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The risk for cardiovascular disease is linked to postnatal weight gain early in life, study results published in the Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism suggest.
“Postnatal growth has previously been shown to be a determinant of later life CVD risk factors and CVD events. The present study shows that among healthy young children, excess early postnatal weight gain leads to thicker arterial walls,” researchers from the Netherlands wrote.
These findings were part of the Wheezing Illnesses Study Leidsche Rijn (WHISTLER) birth cohort. Researchers calculated z scores of individual weight and length gain rates in patients aged birth to 3 months. Of the first 333 of 461 children included who reached age 5 years, the researchers measured intima-media thickness, distensibility and elastic modulus of the carotid artery via ultrasonography. Their weight gain relative to length gain (WLG) was also measured.
According to data, higher WLG was linked to higher weight, height BMI and waist circumference at age 5 years. Additionally, carotid intima-media thickness was 5.1 mcm (95% CI, 1.0-9.2) greater per 1 standard deviation increase in postnatal WLG.
Further data indicate children thinner at birth displayed stiffer arteries with increasing WLG.
“These results support the view that an increased CVD risk in adulthood is associated with different growth patterns early in life,” the researchers concluded.
Disclosure: The researchers report no relevant financial disclosures.
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