Primal Health Databank: Study
Entry No: | 0793 |
Title: | Gender differences in the association between maternal smoking during pregnancy and childhood growth trajectories: multilevel analysis |
Author(s): | Sato M, et al., et al., et al., et al., et al., et al. |
Reference: | International Journal of Obesity (2011) 35, 53–59; doi:10.1038/ijo.2010.198 |
Place of Study: | Japan |
Abstract: | Ongoing prospective cohort study, which is called ‘the Project Koshu’, initiated in the foetal stage to the age of 9–10 years in Koshu City which was in Japanese rural area
The study population comprised children born between 1 April 1991 and 31 March 1999 in Koshu City, Japan, and their mothers. Maternal smoking during early pregnancy was the exposure studied.
The participating mothers delivered 1619 babies during the study period. Birth weight and anthropometric data were collected from 1603 (at birth, 99.0%), 1358 (at age 3, 83.9%), 1248 (at age 5, 77.1%), 1270 (at age 7–8, 78.4%) and 1274 (at age 9–10, 78.7%) of these children. The mean birth weight of both the male and female children whose mothers had smoked during pregnancy was significantly low compared with those born to non-smoking mothers (P<0.01). However, the childhood BMI at each subsequent checkup age significantly increased only among the male children born to the smoking mothers. Moreover, this increase was continuously observed after 3 years of age. The results of BMI z-score analysis were also similar to these of BMI analysis.
Conclusions: Smoking by pregnant women decreases the infant birth weight irrespective of gender but increases childhood weight gain especially by male children. The results might be valuable to explore the mechanism of fetal programming.
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Keyword(s): | birth weight, birthweight, obesity, smoking in pregnancy |
Discussion: | No discussion mentioned for this entry |
See Also: | No related entries mentioned for this entry |
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