be classified as small for gestational age using a singleton, non-Hispanic white standard. By 35 weeks, 38% of twins would be classified as small for gestational age. CONCLUSIONS: The comparatively asymmetric growth pattern in twin gestations, initially evident at 32 weeks, is consistent with the concept that the intrauterine environment becomes constrained in its ability to sustain growth in twin fetuses. Near term, nearly 40% of twins would be classified as small for gestational age based on a singleton growth standard
Maternal stress and neonatal anthropometry: the NICHD Fetal Growth Studies
BackgroundThe effect of maternal mood disorders on neonatal measurements is not well-defined. The Fetal Growth Studies-Singletons provide a unique opportunity to evaluate the relationship between perceived maternal stress and neonatal growth measurements.ObjectiveThe purpose of this study was to determine whether perceived maternal stress during pregnancy is associated with anthropometric measurements in the neonate.Study designThis analysis was based on a prospective, multicenter longitudinal study of fetal growth. Women 18-40 years old with a body mass index of 19.0-29.9 kg/m2 were screened at 8+0 to 13+6 weeks gestation for low-risk status associated with optimal fetal growth (eg, healthy, nonsmoking) and underwent serial sonographic examination at 6 study visits throughout gestation. At each study visit, women completed the Cohen's Perceived Stress Survey, which could have a score that ranges from 0-40. We used a latent class trajectory model to identify distinct groupings (ie, classes) of the Perceived Stress Survey trajectories over pregnancy. Trend analysis was used to determine whether neonatal measurements including birthweight, length, head circumference, and abdominal circumference differed by Perceived Stress Survey class and whether this relationship was modified by maternal race/ethnicity, after adjustment for gestational age at delivery, maternal height, age, and parity.ResultsOf the 2334 women enrolled in the study, 1948 women had complete neonatal anthropometry and were included in the analysis. Latent class analysis identified 3 Perceived Stress Survey trajectory classes, with mean Perceived Stress Survey scores of 2.82 (low), 7.95 (medium), and 14.80 (high). Neonatal anthropometric measures of birthweight, length, head circumference and abdominal circumference were similar (P=.78, =.10, =.18, and =.40 respectively), regardless of the participants' Perceived Stress Survey class. There was no effect modification by maternal race/ethnicity.ConclusionNeonatal measurements did not differ by levels of perceived stress among low-risk pregnant women
Fat Patterning, Overweight, and Adrenal Androgen Interactions in Black Adolescent Females
This study demonstrates that interactions between an adrenal androgen, dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate (DHEAS), and increased adiposity predict a centripetal fat pattern in skeletally mature Black females. In skeletally immature females, adiposity alone best accounts for variation in the centripetal fat ratio (CFR). Three groups of Black adolescent females are compared: (1) 91 skeletally immature females, aged 12.0-15.0 years, (2) 26 skeletally mature females (skeletal age \u3e 15.5), also aged 12.0-15.0 years, and (3) 51 older skeletally mature females, aged 15.1-17.5 years. In skeletally immature females the major predictor of centripetal fat is the body mass index (BMI), a measure of adiposity, and this relationship between increased BMI and CFR is particularly significant (p\u3c.05) in overweight girls (BMI \u3e 22.0). In the skeletally mature females, centripetal fat is best predicted by serum DHEAS or a function of BMI and DHEAS, especially in the overweight (BMI \u3e 24-0), mature females. For the overweight, skeletally advanced girls (aged 12.0-15.0. skeletal age \u3e 15.5), the interaction between BMI and serum DHEAS accounted for 54% of the variance (p\u3c.05) in CFR; for the older overweight females, this interaction accounted for 45% of the variance (p\u3c.05). Our findings suggest that androgens of adrenal origin are related to “android” patterns of subcutaneous fat deposition in mature females, as well as amount of body fat and timing of gonadal maturation, and may implicate abnormalities of adrenal androgen secretion in the pathogenesis of Type II diabetes, hypertension, and other chronic diseases, which are associated with a centripetal fat distribution in obese adult females
Nausea and Vomiting during Teenage Pregnancy: Effects on Birth Weight
Early pregnancy nausea and vomiting (NVP) has been reported to be a favorable risk factor for pregnancy outcome. We studied nausea and vomiting in 239 randomly selected teens from a geographic-based cohort of nearly 2800 pregnant adolescents from Camden County, New Jersey. Early (first trimester) NVP was reported by 20.9%, and an additional 17.6% reported that their NVP persisted into the second or third trimester (late NVP). After adjusting for confounding factors (length of gestation, maternal age, ethnicity, prepregnant body mass index, weight gain, and smoking), we found that early NVP alone did not significantly effect birth weight. Late NVP, however, was associated with a significant decrement in birth weight (−256.5 ± 108.0 g, p \u3c 0.05). Further, the effect of late NVP was greater when maternal weight gain was inadequate. Teenagers with continued NVP are more likely to be nutritionally stressed during the course of their pregnancy
Adrenal Androgens, Body Fat and Advanced Skeletal Age in Puberty: New Evidence for the Relations of Adrenarche and Gonadarche in Males
This paper demonstrates that serum levels of the adrenal androgen, dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate (DHEAS), are significantly associated (p \u3c .03) with levels of fatness in males during early, middle and late adolescence. Relatively high levels of DHEAS are also associated with advanced skeletal age (SA), independent of the association of SA and levels of testosterone. This evidence supports our hypothesis that increased fatness prepubertally may potentiate increased levels of adrenal androgens and precipitate earlier sexual maturation. This interaction between body fat and adrenal androgen levels after adrenarche may account for the recent secular trend toward earlier sexual maturation