4.6 Article

Parental physical and lifestyle factors and their association with newborn body composition

Journal

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/1471-0528.14042

Keywords

Body fat composition; lifestyle determinants; newborn body composition; smoking

Funding

  1. Science Foundation Ireland [12/RC/2272]
  2. Health Research Board, Ireland [CSA 2007/2]
  3. National Children's Research Centre, Dublin, Ireland
  4. Food Standards Agency of the United Kingdom [TO7060]
  5. National Institute for Health Research [CL-2010-17-007] Funding Source: researchfish

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ObjectiveTo investigate the parental physical and lifestyle determinants of newborn body composition. DesignProspective cohort study. SettingCork University Maternity Hospital, a tertiary referral hospital in Cork, Ireland. PopulationAll babies were recruited as part of a prospective birth cohort, Babies After SCOPE: Evaluating the Longitudinal Impact Using Neurological and Nutritional Endpoints (BASELINE). These babies were recruited from women who had participated in the Screening of Pregnancy Endpoints (SCOPE) study Ireland, a prospective, multicentre cohort study MethodsMultivariate linear regression was used to analyse the effect of a range of maternal and paternal physical and lifestyle features on neonatal body fat percentage (BF%). Main outcome measuresNeonatal BF%. Neonatal adiposity was assessed within 48hours of birth using air displacement plethysmography (PEAPOD((R))). ResultsIn all, 1243 infants were enrolled in the study. Increasing maternal body mass index (adjusted mean difference 0.09; 0.04, 0.15) and waist height ratio (adjusted mean difference 6.59; 0.27, 12.92) were significantly associated with increased neonatal BF%. In contrast, maternal smoking was associated with reduced neonatal BF% compared with non smokers (adjusted mean difference -0.55; -1.07, -0.03). Infant sex significantly altered neonatal BF%, with female infants having higher neonatal BF% compared with male infants (adjusted mean difference 1.98; 1.54, 2.53). No association was observed between paternal body mass index (BMI), paternal age or paternal smoking and neonatal BF%. ConclusionsMaternal smoking, BMI, waist height ratio and infant sex were associated with altered BF%. Tweetable abstractMaternal smoking, BMI, waist height ratio and infant sex are associated with altered neonatal body fat percentage. Tweetable abstract Maternal smoking, BMI, waist height ratio and infant sex are associated with altered neonatal body fat percentage.

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