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Developmental origins of midlife physical performance: evidence from a British birth cohort

Developmental origins of midlife physical performance: evidence from a British birth cohort
Developmental origins of midlife physical performance: evidence from a British birth cohort
The authors hypothesized that 1) physical growth, as a marker of the early development of muscle fibers, and 2) advanced childhood motor and cognitive abilities, as markers of central nervous system development, would be positively related to midlife standing balance and chair rising, independently of later life experiences. They tested these hypotheses in a representative British sample of 1,374 men and 1,410 women aged 53 years in 1999 with prospective childhood measures of heights and weights, age at first standing and walking, cognitive ability, and motor coordination. Weight gain before age 7 years was positively related to adult performance in men but not women, independently of later body size, social class, physical activity, and health status. Attainment of motor milestones at the modal age and higher scores on tests of cognitive ability and motor coordination were associated with better performance, independently of other factors. This study is the first to show that childhood growth and development affect midlife performance; prevention of disability and frailty in later life may need to start early
humans, muscles, body size, body height, social class, body weight, preschool, weight, disability, origins, weight gain, health status, men, developmental origins, great britain, prospective studies, activity, child, middle aged, female, birth, cohort, growth, newborn, walking, male, balance, infant, musculoskeletal equilibrium, child development, muscle, women, physiology, birth weight, height, cognition, psychomotor performance, childhood, adult, later life, adolescent, development, size, health, aged
0002-9262
110-121
Kuh, D.
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Hardy, R.
b3f0f66e-4cda-4e9a-aca1-955f7ecdd132
Butterworth, S.
2d52e428-0644-46c6-b31b-b89e509a08aa
Okell, L.
95509d0f-d0a9-4654-9ecc-a352cab1bc1c
Richards, M.
d76b0506-723e-4ed8-9fbc-a522f515e797
Wadsworth, M.
999169a5-826c-4444-b1a9-2a1d06865020
Cooper, C.
e05f5612-b493-4273-9b71-9e0ce32bdad6
Sayer, A.A.
fb4c2053-6d51-4fc1-9489-c3cb431b0ffb
Kuh, D.
6c5d95a4-433d-4895-bd95-86a7d5fe76a5
Hardy, R.
b3f0f66e-4cda-4e9a-aca1-955f7ecdd132
Butterworth, S.
2d52e428-0644-46c6-b31b-b89e509a08aa
Okell, L.
95509d0f-d0a9-4654-9ecc-a352cab1bc1c
Richards, M.
d76b0506-723e-4ed8-9fbc-a522f515e797
Wadsworth, M.
999169a5-826c-4444-b1a9-2a1d06865020
Cooper, C.
e05f5612-b493-4273-9b71-9e0ce32bdad6
Sayer, A.A.
fb4c2053-6d51-4fc1-9489-c3cb431b0ffb

Kuh, D., Hardy, R., Butterworth, S., Okell, L., Richards, M., Wadsworth, M., Cooper, C. and Sayer, A.A. (2006) Developmental origins of midlife physical performance: evidence from a British birth cohort. American Journal of Epidemiology, 164, 110-121. (doi:10.1093/aje/kwj193).

Record type: Article

Abstract

The authors hypothesized that 1) physical growth, as a marker of the early development of muscle fibers, and 2) advanced childhood motor and cognitive abilities, as markers of central nervous system development, would be positively related to midlife standing balance and chair rising, independently of later life experiences. They tested these hypotheses in a representative British sample of 1,374 men and 1,410 women aged 53 years in 1999 with prospective childhood measures of heights and weights, age at first standing and walking, cognitive ability, and motor coordination. Weight gain before age 7 years was positively related to adult performance in men but not women, independently of later body size, social class, physical activity, and health status. Attainment of motor milestones at the modal age and higher scores on tests of cognitive ability and motor coordination were associated with better performance, independently of other factors. This study is the first to show that childhood growth and development affect midlife performance; prevention of disability and frailty in later life may need to start early

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More information

Published date: 2006
Keywords: humans, muscles, body size, body height, social class, body weight, preschool, weight, disability, origins, weight gain, health status, men, developmental origins, great britain, prospective studies, activity, child, middle aged, female, birth, cohort, growth, newborn, walking, male, balance, infant, musculoskeletal equilibrium, child development, muscle, women, physiology, birth weight, height, cognition, psychomotor performance, childhood, adult, later life, adolescent, development, size, health, aged

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 61303
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/61303
ISSN: 0002-9262
PURE UUID: aa6ca9bc-1113-4d6b-a9ed-e74af250cc75
ORCID for C. Cooper: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-3510-0709

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Date deposited: 02 Sep 2008
Last modified: 18 Mar 2024 02:44

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Contributors

Author: D. Kuh
Author: R. Hardy
Author: S. Butterworth
Author: L. Okell
Author: M. Richards
Author: M. Wadsworth
Author: C. Cooper ORCID iD
Author: A.A. Sayer

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