Go to:
Logótipo
Comuta visibilidade da coluna esquerda
Você está em: Start > Publications > View > Effect of birth weight and weight change during the first 96 h of life on childhood body composition-path analysis
Publication

Publications

Effect of birth weight and weight change during the first 96 h of life on childhood body composition-path analysis

Title
Effect of birth weight and weight change during the first 96 h of life on childhood body composition-path analysis
Type
Article in International Scientific Journal
Year
2015
Authors
Fonseca, MJ
(Author)
Other
The person does not belong to the institution. The person does not belong to the institution. The person does not belong to the institution. Without AUTHENTICUS Without ORCID
Severo M
(Author)
FMUP
View Personal Page You do not have permissions to view the institutional email. Search for Participant Publications View Authenticus page Without ORCID
Correia, S
(Author)
Other
The person does not belong to the institution. The person does not belong to the institution. The person does not belong to the institution. Without AUTHENTICUS Without ORCID
Santos, AC
(Author)
Other
The person does not belong to the institution. The person does not belong to the institution. The person does not belong to the institution. Without AUTHENTICUS Without ORCID
Journal
Vol. 39 No. 10
Pages: 579-585
ISSN: 0307-0565
Publisher: Springer Nature
Indexing
Publicação em ISI Web of Knowledge ISI Web of Knowledge - 0 Citations
Publicação em Scopus Scopus - 0 Citations
Other information
Authenticus ID: P-00A-B1P
Abstract (EN): BACKGROUND: It is established that growth during early life is predictive of several health outcomes later in life, including body composition. The role of fetal vs postnatal growth remains controversial. We aimed to evaluate the effect of birth weight (BW) and newborn weight change (NWC) during the first 96 h of life on body composition during childhood, measured by: body mass (BMI), fat mass (FMI), and fat-free mass indexes (FFMI), waist circumference (WC) and waist-to-height ratio (WHtR). METHODS: As part of the Generation XXI birth cohort, children were recruited in 2005/2006 at all public units providing obstetrical and neonatal care in Porto, Portugal. Information was collected by face-to-face interview and abstracted from clinical records. Newborn's anthropometrics were obtained by trained examiners and NWC was estimated as (weight - BW)/BW x 100, adjusted for age in hours. At age 4 and 7, children were re-evaluated and anthropometric measurements were taken according to standard procedures. Life course data for 717 full-term singletons were presented. Path analysis was used to compute adjusted regression coefficients (beta) and 95% confidence intervals. RESULTS: BW had a direct effect on body composition at age 4: for each 100 g increase in BW, there was an increase of 0.043 (0.024; 0.062) on BMI, 0.037 (0.020; 0.055) on FMI, 0.024 (0.007; 0.042) on FFMI, 0.048 (0.031; 0.066) on WC, and 0.022 (0.004; 0.039) on WHtR z-scores. At age 7, BW was positively associated with body composition measures, but this effect was mediated by body composition at age 4. NWC had no effect on body composition at ages 4 or 7. Positive associations were found between body composition at ages 4 and 7. CONCLUSION: It appears that childhood body composition is programmed by fetal growth and this intra-uterine period seems more important to the development of body composition than immediate postnatal period.
Language: English
Type (Professor's evaluation): Scientific
No. of pages: 7
Documents
We could not find any documents associated to the publication.
Related Publications

Of the same journal

Prevalence of overweight and obesity in boys and girls in different Tanner stages (2004)
Other Publications
ribeiro, j; santos, p; duarte, ja; mota, j
Trajectories of total and central adiposity throughout adolescence and cardiometabolic factors in early adulthood (2016)
Article in International Scientific Journal
Araujo, J; Barros H; Ramos E; Li, L
Subcutaneous administration of ghrelin stimulates energy intake in healthy lean human volunteers (2006)
Article in International Scientific Journal
Druce, MR; Neary, NM; Small, CJ; Milton, J; Monteiro, M; Patterson, M; Ghatei, MA; Bloom, SR

See all (33)

Recommend this page Top
Copyright 1996-2025 © Faculdade de Direito da Universidade do Porto  I Terms and Conditions  I Acessibility  I Index A-Z
Page created on: 2025-08-07 at 03:32:09 | Privacy Policy | Personal Data Protection Policy | Whistleblowing