Antonisamy Belavendra, Vasan Senthil K, Geethanjali Finney S, Gowri Mahasampath, Hepsy Y S, Richard Joseph, Raghupathy P, Karpe Fredrik, Osmond Clive, Fall Caroline H D
Department of Biostatistics, Christian Medical College, Vellore, India.
Oxford Center for Diabetes, Endocrinology, and Metabolism, University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom.
J Pediatr. 2017 Jan;180:53-61.e3. doi: 10.1016/j.jpeds.2016.09.059. Epub 2016 Nov 4.
To investigate independent relationships of childhood linear growth (height gain) and relative weight gain to adult cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk traits in Asian Indians.
Data from 2218 adults from the Vellore Birth Cohort were examined for associations of cross-sectional height and body mass index (BMI) and longitudinal growth (independent conditional measures of height and weight gain) in infancy, childhood, adolescence, and adulthood with adult waist circumference (WC), blood pressure (BP), insulin resistance (homeostatic model assessment-insulin resistance [HOMA-IR]), and plasma glucose and lipid concentrations.
Higher BMI/greater conditional relative weight gain at all ages was associated with higher adult WC, after 3 months with higher adult BP, HOMA-IR, and lipids, and after 15 years with higher glucose concentrations. Taller adult height was associated with higher WC (men β = 2.32 cm per SD, women β = 1.63, both P < .001), BP (men β = 2.10 mm Hg per SD, women β = 1.21, both P ≤ .001), and HOMA-IR (men β = 0.08 log units per SD, women β = 0.12, both P ≤ .05) but lower glucose concentrations (women β = -0.03 log mmol/L per SD P = .003). Greater height or height gain at all earlier ages were associated with higher adult CVD risk traits. These positive associations were attenuated when adjusted for adult BMI and height. Shorter length and lower BMI at birth were associated with higher glucose concentration in women.
Greater height or weight gain relative to height during childhood or adolescence was associated with a more adverse adult CVD risk marker profile, and this was mostly attributable to larger adult size.
研究亚洲印度人儿童期线性生长(身高增长)和相对体重增加与成人心血管疾病(CVD)风险特征之间的独立关系。
对来自韦洛尔出生队列的2218名成年人的数据进行检查,以探讨婴儿期、儿童期、青少年期和成年期的横断面身高和体重指数(BMI)以及纵向生长(身高和体重增加的独立条件测量值)与成人腰围(WC)、血压(BP)、胰岛素抵抗(稳态模型评估-胰岛素抵抗 [HOMA-IR])以及血浆葡萄糖和脂质浓度之间的关联。
各年龄段较高的BMI/较大的条件相对体重增加与较高的成人WC相关,3个月后与较高的成人BP、HOMA-IR和脂质相关,15年后与较高的葡萄糖浓度相关。较高的成人身高与较高的WC(男性β = 每标准差2.32厘米,女性β = 1.63,均P <.001)、BP(男性β = 每标准差2.10毫米汞柱,女性β = 1.21,均P ≤.001)和HOMA-IR(男性β = 每标准差0.08对数单位,女性β = 0.12,均P ≤.05)相关,但与较低的葡萄糖浓度相关(女性β = -0.03对数毫摩尔/升每标准差,P =.003)。所有较早年龄段较高的身高或身高增长与较高的成人心血管疾病风险特征相关。在调整成人BMI和身高后,这些正相关关系减弱。出生时较短的身长和较低的BMI与女性较高的葡萄糖浓度相关。
儿童期或青少年期相对于身高的更高身高或体重增加与更不利的成人心血管疾病风险标志物谱相关,这主要归因于更大的成年体型。