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1.
The independent associations between parity and maternal body mass index (BMI), and between parity and maternal weight gain, were investigated using a combination of cross-sectional and longitudinal analyses based on a retrospective, repeat-pregnancy study that examined the change in maternal body weight from the beginning of one pregnancy to the beginning of the next. A group of 523 multiparous women who had been weighed regularly during pregnancy, and none of whom had fallen pregnant less than 12 months after the birth of their previous child, were examined. Sociodemographic, behavioural, medical, obstetric and perinatal data, together with antenatal measurements of maternal body weight and height, were abstracted from each mother's obstetric notes. Parity was found to be independently associated with maternal BMI (p < 0.001), gestational weight gain (p < 0.001) and interpregnancy weight gain (p = 0.032). Women of different parities were found to be at differential risk of long-term weight gain for two reasons. First, primiparous women are at risk of long-term weight gain because they gain the most weight during pregnancy, and high gestational weight gain is in itself a risk factor for long-term weight gain. Second, women of higher parity (4+) are at risk of long-term weight gain because they gain more weight in association with pregnancy, irrespective of the amount of weight they gain during their pregnancies. For women of parity 3 or less, the association between maternal body weight and parity appears to be the result of cumulative weight gained during successive pregnancies. For women of greater parity, the association between maternal body weight and parity is partly the result of cumulative excess gestational weight gained during successive pregnancies, and partly the result of gaining more weight from the beginning of one pregnancy to the next at later pregnancies.  相似文献   

2.
OBJECTIVE: To examine whether birth weight is related to systolic blood pressure during adolescence. DESIGN: Retrospective (comparative) cohort study. The observers who traced and studied the subjects were unaware of their case-control status. SUBJECTS: 330 subjects were born in Cardiff in 1975-7. Cases who were low birth weight at term (< 2500 g) were matched with controls of normal birth weight (3000-3800 g) at term. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Systolic blood pressure measured by random zero sphygmomanometry in the subject's right arm with the subject supine, corrected for size and age. RESULTS: The mean age at examination was 15.7 years. The mean systolic blood pressure of the cases was 105.8 mm Hg and of the controls 107.5 mm Hg. The corrected difference (95% confidence interval) in systolic blood pressure between the cases and controls was 1 mm Hg (-3 to +1 mm Hg; two tailed probability 0.33). CONCLUSION: Systolic blood pressure in adolescents of low birth weight is not significantly different from that of adolescents of normal birth weights.  相似文献   

3.
A pregnant woman with transient gastric obstruction was fed by enteral nutrition alone for 11 wk and 6 d. Her body mass index of 23.2 kg/m2 before pregnancy declined to 21.8 kg/m2 after delivery. Although she did not gain weight during enteral nutrition, fetal growth, estimated by ultrasonography, was normal, and she delivered a 3030-g female infant at 38 wk gestation. The blood laboratory data during pregnancy and the breast milk after pregnancy were also normal. The results suggest that factors other than maternal weight gain alone should be considered in the evaluation of nutritional status for the pregnant woman.  相似文献   

4.
Systolic blood pressure was measured in 36 infants with median gestational age of 29 weeks (range 24-35 weeks) and birth weight of 1160 g (range 642-1500 g). Measurements were made at 1, 6 and 12 weeks, and subsequently at 12-weekly intervals during the first year of life. No infant developed chronic lung disease. Systolic blood pressure increased over the first 24 weeks (p < 0.001) to a mean value of 95 mmHg, but did not change significantly over the next 24 weeks. These data provide a reference range of blood pressure levels during the first year of life for infants born at an early gestational age.  相似文献   

