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Geographical variation in neonatal size and shape, and relationships with maternal and paternal body composition

Geographical variation in neonatal size and shape, and relationships with maternal and paternal body composition
Geographical variation in neonatal size and shape, and relationships with maternal and paternal body composition

This thesis uses a number of datasets to characterise geographical variation in neonatal and maternal phenotypes, and investigate both maternal-neonatal and paternal-neonatal relationships.  These include cohorts from UK, Finland, India, Sri Lanka, China, Congo, Nigeria and Jamaica.  Analyses were restricted to singleton, liveborn, term births.

Neonates in Europe were the largest, followed by Jamaica, China then Africa, India and Sri Lanka.  There was wide variation in many of the measurements such as birthweight, where the mean values ranged from 2730g to 3570g across populations.  However, head circumference was similar in all populations except China, where it was markedly smaller.  The main differences between populations were in the ratio of head to length, with small heads in China and large heads in India, Sri Lanka and Africa, relative to length.  The mothers from Sri Lanka were the shortest (mean height 151cm) and thinnest (mean BMI at 30 weeks gestation 20 kg/m2), while those from Southampton were the tallest (mean height 164cm) and fattest (mean BMI 27 kg/m2).  There were large differences between mothers in the amount of fat relative to muscle.  Urban Indian mothers were relatively fat while mothers from the Congo, rural India and particularly Jamaica were relatively muscular.

Mother to baby relationships were surprisingly similar across populations, although some effects were stronger in developing countries.  All the maternal variables had important effects on the neonatal measures, particularly maternal birthweight.  ‘Like with like’ relationships were seen consistently for maternal height and neonatal length, maternal and neonatal head, and maternal and neonatal fat.  Maternal muscle effects were relatively weak, except in one dataset (Congo).  After adjusting for the variation in maternal phenotypes across populations, differences in  neonatal phenotypes were reduced but still present.

University of Southampton
Leary, Samantha Dawn
4e0d99dc-a818-43da-8a98-5ee0c86d2f92
Leary, Samantha Dawn
4e0d99dc-a818-43da-8a98-5ee0c86d2f92

Leary, Samantha Dawn (2003) Geographical variation in neonatal size and shape, and relationships with maternal and paternal body composition. University of Southampton, Doctoral Thesis.

Record type: Thesis (Doctoral)

Abstract

This thesis uses a number of datasets to characterise geographical variation in neonatal and maternal phenotypes, and investigate both maternal-neonatal and paternal-neonatal relationships.  These include cohorts from UK, Finland, India, Sri Lanka, China, Congo, Nigeria and Jamaica.  Analyses were restricted to singleton, liveborn, term births.

Neonates in Europe were the largest, followed by Jamaica, China then Africa, India and Sri Lanka.  There was wide variation in many of the measurements such as birthweight, where the mean values ranged from 2730g to 3570g across populations.  However, head circumference was similar in all populations except China, where it was markedly smaller.  The main differences between populations were in the ratio of head to length, with small heads in China and large heads in India, Sri Lanka and Africa, relative to length.  The mothers from Sri Lanka were the shortest (mean height 151cm) and thinnest (mean BMI at 30 weeks gestation 20 kg/m2), while those from Southampton were the tallest (mean height 164cm) and fattest (mean BMI 27 kg/m2).  There were large differences between mothers in the amount of fat relative to muscle.  Urban Indian mothers were relatively fat while mothers from the Congo, rural India and particularly Jamaica were relatively muscular.

Mother to baby relationships were surprisingly similar across populations, although some effects were stronger in developing countries.  All the maternal variables had important effects on the neonatal measures, particularly maternal birthweight.  ‘Like with like’ relationships were seen consistently for maternal height and neonatal length, maternal and neonatal head, and maternal and neonatal fat.  Maternal muscle effects were relatively weak, except in one dataset (Congo).  After adjusting for the variation in maternal phenotypes across populations, differences in  neonatal phenotypes were reduced but still present.

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Published date: 2003

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 464987
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/464987
PURE UUID: ab3afa95-abfc-4cfc-88d3-4c09f8d5e74d

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Date deposited: 05 Jul 2022 00:15
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 19:52

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Author: Samantha Dawn Leary

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