Wells Jonathan C K, Wibaek Rasmus, Poullas Marios
Childhood Nutrition Research Centre, UCL Great Ormond Street Institute of Child Health, London, United Kingdom.
Department of Nutrition, Exercise and Sports, University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark.
Front Public Health. 2018 Oct 17;6:292. doi: 10.3389/fpubh.2018.00292. eCollection 2018.
Among contemporary human populations, rates of cesarean delivery vary substantially, making it difficult to know if the procedure is inadequately available, or used excessively relative to medical need. A much-cited evolutionary hypothesis attributed birth complications to an "obstetric dilemma," resulting from antagonistic selective pressures acting on maternal pelvic dimensions and fetal brain growth during hominin evolution. However, the childbirth challenges experienced by living humans may not be representative of those in the past, and may vary in association with trends in ecological conditions. We hypothesized that variability in maternal phenotype (height and nutritional status) may contribute to the risk of cesarean delivery. In many populations, high levels of child stunting contribute to a high frequency of short adult stature, while obesity is also becoming more common. The combination of short maternal stature and maternal overweight or obesity may substantially increase the risk of cesarean delivery. Using data from two large Indian health surveys from 2005-6 to 2015-2016, we tested associations of maternal somatic phenotype (short stature, overweight) with the risk of cesarean delivery, adjusting for confounding factors such as maternal age, birth order, rural/urban location, wealth and offspring sex. Secular trends in maternal body mass index between surveys were greater than trends in height. Maternal short stature and overweight both increased the risk of cesarean delivery, most strongly when jointly present within individual women. These associations were independent of birth order, wealth, maternal age and rural/urban location. Secular trends in maternal phenotype explained 18% of the increase in cesarean rate over 10 years. Our results highlight how the emerging dual burden of malnutrition (persisting short adult stature which reflects persistent child stunting; increasing overweight in adults) is likely to impact childbirth in low and middle-income countries.
在当代人群中,剖宫产率差异很大,这使得很难确定该手术是供应不足,还是相对于医疗需求而言使用过度。一个被广泛引用的进化假说将分娩并发症归因于“产科困境”,这是由人类进化过程中作用于母体骨盆尺寸和胎儿大脑生长的拮抗选择压力导致的。然而,现代人类经历的分娩挑战可能并不代表过去的情况,并且可能随生态条件的变化而有所不同。我们假设母体表型(身高和营养状况)的差异可能导致剖宫产风险增加。在许多人群中,儿童发育迟缓率高导致成年后身材矮小的频率也高,同时肥胖也越来越普遍。母体身材矮小与超重或肥胖相结合可能会大幅增加剖宫产风险。利用2005 - 2006年至2015 - 2016年两次印度大型健康调查的数据,我们测试了母体躯体表型(身材矮小、超重)与剖宫产风险之间的关联,并对诸如产妇年龄、生育顺序、农村/城市地区、财富和后代性别等混杂因素进行了调整。两次调查之间母体体重指数的长期趋势大于身高趋势。母体身材矮小和超重都增加了剖宫产风险,当个体女性同时存在这两种情况时风险增加最为显著。这些关联独立于生育顺序、财富、产妇年龄和农村/城市地区。母体表型的长期趋势解释了10年内剖宫产率上升的18%。我们的研究结果凸显了营养不良的新双重负担(反映持续儿童发育迟缓的成年后持续身材矮小;成年人超重情况增加)可能如何影响低收入和中等收入国家的分娩情况。