Blood pressure in adults after prenatal exposure to famine
- 1 March 1999
- journal article
- clinical trial
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Journal Of Hypertension
- Vol. 17 (3), 325-330
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00004872-199917030-00004
Abstract
Many studies have shown that low birth weight is associated with high blood pressure. The composition of the diet of pregnant women has also been found to affect blood pressure in their children. We assessed the effect of prenatal exposure to the Dutch famine of 1944–1945, during which the caloric intake from protein, fat and carbohydrate was proportionally reduced, on blood pressures in adults now aged about 50 years. We measured blood pressures at home and in the clinic among people born at term in one hospital in Amsterdam, The Netherlands, between November 1 1943 and February 28 1947, for whom we had detailed birth records. Blood pressures of people exposed to famine during late (n = 120), mid-(n = 109) or early gestation (n = 68) were compared with those of people born in the year before or conceived in the year after the famine (unexposed subjects, n = 442). No effect of prenatal exposure on systolic and diastolic blood pressure was observed. The mean systolic blood pressure taken in the clinic in those exposed in late gestation, and adjusted for sex and age, was 1.3 mmHg higher than in the unexposed group (95% confidence interval −1.9 to 4.4). The mean systolic blood pressure differed by −0.6 mmHg (95% confidence interval −3.9 to 2.7) for those exposed in mid-gestation and −1.7 mmHg (95% confidence interval −5.6 to 2.2) for those exposed in early gestation. People who were small at birth had higher blood pressures. A 1 kg increase in birth weight was associated with a decrease of 2.7 mmHg (95% confidence interval 0.3 to 5.1) in systolic blood pressure. Analyses of blood pressures measured at home gave similar results. High blood pressure was not linked to prenatal exposure to a balanced reduction of macronutrients in the maternal diet. However, it was linked to reduced fetal growth. We postulate that it might be the composition rather than the quantity of a pregnant woman's diet that affects her child's blood pressure in later life.Keywords
This publication has 13 references indexed in Scilit:
- Glucose tolerance in adults after prenatal exposure to famineThe Lancet, 1998
- Does malnutrition in utero determine diabetes and coronary heart disease in adulthood? Results from the Leningrad siege study, a cross sectional studyBMJ, 1997
- Huge variation in Russian mortality rates 1984–94: artefact, alcohol, or what?The Lancet, 1997
- Intrauterine programming of hypertension in the rat: Nutrient interactionsComparative Biochemistry and Physiology Part A: Physiology, 1996
- Diet in pregnancy and the offspring's blood pressure 40 years laterBJOG: An International Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, 1996
- Maternal nutritional status in pregnancy and blood pressure in childhoodBJOG: An International Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, 1994
- Fetal growth and impaired glucose tolerance in men and womenDiabetologia, 1993
- Short report: Accuracy of the Profilomat ambulatory blood pressure measuring system determined by the British Hypertension Society ProtocolJournal Of Hypertension, 1992
- Fetal and infant growth and impaired glucose tolerance at age 64.BMJ, 1991
- LECTURES ON THE THEORY AND PRACTICE OF MIDWIFERY,The Lancet, 1828