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Fetal and infant growth and glucose tolerance in the Hertfordshire cohort study: a study of men and women born between 1931 and 1939

Fetal and infant growth and glucose tolerance in the Hertfordshire cohort study: a study of men and women born between 1931 and 1939
Fetal and infant growth and glucose tolerance in the Hertfordshire cohort study: a study of men and women born between 1931 and 1939
The Hertfordshire Cohort Study based in the U.K. was the first to report associations between fetal or infant growth and the prevalence of adult glucose intolerance and diabetes. Many studies have replicated the findings with respect to birth weight, but there have been fewer observations in relationship to infant growth, because this is infrequently recorded in routine datasets.
Recently, we carried out glucose tolerance tests in a more recently born group of men and women from the Hertfordshire Cohort Study. The objective was to determine whether the associations with weights at birth and 1 year of age reported in the original study of people born between 1920 and 1930 were observed in people born between 1931 and 1939. Birth weight was inversely related to the overall prevalence of diabetes (comprising newly diagnosed as well as existing cases) in men and women.
However, weight at 1 year of age was not associated with diabetes in either sex. Analysis of data from the glucose tolerance tests showed that both sexes had evidence of higher insulin and glucose concentrations in people who were small at birth or during infancy. Finally, direct comparison of 2-h plasma glucose concentrations in the previous and current Hertfordshire study suggested that both surveys showed broad similarity of the trends in glucose tolerance with birth or infant weights; most differences arose at the extremes of the birth weight, possibly because of the small numbers of subjects studied in these groups.
0012-1797
S145-S150
Phillips, David I.W.
29b73be7-2ff9-4fff-ae42-d59842df4cc6
Goulden, Peter
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Syddall, Holly E.
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Aihie Sayer, Avan
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Dennison, Elaine M.
ee647287-edb4-4392-8361-e59fd505b1d1
Martin, Helen
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Cooper, Cyrus
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Phillips, David I.W.
29b73be7-2ff9-4fff-ae42-d59842df4cc6
Goulden, Peter
1b3d25e7-a22e-4d20-9018-d33b9f04e78c
Syddall, Holly E.
a0181a93-8fc3-4998-a996-7963f0128328
Aihie Sayer, Avan
fb4c2053-6d51-4fc1-9489-c3cb431b0ffb
Dennison, Elaine M.
ee647287-edb4-4392-8361-e59fd505b1d1
Martin, Helen
4f4071fd-5928-4a01-8fdd-b8bca20a7d3c
Cooper, Cyrus
e05f5612-b493-4273-9b71-9e0ce32bdad6

Phillips, David I.W., Goulden, Peter, Syddall, Holly E., Aihie Sayer, Avan, Dennison, Elaine M., Martin, Helen and Cooper, Cyrus (2005) Fetal and infant growth and glucose tolerance in the Hertfordshire cohort study: a study of men and women born between 1931 and 1939. Diabetes, 54 (Supplement 2), S145-S150.

Record type: Article

Abstract

The Hertfordshire Cohort Study based in the U.K. was the first to report associations between fetal or infant growth and the prevalence of adult glucose intolerance and diabetes. Many studies have replicated the findings with respect to birth weight, but there have been fewer observations in relationship to infant growth, because this is infrequently recorded in routine datasets.
Recently, we carried out glucose tolerance tests in a more recently born group of men and women from the Hertfordshire Cohort Study. The objective was to determine whether the associations with weights at birth and 1 year of age reported in the original study of people born between 1920 and 1930 were observed in people born between 1931 and 1939. Birth weight was inversely related to the overall prevalence of diabetes (comprising newly diagnosed as well as existing cases) in men and women.
However, weight at 1 year of age was not associated with diabetes in either sex. Analysis of data from the glucose tolerance tests showed that both sexes had evidence of higher insulin and glucose concentrations in people who were small at birth or during infancy. Finally, direct comparison of 2-h plasma glucose concentrations in the previous and current Hertfordshire study suggested that both surveys showed broad similarity of the trends in glucose tolerance with birth or infant weights; most differences arose at the extremes of the birth weight, possibly because of the small numbers of subjects studied in these groups.

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Published date: December 2005

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 25905
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/25905
ISSN: 0012-1797
PURE UUID: 6ca5111f-4ddb-4bf1-a8fb-21410d08f2d9
ORCID for Holly E. Syddall: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-0171-0306
ORCID for Elaine M. Dennison: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-3048-4961
ORCID for Cyrus Cooper: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-3510-0709

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Date deposited: 20 Apr 2006
Last modified: 18 Mar 2024 02:48

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Contributors

Author: David I.W. Phillips
Author: Peter Goulden
Author: Avan Aihie Sayer
Author: Helen Martin
Author: Cyrus Cooper ORCID iD

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