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Do Mismatches between Pre- and Post-Natal Environments Influence Adult Physiological Functioning?
Authors
A Lucas
A Singhal
+58 more
AK Wills
AR Tate
BL Horta
C Fall
C Langenberg
C. Mary Schooling
CD Byrne
CE Stein
CN Hales
CN Hales
D Canoy
DA Lawlor
DA Lawlor
DA Lawlor
DA Leon
DJ Barker
DJ Barker
DJ Barker
DJ Barker
DJ Barker
DJ Barker
DJ Barker
DJ Gunnell
DW Cockcroft
EM Lewit
F Schiele
GR Singh
HA Kerstjens
IM Schmidt
J Janssens
J Spencer
JG Eriksson
K Puukka
KC Pike
L Orfei
LD Howe
LM Silva
LN Pani
M Benzeval
ME Wadsworth
Michaela Benzeval
MR Law
MS Kramer
P Bateson
P Bateson
R Huxley
RD Lindeman
RJ Glassock
RJ Hancox
RR Huxley
SL White
T Forsen
T Higgins
T Seeman
TJ Cole
Tony Robertson
V Mericq
VA Luyckx
Publication date
1 January 2014
Publisher
'Public Library of Science (PLoS)'
Doi
View
on
PubMed
Abstract
Purpose: Mismatches between pre- and post-natal environments have implications for disease in adulthood. However, less is known about how this mismatch can affect physiological systems more generally, especially at younger ages. We hypothesised that mismatches between pre- and post-natal environments, as measured by the measures of birthweight and adult leg length, would be associated with poorer biomarker levels across five key physiological systems in young adults. Methods: Data were collected from 923, 36 year-old respondents from the West of Scotland Twenty-07 Study. The biomarkers were: systolic blood pressure (sBP); forced expiratory volume (FEV1); glycated haemoglobin (HbA1c); glomerular filtration rate (eGFR); and gamma- glutamyltransferase (GGT). These biomarkers were regressed against pre-natal conditions (birthweight), post-natal conditions (leg length) and the interaction between pre- and post-natal measures. Sex, childhood socioeconomic position and adult lifestyle characteristics were adjusted for as potential effect modifiers and confounders, respectively. Results: There were no associations between birthweight and leg length and sBP, FEV1, HbA1c, or GGT. Higher birthweight and longer leg length were associated with better kidney function (eGFR). However, there was no evidence for mismatches between birthweight and leg length to be associated with worse sBP, FEV1, HbA1c, eGFR or GGT levels (P>0.05). Conclusions: Our hypothesis that early signs of physiological damage would be present in young adults given mismatches in childhood environments, as measured by growth markers, was not proven. This lack of association could be because age 36 is too young to identify significant trends for future health, or the associations simply not being present. © 2014 Robertson, Benzeval
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