Ellis Kenneth J
Children's Nutrition Research Center, Department of Pediatrics, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX, USA.
Nestle Nutr Workshop Ser Pediatr Program. 2010;65:213-20; discussion 221-4. doi: 10.1159/000281168. Epub 2010 Feb 1.
From retrospective studies, there is substantial evidence that birthweight and the rate of weight gain during early infancy are associated with increased risk for adverse health outcomes later in life. Birthweight is the marker of the integrative effects of the prenatal environment, while the rate of weight gain after birth reflects both genetic potential and external postnatal influences. The adulthood-to-infancy associations constitute the basis for the 'fetal origins' and 'catch-up growth' hypotheses for some diseases. However, these findings are based on the assumption that anthropometric-based indices reflect body composition during both time periods, with the body mass index (weight/stature2) being the most frequently used index. More direct measures of body composition were simply not available at the time of the births of the adults participating in these studies. Nowadays, there are a number of in vivo techniques that can be used to examine body composition in infancy. In particular, what does the body mass index reflect in terms of body composition for the infant? Is it an adequate index?
回顾性研究提供了大量证据,表明出生体重和婴儿早期的体重增加速度与日后不良健康结局风险增加有关。出生体重是产前环境综合影响的标志,而出生后的体重增加速度既反映了遗传潜力,也反映了出生后的外部影响。成年期与婴儿期的关联构成了某些疾病“胎儿起源”和“追赶生长”假说的基础。然而,这些发现基于这样一种假设,即基于人体测量的指标反映了两个时期的身体组成,体重指数(体重/身高²)是最常用的指标。在参与这些研究的成年人出生时,根本没有更直接的身体组成测量方法。如今,有许多体内技术可用于检测婴儿期的身体组成。特别是,体重指数在婴儿身体组成方面反映了什么?它是一个合适的指标吗?