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Intergenerational effects of in utero exposure to Ramadan in Tunisia

Intergenerational effects of in utero exposure to Ramadan in Tunisia
Intergenerational effects of in utero exposure to Ramadan in Tunisia
We have reported that changes in the lifestyle of pregnant women during Ramadan affect more than one generation. In a series of newborn babies in Saudi Arabia, those whose mothers had been in utero during Ramadan differed from those whose mothers had not been in utero during Ramadan. These were unexpected findings and require replication.

METHODS: We examined body size at birth in 1,321 babies (682 boys and 639 girls) born in Gafsa, a small city in Tunisia.

RESULTS: Babies whose mothers had been in utero during Ramadan were smaller and thinner, and had smaller placentas, than those whose mothers had not been in utero during Ramadan. After adjustment for sex, the babies were 93 g lighter (95% confidence interval, 32-153, P=0.003) than those whose mother had not been in utero during Ramadan, their mean ponderal index was 0.52 kg/m(3) lower (0.24-0.79, P<0.001) and their placental weight was 21 g lower (5-37, P=0.01). The findings did not differ by trimester of maternal exposure to Ramadan. They were similar in boys and girls and in primiparous and multiparous mothers.

CONCLUSION: This study provides further evidence that changes in lifestyle during Ramadan have intergenerational effects.
1042-0533
341-343
Alwasel, S.H.
ea0f8ea5-a186-4a34-a1c8-50cbc93aed52
Harrath, A.
f3f792e1-cb4e-4241-922d-8a1d8085af3c
Aljarallah, J.S.
4528caff-494b-414f-974e-f59948821077
Abotalib, Z.
650beb00-f3c2-4165-a3ab-bd3b2f868ba7
Osmond, C.
2677bf85-494f-4a78-adf8-580e1b8acb81
Al Omar, S.Y.
5dfaf365-9a15-4fcd-b649-8187fd359344
Khaled, I.
519ae908-52b6-4995-b19d-6fa7ed31d0e2
Barker, D.J.
cabc3433-b628-43e5-9fd7-e6ff5769bf44
Alwasel, S.H.
ea0f8ea5-a186-4a34-a1c8-50cbc93aed52
Harrath, A.
f3f792e1-cb4e-4241-922d-8a1d8085af3c
Aljarallah, J.S.
4528caff-494b-414f-974e-f59948821077
Abotalib, Z.
650beb00-f3c2-4165-a3ab-bd3b2f868ba7
Osmond, C.
2677bf85-494f-4a78-adf8-580e1b8acb81
Al Omar, S.Y.
5dfaf365-9a15-4fcd-b649-8187fd359344
Khaled, I.
519ae908-52b6-4995-b19d-6fa7ed31d0e2
Barker, D.J.
cabc3433-b628-43e5-9fd7-e6ff5769bf44

Alwasel, S.H., Harrath, A., Aljarallah, J.S., Abotalib, Z., Osmond, C., Al Omar, S.Y., Khaled, I. and Barker, D.J. (2013) Intergenerational effects of in utero exposure to Ramadan in Tunisia. American Journal of Human Biology, 25 (3), 341-343. (doi:10.1002/ajhb.22374). (PMID:23436278)

Record type: Article

Abstract

We have reported that changes in the lifestyle of pregnant women during Ramadan affect more than one generation. In a series of newborn babies in Saudi Arabia, those whose mothers had been in utero during Ramadan differed from those whose mothers had not been in utero during Ramadan. These were unexpected findings and require replication.

METHODS: We examined body size at birth in 1,321 babies (682 boys and 639 girls) born in Gafsa, a small city in Tunisia.

RESULTS: Babies whose mothers had been in utero during Ramadan were smaller and thinner, and had smaller placentas, than those whose mothers had not been in utero during Ramadan. After adjustment for sex, the babies were 93 g lighter (95% confidence interval, 32-153, P=0.003) than those whose mother had not been in utero during Ramadan, their mean ponderal index was 0.52 kg/m(3) lower (0.24-0.79, P<0.001) and their placental weight was 21 g lower (5-37, P=0.01). The findings did not differ by trimester of maternal exposure to Ramadan. They were similar in boys and girls and in primiparous and multiparous mothers.

CONCLUSION: This study provides further evidence that changes in lifestyle during Ramadan have intergenerational effects.

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e-pub ahead of print date: 21 February 2013
Organisations: Faculty of Health Sciences

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 352408
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/352408
ISSN: 1042-0533
PURE UUID: 0bf49f1c-b791-4e0e-b92a-9784e1186cf0
ORCID for C. Osmond: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-9054-4655

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Date deposited: 13 May 2013 12:06
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 02:50

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Contributors

Author: S.H. Alwasel
Author: A. Harrath
Author: J.S. Aljarallah
Author: Z. Abotalib
Author: C. Osmond ORCID iD
Author: S.Y. Al Omar
Author: I. Khaled
Author: D.J. Barker

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