5.
OBJECTIVE: To examine the impact of central adiposity upon hemodynamic functioning at rest and during stress in adolescents. DESIGN: Cross-sectional, correlational study. SUBJECTS: 46 White and 49 Black normotensive adolescents with family histories of essential hypertension. MEASUREMENTS: Systolic and diastolic blood pressure (SBP, DBP), cardiac output and total peripheral resistance responses were assessed at rest, during postural change, video game challenge and forehead cold stimulation. Specific lower and higher waist-to-hip ratio (WHR) tertiles were created for each gender and then integrated for analyses. This resulted in a lower WHR tertile of 11 Whites and 21 Blacks and an upper WHR tertile of 15 Whites and 17 Blacks. RESULTS: No differences in age, gender or ethnicity proportions were found between tertile groups (all P > 0.21). The upper WHR group showed greater body weight, waist and hip circumferences, body mass index (BMI), triceps skinfold and body surface area (all P < 0.001). Controlling for peripheral (that is, triceps skinfold) and overall (that is, BMI) adiposity, the upper WHR group exhibited greater SBP (that is, peak response minus mean pre-stressor level) to all three stressors and greater DBP reactivity to postural change and cold pressor (all P < 0.05). CONCLUSION: Central adiposity appears to adversely influence hemodynamic functioning during adolescence. Underlying mechanisms responsible for these associations require exploration.  相似文献   

6.
OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the association between maternal weight gain patterns, based on pregravid body mass index (BMI) and birth weight outcome in twins, and to make specific recommendations for maternal weight gain during twin gestation. METHODS: One hundred eighty-nine twin pregnancies were reviewed retrospectively. Weekly rates of maternal weight gain before 20 weeks, from 20 weeks to delivery, and for total gestation were calculated. Thresholds of weekly maternal weight gain were determined for underweight and normal-weight women. RESULTS: In underweight women, a higher weekly rate of gain before 20 weeks was associated with the birth of both twins weighing at least 2500 g (1.13 versus 0.70 lb/week, P = .017), when compared with mothers of at least one twin weighing less than 2500 g. A higher rate of weight gain from 20 weeks to delivery was associated with the delivery of twins weighing at least 2500 g in both underweight (1.92 versus 1.29 lb/week, P = .031) and normal weight (1.63 versus 1.29 lb/week, P = .046) women. No significant differences in weight gain patterns were found between overweight women delivering twins weighing less than 2500 g or at least 2500 g. A weekly rate of gain from 20 weeks' gestation to delivery of at least 1.75 lb/week in underweight women and at least 1.50 lb/week in normal-weight women was associated with the birth of both twins weighing at least 2500 g. After controlling for other potential determinants of birth weight, the threshold of 1.75 lb/week in underweight women showed a trend toward significance as an independent predictor of both twins weighing at least 2500 g (P = .06). CONCLUSION: Certain maternal weight gain patterns during twin pregnancy are associated with the birth of each twin weighing at least 2500 g. As with singletons, recommendations for maternal weight gain during twin pregnancy can be based on pregravid BMI.  相似文献   

7.
AIMS: To compare the blood pressure of very low birthweight infants with that of normal birthweight controls in adolescence. METHODS: A cohort of all infants of birthweight < or = 1500 g born to women resident in the county of Merseyside in 1980-1 was followed up at age 15 years with age, sex, and school matched controls. Growth indices and blood pressures were measured under standard conditions. The smoking history of mothers and children and their status for several socioeconomic variables were documented. In a matched pairs analysis systolic and diastolic blood pressures were compared for cases and controls before and after adjusting for height, weight, and body mass index. RESULTS: There were 172 singleton 15 year old survivors of birthweight < 1500 g out of 40,321 live births of Merseyside residents in 1980-1. Of the 172 survivors, 128 (74%) who had no clinical disability and 11 (6%) with a clinical disability but attending normal schools, were assessed with individually matched age, sex, and school controls. Twenty three (13%) had a clinical disability and were attending special schools; these were assessed without controls. Ten (6%) children refused or were unavailable for assessment. The systolic blood pressure was significantly higher in cases than in controls; the mean of the difference was 3.2 mm Hg. The diastolic blood pressure was also higher in the cases, but the difference was not significant. The controls were significantly heavier (4.4 kg), taller (4.0 cm), with larger head circumference (1.5 cm) than the cases. The difference in body mass index was not significant. Adjusting for height, weight, or body mass index increased the difference in systolic blood pressure between cases and controls. There were no significant differences in the socioeconomic variables, but what differences did exist favoured the controls. There was also a higher prevalence of smoking among the children and the mothers of the cases than the controls. CONCLUSIONS: The study supports the hypothesis that in adolescents variation in systolic blood pressure has its origins in fetal development. Some of the variation could be attributed to socioeconomic differences.  相似文献   

