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"Long
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November 16, 2011
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Low birth weight may have effects 60
years later
Nov. 16, 2011
Courtesy of the Academy of Finland
and World
Science staff
Low birth weight and slow growth in pre-adolescence significantly increases the risk of poor physical functioning at age 60, a Finnish study has found.
It was disturbing to discover how far the negative effects reach into adulthood, the researchers said, especially since fetal undernutrition remains widespread in Western and developing countries.
The study also reported that the long-term negative effects of low birthweight become more pronounced for people who are overweight
at age 11. The findings were published online Nov. 9 in the American Journal of Epidemiology,
Babies who are born thin lack muscle, said Mikaela von Bonsdorff of the Gerontology Research Center at the University of Jyväskylä, Finland, who conducted the research with colleagues. She added that this may be because in an undernourished fetus, brain development is prioritized at the expense of muscles, an idea known as the Barker hypothesis.
In the study, scientists assessed 1,999 people at age 60 who were part of a Finnish database known as the Helsinki Birth Cohort. Their birth and childhood growth data were extracted from medical records and matched with these data. A child welfare system established in the 1920s in Finland enabled the collection of the dataset.
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Low birth weight and slow growth in pre-adolescence significantly increases the risk of poor physical functioning at age 60, a Finnish study has found.
It was disturbing to discover how far the negative effects reach into adulthood, the researchers said, especially since fetal undernutrition remains widespread in Western and developing countries.
The study, published in the American Journal of Epidemiology, also reported that the long-term negative effects of low birthweight become more pronounced for people who were are overweight by age 11.
Babies who are born thin lack muscle, said Mikaela von Bonsdorff of the Gerontology Research Centre at the University of Jyväskylä, Finland, who conducted the research with colleagues. She added that this may be because in an undernourished fetus, brain development is prioritized at the expense of muscles, an idea known as the Barker hypothesis.
In the study, scientists assessed 1999 people at age 60 who were part of a Finnish database known as the Helsinki Birth Cohort. Their birth and childhood growth data were extracted from medical records and matched with these data. A child welfare system established in the 1920s in Finland enabled the collection of the dataset.
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