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Maternal nutrition during gestation and blood pressure in later life

Maternal nutrition during gestation and blood pressure in later life
Maternal nutrition during gestation and blood pressure in later life
Objective: To assess the link between maternal diet during pregnancy and blood pressure of the offspring.
Design: Follow-up study.
Setting: A university hospital in Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
Participants: People born at term as singletons between November 1943 and February 1947.
Main outcome measure: Blood pressure at adult age.
Results: Adult blood pressure was not associated with protein, carbohydrate or fat intake during any period of gestation. We found, however, after adjustment for sex that the systolic blood pressure decreased by 0.6 mmHg (0.1-1.1) for every 1% increase in protein/carbohydrate ratio in the third trimester. This association was present both in people who had been exposed to the famine during gestation as well as in those who had not been exposed. The association between protein/carbohydrate ratio in the third trimester and adult blood pressure was furthermore independent of maternal weight gain and final weight, and birth weight [increase for every 1% increase in protein/carbohydrate ratio 0.6 mmHg (0.0-1.2)]. Adjustment for adult characteristics such as body mass index, smoking and socio-economic status did not affect the observed association appreciably [adjusted increase 0.5 mmHg (0.0-1.0)].
Conclusion: Adult blood pressure seems to be affected by small variations in the balance of macro-nutrients in the maternal diet during gestation rather than by relatively large variations in the absolute amounts.
blood pressure, nutrition, pregnancy, fetal origins
0263-6352
29-34
Roseboom, Tessa J.
ca016399-99d7-4918-9572-e3d37d20f1b6
van der Meulen, Jan H.P.
6e522553-7d4e-4cbb-a185-8f31e4f6e4cb
van Montfrans, Gert A.
6f2372b1-f0c4-4322-bd2f-9f842f57a9db
Ravelli, Anita C.
2c50a713-6e56-4530-9636-9146598f92c3
Osmond, Clive
2677bf85-494f-4a78-adf8-580e1b8acb81
Barker, David J.P.
5c773838-b094-4ac1-999b-b5869717f243
Bleker, Otto P.
047c2fa6-5b66-4c7b-98a9-51ed4a1e3b08
Roseboom, Tessa J.
ca016399-99d7-4918-9572-e3d37d20f1b6
van der Meulen, Jan H.P.
6e522553-7d4e-4cbb-a185-8f31e4f6e4cb
van Montfrans, Gert A.
6f2372b1-f0c4-4322-bd2f-9f842f57a9db
Ravelli, Anita C.
2c50a713-6e56-4530-9636-9146598f92c3
Osmond, Clive
2677bf85-494f-4a78-adf8-580e1b8acb81
Barker, David J.P.
5c773838-b094-4ac1-999b-b5869717f243
Bleker, Otto P.
047c2fa6-5b66-4c7b-98a9-51ed4a1e3b08

Roseboom, Tessa J., van der Meulen, Jan H.P., van Montfrans, Gert A., Ravelli, Anita C., Osmond, Clive, Barker, David J.P. and Bleker, Otto P. (2001) Maternal nutrition during gestation and blood pressure in later life. Journal of Hypertension, 19 (1), 29-34.

Record type: Article

Abstract

Objective: To assess the link between maternal diet during pregnancy and blood pressure of the offspring.
Design: Follow-up study.
Setting: A university hospital in Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
Participants: People born at term as singletons between November 1943 and February 1947.
Main outcome measure: Blood pressure at adult age.
Results: Adult blood pressure was not associated with protein, carbohydrate or fat intake during any period of gestation. We found, however, after adjustment for sex that the systolic blood pressure decreased by 0.6 mmHg (0.1-1.1) for every 1% increase in protein/carbohydrate ratio in the third trimester. This association was present both in people who had been exposed to the famine during gestation as well as in those who had not been exposed. The association between protein/carbohydrate ratio in the third trimester and adult blood pressure was furthermore independent of maternal weight gain and final weight, and birth weight [increase for every 1% increase in protein/carbohydrate ratio 0.6 mmHg (0.0-1.2)]. Adjustment for adult characteristics such as body mass index, smoking and socio-economic status did not affect the observed association appreciably [adjusted increase 0.5 mmHg (0.0-1.0)].
Conclusion: Adult blood pressure seems to be affected by small variations in the balance of macro-nutrients in the maternal diet during gestation rather than by relatively large variations in the absolute amounts.

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More information

Published date: 2001
Keywords: blood pressure, nutrition, pregnancy, fetal origins

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 25955
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/25955
ISSN: 0263-6352
PURE UUID: cadfa3a6-f914-4ba4-92c2-3849d7787917
ORCID for Clive Osmond: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-9054-4655

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 21 Apr 2006
Last modified: 08 Jan 2022 02:42

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Contributors

Author: Tessa J. Roseboom
Author: Jan H.P. van der Meulen
Author: Gert A. van Montfrans
Author: Anita C. Ravelli
Author: Clive Osmond ORCID iD
Author: David J.P. Barker
Author: Otto P. Bleker

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