8.
OBJECTIVES: To study carotid and femoral intima-media thicknesses and diameters in relation to age, sex, morphologic status and blood pressure. PARTICIPANTS: The subjects were 369 men and women (aged 10-54 years) from the Stanislas cohort, with no known cardiovascular disease. METHODS: Intima-media thicknesses and diameters were measured by B-mode ultrasonography. The effects of sex, age, smoking, anthropometric variables, cholesterol and blood pressure were studied using bivariate and regression analysis. RESULTS: Carotid and femoral intima-media thicknesses were not affected by age nor by sex up to 18 years of age. Thereafter, they increased sharply in men and remained higher than in women. Values were correlated with systolic blood pressure only in men, and with fat-free mass in children and young adults only at the femoral site. Smoking, body mass index and fat mass were associated with intima-media thicknesses only in adults. Carotid diameter was little affected by age during childhood and in adults. Femoral diameter increased up to the age of 18 in both sexes and remained unaffected by age thereafter. This increase was more pronounced in boys, and so values became consistently greater in males aged over 14 years. Carotid diameter was correlated with body mass index or fat mass whereas femoral diameter was correlated with weight or fat-free-mass in children and men. The opposite was observed in women. CONCLUSION: Sex differences occur before adolescence for arterial diameter, but only at an adult age for intima-media thickness. In young subjects, carotid geometry seems to be influenced by blood pressure and excess body weight, while femoral artery geometry seems to be related to blood pressure and body growth.  相似文献   

9.
OBJECTIVE: To determine subsequent growth and body composition of children born to women with type 1 diabetes compared with controls. DESIGN: Prospective cohort study. SETTING: Follow-up of offspring born to women with type 1 diabetes and controls from an earlier study of diabetes and lactation. SUBJECTS: Seventeen nondiabetic offspring of women with type 1 diabetes and 18 offspring of control women (age range 5.9 to 9.0 years). OUTCOME MEASURES: Anthropometric measures at follow-up included height, weight, triceps and subscapular skinfold thickness. Information on usual nutrient intakes and physical activity patterns was elicited through questionnaires. Body composition was determined from skinfold thickness measures and bioelectrical impedance analysis. A child was identified as obese if he or she met at least 2 of the following 4 criteria for obesity: (1) weight-for-height equal to or greater than 120% of the National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS) reference median plus triceps skinfold greater than the 85th percentile; (2) body mass index (BMI) greater than the 95th percentile for age and sex; (3) percent body fat (from impedance measures) equal to or greater than 25 for boys and 30 for girls; or (4) percent body fat (from sum of skinfold measures) equal to or greater than 25 for boys and 30 for girls. RESULTS: There were 7 obese children in the type 1 diabetes group and none in the control group (p = 0.007). Obese children did not differ from nonobese children in birth weight, body fat patterning, nutrient intake, physical activity patterns, maternal pregravid weight or blood glucose control during the last trimester of pregnancy. Mothers of obese children, however, had fewer years of education and gained more weight during pregnancy compared with mothers of nonobese children in the type 1 diabetes group (p < 0.05). CONCLUSION: Obesity during childhood is a significant problem among nondiabetic children of women with type 1 diabetes. The association of childhood obesity with lower maternal education and excessive pregnancy weight gain warrants further investigation.  相似文献   

