Pregnancy weight predict kids' weight as teens
Women who gain too much weight during pregnancy may not only have bigger babies, but bigger teenagers as well, a study suggests. Researchers at Harvard Medical School found that among nearly 12,000 children and teenagers they studied, those whose...
Women who gain too much weight during pregnancy may not only have bigger babies, but bigger teenagers as well, a study suggests.
Researchers at Harvard Medical School found that among nearly 12,000 children and teenagers they studied, those whose mothers gained more than the recommended amount of weight during pregnancy were 42 per cent more likely to be obese.
The risk was independent of other factors the researchers examined, including mothers' pre-pregnancy weight, family income and parents' education.
Some past studies have linked excessive weight gain during pregnancy to a higher risk of obesity in childhood. These latest findings add to evidence that the foetal environment may have a "sustained effect" on children's weight regulation, Dr Emily Oken and colleagues report in the journal Obstetrics & Gynaecology.
For women, they say, the study underscores the importance of going into pregnancy at a healthy weight, and then gaining only the recommended amount.
In the US, the Institute of Medicine (IOM) suggests that normal-weight women gain 11 to 15 kilos during pregnancy. Women who were overweight before becoming pregnant are encouraged to gain a little less -- six to 11 kilos -- while underweight women should put on 13 to 18 kilos.
The current study included 11,994 children between 9 and 14-years olds whose mothers were part of the Nurses Health Study II, a long-range health study of female nurses from across the US. The researchers found that 6.5 percent of the children were obese.
Dr Oken's team found that when mothers exceeded the IOM guidelines for pregnancy weight gain, their children's weight also tended to climb.
Compared with their peers whose mothers followed the IOM guidelines, those whose mothers gained too much weight were 42 per cent more likely to be obese by the time they were nine to 14 years old.
Researchers suspect that excess pregnancy weight may affect foetal development in a way that makes children more susceptible to excessive weight gain.
Animal research has found that overeating during pregnancy alters the expression of genes involved in fat regulation in offspring, and seems to affect the appetite-control centres of their brains as well.
Reuters Health
Source: Obstetrics & Gynaecology, November 2008.