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Cold-induced elevation of forearm vascular resistance is inversely related to birth weight

Cold-induced elevation of forearm vascular resistance is inversely related to birth weight
Cold-induced elevation of forearm vascular resistance is inversely related to birth weight
Fetal growth retardation has been linked to elevated blood pressure in adult life. This association between birth weight and blood pressure is present in childhood and is amplified with age. However, the mechanisms that underlie this association are largely unknown. We examined the relationship between birth weight and forearm vascular resistance and forearm blood flow in children aged 9?12.7 years. A total of 58 children were randomly selected from a cohort of 1610 born at the University Hospital of the West Indies in Jamaica where adequate antenatal and delivery records were available. Blood pressure, heart rate and forearm blood flow (by venous occlusion plethysmography) were measured at rest and after cold pressor and mental arithmetic tests. There was a significant inverse correlation between birth weight and the change in the vascular resistance for the cold pressor test (r=-0.47; P<0.001) and the mental arithmetic stress test (r=-0.26; P=0.05). The log ratio of vascular resistance under stress to resting decreased by 0.289 units per kg of birth weight (95% CI: 0.145?0.434; P=0.0002). Lower birth weight is associated with increased vascular responsiveness. Increased vascular resistance might be one mechanism linking fetal growth to subsequent elevated blood pressure.
vascular resistance, blood flow, birth weight, blood pressure, plethysmography
0950-9240
309-314
Nichols, S.D.
eb18711d-ab09-4669-a6c1-a3075c3549fa
Boyne, M.S.
4f1a8543-68dd-4e6a-a75c-013faca58a91
Thame, M.
071c8725-1b66-4c64-b3fa-a13077570a4b
Osmond, C.
2677bf85-494f-4a78-adf8-580e1b8acb81
Wilks, R.J.
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Bennett, F.I.
ea540833-fddf-48f7-a1b6-120ea107f09e
McFarlane-Anderson, N.
7123d993-d982-4aa4-a402-468fd7ab30a8
Young, R.E.
40a20d81-21c1-4b49-900a-bf0f37dd029b
Forrester, T.E.
bb3a3675-9204-4743-b4e0-f8d0ddd55932
Nichols, S.D.
eb18711d-ab09-4669-a6c1-a3075c3549fa
Boyne, M.S.
4f1a8543-68dd-4e6a-a75c-013faca58a91
Thame, M.
071c8725-1b66-4c64-b3fa-a13077570a4b
Osmond, C.
2677bf85-494f-4a78-adf8-580e1b8acb81
Wilks, R.J.
14f2d2d1-c478-467b-b19d-c7f4273faa54
Bennett, F.I.
ea540833-fddf-48f7-a1b6-120ea107f09e
McFarlane-Anderson, N.
7123d993-d982-4aa4-a402-468fd7ab30a8
Young, R.E.
40a20d81-21c1-4b49-900a-bf0f37dd029b
Forrester, T.E.
bb3a3675-9204-4743-b4e0-f8d0ddd55932

Nichols, S.D., Boyne, M.S., Thame, M., Osmond, C., Wilks, R.J., Bennett, F.I., McFarlane-Anderson, N., Young, R.E. and Forrester, T.E. (2005) Cold-induced elevation of forearm vascular resistance is inversely related to birth weight. Journal of Human Hypertension, 19, 309-314. (doi:10.1038/sj.jhh.1001826).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Fetal growth retardation has been linked to elevated blood pressure in adult life. This association between birth weight and blood pressure is present in childhood and is amplified with age. However, the mechanisms that underlie this association are largely unknown. We examined the relationship between birth weight and forearm vascular resistance and forearm blood flow in children aged 9?12.7 years. A total of 58 children were randomly selected from a cohort of 1610 born at the University Hospital of the West Indies in Jamaica where adequate antenatal and delivery records were available. Blood pressure, heart rate and forearm blood flow (by venous occlusion plethysmography) were measured at rest and after cold pressor and mental arithmetic tests. There was a significant inverse correlation between birth weight and the change in the vascular resistance for the cold pressor test (r=-0.47; P<0.001) and the mental arithmetic stress test (r=-0.26; P=0.05). The log ratio of vascular resistance under stress to resting decreased by 0.289 units per kg of birth weight (95% CI: 0.145?0.434; P=0.0002). Lower birth weight is associated with increased vascular responsiveness. Increased vascular resistance might be one mechanism linking fetal growth to subsequent elevated blood pressure.

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More information

Published date: February 2005
Keywords: vascular resistance, blood flow, birth weight, blood pressure, plethysmography

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 25847
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/25847
ISSN: 0950-9240
PURE UUID: 4406604b-135b-4aad-ba95-8951334027e3
ORCID for C. Osmond: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-9054-4655

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 12 Apr 2006
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 02:50

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Contributors

Author: S.D. Nichols
Author: M.S. Boyne
Author: M. Thame
Author: C. Osmond ORCID iD
Author: R.J. Wilks
Author: F.I. Bennett
Author: N. McFarlane-Anderson
Author: R.E. Young
Author: T.E. Forrester

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