10.
Risk factors for Aboriginal low birthweight (< 2500 g), preterm birth (< 37 weeks' gestation) and intrauterine growth retardation (under the tenth percentile of Australian birthweights for gestational age) were examined in 503 live-born singletons recorded as born to an Aboriginal mother and routinely delivered at the Royal Darwin Hospital between January 1987 and March 1990. Infants born to mothers with body mass index less than 18.5 kg/m2 had five times the risk of having low birthweight and 2.5 times the risk of intrauterine growth retardation. Population-attributable risk percentages suggest that 28 per cent of low birthweight and 15 per cent of growth retardation could be attributed to maternal malnutrition. Risk percentages for maternal smoking of more than half a packet of cigarettes a day were 18 per cent for low birthweight and 10 per cent for growth retardation. For growth retardation, 18 per cent could be attributed to a maternal age under 20 years. Risk factors for preterm birth were predominantly obstetric: the population-attributable risk percentage for pregnancy-induced hypertension was 26 per cent and for other obstetric conditions was 16 per cent. For Aboriginal births in the Darwin Health Region, maternal malnutrition and smoking are key elements in the prevention of low birthweight and intrauterine growth retardation. Teenage pregnancy is an important risk for intrauterine growth retardation, and pregnancy-induced hypertension is a risk for preterm birth.  相似文献   

11.
Information on 869 076 singletons and 17 566 twins, born during the period 1983-1991, was obtained from the Swedish Medical Birth Registry. Data on birth weight, gestational duration, vital status, and maternal smoking habits during pregnancy were analyzed in order to investigate whether twinning potentiates the effect of maternal smoking on birth weight and perinatal mortality. The individual birth weights were expressed as percentages of mean birth weight, where mean birth weights of singletons and twins were calculated separately. The birth weight reducing effect of maternal smoking was found to be of the same magnitude among twins and singletons weighing > 90% of mean birth weight. For infants weighing < 90% of mean birth weight, maternal smoking had a significantly stronger effect on birth weight among singletons than among twins. When gestational duration was taken into consideration, this difference was less pronounced. The effect of maternal smoking on gestational duration was stronger among singletons than twins. The smoking-related risk increase of perinatal death was of about the same magnitude among twins and singletons.  相似文献   

12.
OBJECTIVES: This study examined absolute and proportional gestational weight gain and prepregnancy body mass index as predictors of primary cesarean delivery. METHODS: Data were derived from a prospective study of pregnancy outcome risk factors in 2301 women in greater New Haven, Conn, who had singleton deliveries by primary cesarean (n = 312) or vaginal delivery (n = 1989) and for whom height, prepregnancy weight, and weight gain were available. Women were divided into 4 body mass index groups (underweight, low average, high average, and obese) and further subdivided into 8 groups according to median proportional or absolute weight gain. RESULTS: Risk of cesarean delivery increased with increasing body mass index and gestational weight gain greater than the median for one's body mass index. Proportional weight gain was more predictive of cesarean delivery than absolute weight gain. Underweight women gaining more than 27.8% of their prepregnancy weight had a 2-fold adjusted relative risk of cesarean delivery. CONCLUSIONS: Proportional weight gain is an important predictor of cesarean delivery for underweight women; high body mass index is also predictive of increased risk.  相似文献   

13.
OBJECTIVE: To study pregnancy outcomes among teenagers and to determine whether age-related increases in risk are due to differences in socioeconomic conditions, maternal smoking, or anthropometric status. METHODS: All single births during 1990-1991 to mothers aged less than 25 years recorded in the Swedish Medical Birth Registry were studied (n = 62,433). The pregnancy outcomes analyzed were late fetal death, infant mortality, preterm birth, low birth weight, small for gestational age, and low Apgar scores. Information on maternal age, parity, family situation, maternal smoking, maternal height, and weight gain during pregnancy was recorded in the Medical Birth Registry. Information on socioeconomic characteristics was obtained from the Population Census. Logistic regression analysis was used to define the determinants of the adverse outcomes among teenagers. RESULTS: Compared with women aged 20-24 years, girls of 17 years or less were at higher risk for preterm birth (odds ratio [OR] 1.6), and this increased risk remained essentially unchanged after controlling for major confounding factors (OR 1.5). Teenagers also had a crude 50% higher risk of late fetal death and infant mortality, but this risk was reduced after controlling for the effect of socioeconomic characteristics (adjusted OR 1.2). CONCLUSIONS: The increase in risk of late fetal death and infant mortality associated with low maternal age is substantially an effect of teenagers' poorer socioeconomic situation. However, the increase in preterm birth among younger teenagers suggests that young maternal age may be a biologic risk factor for preterm birth.  相似文献   

