Literature DB >> 22493074

Adipose and height growth through childhood and blood pressure status in a large prospective cohort study.

Alexander Jones1, Marietta Charakida, Emanuela Falaschetti, Aroon D Hingorani, Nicholas Finer, Stefano Masi, Ann E Donald, Debbie A Lawlor, George Davey Smith, John E Deanfield.   

Abstract

Raised blood pressure (BP) is the world's leading mortality risk factor. Childhood BP substantially predicts adult levels, and although both prenatal and postnatal growth influence it, their relative importance is debated. In a longitudinal study (Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children) of 12 962 healthy children, we aimed to assess the relative contribution of different growth periods and of standardized measures of height versus weight-for-height (an adiposity marker) to BP at age 10 years. Conditional growth modeling was used in the 3230 boys and 3346 girls with BP measurements. Systolic BP was inversely associated with birth weight and weight-for-height but not length (-0.33, -0.27, and -0.12 mm Hg · SD(-1); P=0.003, 0.035, and 0.35, respectively). In infancy, weight, weight-for-height, and height gains were all positively associated with systolic BP (0.90, 0.41, and 0.82 mm Hg · SD(-1), respectively; all P<0.001). After infancy, all of the growth modalities were positively associated with systolic BP (weight, 1.91; weight-for-height, 1.56; height, 1.20 mm Hg · SD(-1); all P<0.001). Similar but weaker associations were found with diastolic BP. Although BP at 10 years was associated with both prenatal and early postnatal growth, their influence was small compared with that of later growth. Because BP ranking relative to the population is substantially determined in the first decade of life, a focus on strategies to reduce the development of adiposity from infancy onward, rather than an emphasis on the nutrition and weight of mothers and infants, should bring greater reductions in population BP.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22493074      PMCID: PMC3428923          DOI: 10.1161/HYPERTENSIONAHA.111.187716

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Hypertension        ISSN: 0194-911X            Impact factor:   10.190


  21 in total

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3.  Adiposity and cardiovascular risk factors in a large contemporary population of pre-pubertal children.

Authors:  Emanuela Falaschetti; Aroon D Hingorani; Alexander Jones; Marietta Charakida; Nicholas Finer; Peter Whincup; Debbie A Lawlor; George Davey Smith; Naveed Sattar; John E Deanfield
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Review 4.  Tracking of blood pressure from childhood to adulthood: a systematic review and meta-regression analysis.

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9.  Association between general and central adiposity in childhood, and change in these, with cardiovascular risk factors in adolescence: prospective cohort study.

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  35 in total

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2.  Circadian and ultradian cardiovascular rhythmicity in obese children.

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5.  Behavioral Interventions and Cardiovascular Risk in Obese Youth: Current Findings and Future Directions.

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6.  Influences of the neighbourhood food environment on adiposity of low-income preschool-aged children in Los Angeles County: a longitudinal study.

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7.  Early Weight Gain, Linear Growth, and Mid-Childhood Blood Pressure: A Prospective Study in Project Viva.

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8.  Maternal weight gain in different periods of pregnancy and childhood cardio-metabolic outcomes. The Generation R Study.

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