Titre : | The association between intrauterine growth restriction in the full-term infant and high blood pressure at age 7 years : results from the Collaborative Perinatal Project. Commentary : Intergenerational influences on health. (2006) |
Auteurs : | Anusha-H HEMACHANDRA ; Anne-K DUGGAN ; Susan-L FURTH ; Janet-B Hardy ; Mark-A KLEBANOFF ; Christopher-G OWEN, disc. ; Peter-H WHINCUP, disc. ; Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. Department of Pediatrics. Division of General Pediatrics. Baltimore. MD. USA ; National Institutes of Health. National Institutes of Child Health and Human Development. Department of Health and Human Services. Division of Epidemiology Statistics and Prevention Research. Bethesda. MD. USA ; St George's University of London. Division of Community Health Sciences. Cranmer Terrace. London. GBR |
Type de document : | Article |
Dans : | International journal of epidemiology (vol. 35, n° 4, 2006) |
Pagination : | 871-879 |
Langues: | Anglais |
Mots-clés : | Hypotrophie foetale ; Association ; Nourrisson ; Homme ; Hypertension artérielle ; Pression artérielle ; Age ; Nouveau né ; Anthropométrie ; Foetopathie ; Gestation [pathologie] ; Appareil circulatoire [pathologie] |
Résumé : | [BDSP. Notice produite par INIST-CNRS n92R0xe9. Diffusion soumise à autorisation]. Objective : To use neonatal and placental anthropometry as proxy measures of intrauterine growth restriction (IUGR) and to relate these to blood pressure later in childhood. Study design : A post hoc analysis of full-term white and black children from the Collaborative Perinatal Project, followed from birth until age 7 years (n=29 710). Blood pressure above the 90th percentile by gender and race was considered high blood pressure. Anthropometric measures at birth included birth weight, ponderal index (PI, birth weight/birth length), head to chest circumference (HCC) ratio, and placental ratio percentage (PRP, placental weight*100/birth weight). Results : Among anthropometric measures, PI, HCC, and birth weight were not associated with high systolic blood pressure at age 7 years, but PRP was. In multiple logistic regression, high systolic blood pressure and widened pulse pressure were both predicted by increased PRP [odds ratio (OR) 1.03 and 1.04, P |