14.
BACKGROUND: Leptin, a product of the obese (ob) gene, is released from adipocytes. At the same body mass index, women have higher concentrations than men. Thus, during pregnancy, leptin may influence gestational weight gain and retention of a portion of that gain postpartum. OBJECTIVE: We examined the relation between plasma leptin at entry to prenatal care and subsequent changes in weight from entry to prenatal care (at 17 wk gestation, baseline) until 6 mo postpartum. DESIGN: This was an observational study of leptin, gestational weight gain, and postpartum weight retention (at 6 wk and 6 mo postpartum) in 103 low-income pregnant women from Camden, NJ, with a pregravid body mass index (in kg/m2) in the normal range (19.8-26). RESULTS: After potential confounding variables were controlled for, leptin at entry significantly (P < 0.05) predicted weight gain in pregnancy, including measured rate of weight gain (x +/- SEE: 0.25 +/- 0.13 kg x unit log leptin(-1) x wk(-1)), measured rate of third-trimester weight gain (0.37 +/- 0.15 kg x unit log leptin(-1) x wk(-1)), rate of weight gain from recalled pregravid weight (0.23 +/- 0.09 kg x unit log leptin(-1) x wk(-1)), and net rate of gestational weight gain (0.22 +/- 0.09 kg x unit log leptin(-1) x wk(-1)). The leptin concentration at entry also significantly predicted retained weight in the postpartum period (at 6 mo: 7.29 +/- 3.33 kg/unit log leptin at entry) and marginally predicted changes in the sum of skinfold thicknesses (at 6 mo: 14.7 +/- 7.5 mm/unit log leptin at entry). CONCLUSION: These results suggest that a high leptin concentration at entry to prenatal care may predict an increased risk of overweight and obesity in vulnerable women.  相似文献   

15.
The association patterns between maternal anthropometric characteristics (stature, prepregnancy weight, prepregnancy body mass index, pregnancy weight gain) and newborn size (birth weight, length, head circumference) were tested with 10,240 single births taking place between 1985 and 1995 in Vienna, Austria, and 3,452 single births taking place between 1989 and 1995 in Westerstede-Ammerland (Friesland), northern Germany. Maternal size and newborn size differed highly significantly (p < 0.001) between the two genetically and socioeconomically different population groups. Furthermore, the incidence of macrosomia among newborns (birth weight greater than 4000 g) was extraordinarily high (17.9%) in the Frisian group from northern Germany. In both populations taller and heavier women with a higher weight gain during pregnancy gave birth to heavier offspring. Nevertheless, the pregnancy weight gain, which indicates environmental conditions of the mother, had only a minor impact on newborn size compared with stature and prepregnancy weight, which reflect the maternal genetic potential to a higher degree.  相似文献   

16.
OBJECTIVE: It was our objective to evaluate the association between early maternal weight gain (before 20 weeks), midpregnancy weight gain (20-28 weeks), and late pregnancy weight gain (28 weeks to birth) with fetal growth and birth weight in twins. STUDY DESIGN: This historic cohort study was based on 1564 births of live twins >/=28 weeks' gestation from Baltimore, Maryland, Miami, Florida, Charleston, South Carolina, and Ann Arbor, Michigan. RESULTS: Early fetal growth was affected only by smoking and chorionicity. Factors in models of both mid and late fetal growth included maternal age, pregravid weight, parity, rates of early pregnancy and midpregnancy maternal weight gain, smoking, and pre-eclampsia. Increased midpregnancy fetal growth was associated with early maternal weight gain (10.91 g/wk per pound per week) and midpregnancy maternal weight gain (15.89 g/wk per pound per week). Increased late fetal growth was associated with early maternal weight gain (16.86 g/wk per pound per week) and midpregnancy maternal weight gain (23.88 g/wk per pound per week). Increased birth weight was associated with early (283.02 g per pound per week), mid (163.58 g per pound per week), and late (69.76 g per pound per week) maternal weight gains. CONCLUSIONS: These findings confirm the importance of early maternal weight gain in twin fetal growth and birth weight.  相似文献   

