| Literature DB >> 24740086 |
Katharine C Pike1, Shelley A Davis2, Samuel A Collins3, Jane S A Lucas4, Hazel M Inskip5, Susan J Wilson6, Elin R Thomas3, Harris A Wain3, Piia H M Keskiväli-Bond3, Cyrus Cooper7, Keith M Godfrey7, Christopher Torrens3, Graham Roberts8, John W Holloway2.
Abstract
Chronic cardiorespiratory disease is associated with low birthweight suggesting the importance of the developmental environment. Prenatal factors affecting fetal growth are believed important, but the underlying mechanisms are unknown. The influence of developmental programming on bronchial hyperreactivity is investigated in an animal model and evidence for comparable associations is sought in humans. Pregnant Wistar rats were fed either control or protein-restricted diets throughout pregnancy. Bronchoconstrictor responses were recorded from offspring bronchial segments. Morphometric analysis of paraffin-embedded lung sections was conducted. In a human mother-child cohort ultrasound measurements of fetal growth were related to bronchial hyperreactivity, measured at age six years using methacholine. Protein-restricted rats' offspring demonstrated greater bronchoconstriction than controls. Airway structure was not altered. Children with lesser abdominal circumference growth during 11-19 weeks' gestation had greater bronchial hyperreactivity than those with more rapid abdominal growth. Imbalanced maternal nutrition during pregnancy results in offspring bronchial hyperreactivity. Prenatal environmental influences might play a comparable role in humans.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24740086 PMCID: PMC3989559 DOI: 10.1038/srep04705
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Cumulative addition of (A) CCh or (B) the thromboxane mimetic U46619 to isolated bronchi from 35 day old male offspring from C (o, n = 6) or PR (•, n = 5) dams.
Figure 2Cumulative addition of (A) CCh or (B) U46619 to isolated bronchi from 75 day old male offspring from C (o, n = 6) or PR (•, n = 4) dams.
*** indicates p < 0.001% max response C vs. PR.
Figure 3Comparison of airway wall histology in offspring of control and protein restricted mothers.
Figure 4Volume factionation of lung components as percentage of entire lung for both PR and C groups at 225 days of age (C = 6, PR = 6).
Linear regression for fetal and infant growth variables and BHR
| Unadjusted analysis | Adjusted analysis | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Beta | 95% CI | P-value | n | Beta | 95% CI | P-value | n | |
| Birthweight | −0.040 | −0.400 to 0.319 | 0.83 | 225 | −0.051 | −0.408 to 0.307 | 0.78 | 224 |
| Head circumference at birth | −0.001 | −0.362 to 0.359 | 0.99 | 225 | −0.017 | −0.376 to 0.341 | 0.92 | 224 |
| Abdominal circumference at birth | 0.108 | −0.261 to 0.478 | 0.56 | 225 | 0.134 | −0.239 to 0.506 | 0.48 | 221 |
| Head circumference growth between 11 and 19 weeks' gestation | −0.152 | −0.678 to 0.374 | 0.57 | 114 | −0.224 | −0.726 to 0.279 | 0.38 | 113 |
| Abdominal circumference growth between 11 and 19 weeks' gestation | 0.490 | −0.138 to 1.119 | 0.13 | 110 | 0.643 | 0.038 to 1.247 | 109 | |
| Head circumference growth between 19 and 34 weeks' gestation | −0.066 | −0.410 to 0.278 | 0.71 | 216 | −0.050 | −0.393 to 0.293 | 0.77 | 213 |
| Abdominal circumference growth between 19 and 34 weeks' gestation | 0.131 | −0.199 to 0.461 | 0.43 | 224 | 0.246 | −0.095 to 0.584 | 0.15 | 221 |
Measurements of circumferential growth were calculated as the conditional change in the relevant circumference between either 11 and 19 or 19 and 34 weeks' gestation conditional on either 11 or 19 week circumference respectively. Measurements were corrected for regression to the mean and exact age at measurement Not all women were scanned at each time point and positioning of the fetus occasionally precluded some measurements. If identified as a likely confounder in the multivariate model, the following were adjusted for: maternal history of asthma, eczema, rhinitis or atopy; paternal history of asthma, eczema or rhinitis; maternal age, body mass index, height, smoking in pregnancy, educational achievement and parity; child's gender and parental social class.
Figure 5Follow-up within the Southampton Women's Survey.