Literature DB >> 14993588

Comparison of linear growth patterns in the first three years of life across two generations in Guatemala.

Aryeh D Stein1, Huiman X Barnhart, Meng Wang, Moshe B Hoshen, Karen Ologoudou, Usha Ramakrishnan, Ruben Grajeda, Manuel Ramirez-Zea, Reynaldo Martorell.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: The secular increase in height is assumed to result from long-term improvements in nutritional intakes and reductions in infectious disease burdens. Nutritional supplementation in early life reduces stunting in chronically undernourished populations. It is not known whether these improvements have an impact on the growth of subsequent generations. Our objective was to estimate the intergenerational effect on offspring length of improved nutrition in the mother's early childhood.
METHODS: We studied 283 mother-child pairs (mothers born 1969-1977; children born 1996-1999). The mothers had received nutritional supplementation--either atole (enhanced protein-energy) or fresco (moderate energy, no protein), with both containing vitamins and minerals--prenatally and up to age 7 y as part of a community trial conducted in 4 villages in Guatemala. Length was measured on repeated occasions to 36 months of age in both mothers and children. Growth was modeled as a fractional polynomial.
RESULTS: Children grew faster than their mothers. Children of mothers who received atole grew faster than children of women who received fresco. In both groups, lengths of individual children were positively correlated with lengths of their own mothers at the same ages. Correlations were generally stronger when the mothers had received atole in early life.
CONCLUSION: We have confirmed a secular trend in growth of children in a developing country setting. The rate of child growth reflects, in part, the growth pattern of the mother, including improvements to that pattern resulting from nutritional supplementation.

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Mesh:

Year:  2004        PMID: 14993588     DOI: 10.1542/peds.113.3.e270

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Pediatrics        ISSN: 0031-4005            Impact factor:   7.124


  17 in total

1.  Growth of functional cranial components in rats submitted to intergenerational undernutrition.

Authors:  María F Cesani; Alicia B Orden; Evelia E Oyhenart; Mariel Zucchi; María C Muñe; Héctor M Pucciarelli
Journal:  J Anat       Date:  2006-08       Impact factor: 2.610

Review 2.  Childhood growth and chronic disease: evidence from countries undergoing the nutrition transition.

Authors:  Aryeh D Stein; Angela M Thompson; Ashley Waters
Journal:  Matern Child Nutr       Date:  2005-07       Impact factor: 3.092

Review 3.  Child health, developmental plasticity, and epigenetic programming.

Authors:  Z Hochberg; R Feil; M Constancia; M Fraga; C Junien; J-C Carel; P Boileau; Y Le Bouc; C L Deal; K Lillycrop; R Scharfmann; A Sheppard; M Skinner; M Szyf; R A Waterland; D J Waxman; E Whitelaw; K Ong; K Albertsson-Wikland
Journal:  Endocr Rev       Date:  2010-10-22       Impact factor: 19.871

Review 4.  Intergenerational programming of metabolic disease: evidence from human populations and experimental animal models.

Authors:  Mary-Elizabeth Patti
Journal:  Cell Mol Life Sci       Date:  2013-02-23       Impact factor: 9.261

5.  The prevalence of stunting is high in HIV-1-exposed uninfected infants in Kenya.

Authors:  Christine J McGrath; Ruth Nduati; Barbra A Richardson; Alan R Kristal; Dorothy Mbori-Ngacha; Carey Farquhar; Grace C John-Stewart
Journal:  J Nutr       Date:  2012-02-29       Impact factor: 4.798

6.  Does low birthweight influence the nutritional status of children at school age? A cohort study in northeast Brazil.

Authors:  Rosemary de Jesus Machado Amorim; Marilia de Carvalho Lima; Pedro Israel Cabral de Lira; Alan Martin Emond
Journal:  Matern Child Nutr       Date:  2010-02-05       Impact factor: 3.092

7.  Comparative effects of vivax malaria, fever and diarrhoea on child growth.

Authors:  Gwenyth Lee; Pablo Yori; Maribel Paredes Olortegui; William Pan; Laura Caulfield; Robert H Gilman; John W Sanders; Hermann Silva Delgado; Margaret Kosek
Journal:  Int J Epidemiol       Date:  2012-01-17       Impact factor: 7.196

8.  Eighty-year trends in infant weight and length growth: the Fels Longitudinal Study.

Authors:  William Johnson; Audrey C Choh; Laura E Soloway; Stefan A Czerwinski; Bradford Towne; Ellen W Demerath
Journal:  J Pediatr       Date:  2011-12-16       Impact factor: 4.406

9.  Height for age increased while body mass index for age remained stable between 1968 and 2007 among Guatemalan children.

Authors:  Aryeh D Stein; Meng Wang; Ann Digirolamo; John Hoddinott; Reynaldo Martorell; Manuel Ramirez-Zea; Kathryn Yount
Journal:  J Nutr       Date:  2008-12-17       Impact factor: 4.798

10.  Developmental plasticity in child growth and maturation.

Authors:  Ze'ev Hochberg
Journal:  Front Endocrinol (Lausanne)       Date:  2011-09-29       Impact factor: 5.555

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