17.
OBJECTIVE: We sought to determine whether paternal size at birth and during young adulthood influences the birth weight of the offspring. STUDY DESIGN: This historic cohort study followed up girls born in Copenhagen during 1959 to 1961. Their pregnancies in 1974 to 1989 were traced through the Danish Population Register, and the Personal Identification Numbers of the fathers of the children were obtained. Paternal birth weight was obtained from midwifery records and adult stature from military draft records. RESULTS: Compared with fathers who weighed at least 4 kg at birth, fathers who weighed 3 to 3.99 kg at birth had infants who were 109 gm lighter, and fathers who weighed <3 kg had infants who were 176 gm lighter after adjustment for maternal birth weight and adult stature, smoking, and medical and socioeconomic factors. After adjustment, fathers in the lowest quartile of adult body mass index had infants that were 105 gm lighter than those of fathers in the highest quartile. Both paternal birth weight and adult body mass index exhibited significant trends in association with infant birth weight. CONCLUSION: Independently of maternal size, the father's physical stature, particularly his own size at birth, influences the birth weight of his children.  相似文献   

18.
This article reviews recent medical research on the relationship between young maternal age and the incidence of low birth weight infants. One line of research, "nature," emphasizes biological factors in early adolescence such as immaturity of the female reproductive system and inadequate prenatal weight gain. "Nurture," another research focus, stresses sociocultural attributes of teen mothers such as poverty and minority status. Young maternal age alone does not explain the higher rates of low birth weight infants born to adolescent females. Both biological and sociocultural factors, plus lifestyle choices made by adolescents, combine to raise or lower the risk of delivering a low birth weight infant. School health personnel need to link their health promotion efforts to those of other community organizations serving adolescents and their families.  相似文献   

19.
BACKGROUND: Although immigrants to the United States are usually ethnic minorities and socioeconomically disadvantaged, foreign-born women generally have lower rates of low birth weight infants than do US-born women. OBJECTIVE: To measure the relationship between maternal birthplace, ethnicity, and low birth weight infants. DESIGN: Retrospective cohort study of birth certificate data. SETTING: California, 1992. SUBJECTS: Singleton infants (n = 497 868) born to Asian, black, Latina, and white women. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Very low birth weight (500-1499 g), moderately low birth weight (1500-2499 g), and normal birth weight (2500-4000 g, reference category). RESULTS: Foreign-born Latina women generally had less favorable maternal characteristics than US-born Latinas, yet foreign-born Latina women were less likely to have moderately low birth weight infants (odds ratio, 0.91; 95% confidence interval, 0.86-0.96) than US-born Latinas after adjusting for maternal age, education, marital status, parity, tobacco use, use of prenatal care, and gestational age. While foreign-born Asian women generally had a less favorable profile of maternal characteristics than US-born Asians, there was no statistically significant difference in the odds of very low birth weight or moderately low birth weight infants between foreign- and US-born Asian women. Foreign-born black women had more favorable maternal characteristics than US-born women, but there was no significant nativity difference in very low birth weight or moderately low birth weight between foreign- and US-born black women after adjusting for maternal and infant factors. CONCLUSIONS: The relationship between maternal birthplace and low birth weight varies by ethnicity. Further study is needed to understand the favorable pregnancy outcomes of foreign-born Latina women.  相似文献   

20.
The relationship between adiposity and blood pressure has been studied among 17,067 healthy children aged 4 to 18 years old. The correlation of blood pressure with fatness, expressed as non lean body mass, is smaller than the correlation with lean body mass, especially in boys. Blood pressure association with lean body mass strongly increases during puberty growth in boys. These data suggest that during adolescence blood pressure association with weight is mainly due to growth and physical-maturation and that fatness has less influence. A careful analysis of somatic features of adolescents with high blood pressure seems necessary before advocating and improved system of weight control. Preference of blood pressure reference to height is again strengthened.  相似文献   

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