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Mother's Puberty Can Help
Predict Obesity Of Children
The age at which a woman had her
first period can help predict her children's risk of obesity,
say UK researchers.
A study of 6,000 children found those born to
mothers with an early puberty were more likely to grow rapidly
as babies and be overweight as children.
This faster growth pattern is also linked to
obesity in adulthood.
The findings could help identify children at
risk of weight problems early on, the Public Library of Science
Medicine (PLOS) report concludes.
It is already known that age at which a girl
has her first period - or reaches "menarche" - is largely inherited.
And women who start their periods early are at
increased risk of obesity in later life, and are likely to be
overweight even before puberty.
In the latest study, mothers who began their
periods before age 11 were five times more likely to be obese
than mothers who had their first period after the age of 15.
Children of mothers who had early first periods
were taller by the age of nine and weighed more. Girls were also
more likely to start their periods before the age of 11.
Those whose mothers had their first period under
the age of 11 were three times more likely to be obese than those
who started their periods after the age of 15.
The researchers also looked in more detail at
growth measurements from birth to nine years in 900 children,
and found that mothers' age at first period was associated with
faster growth in weight and height in children up until the age
of two years.
Children who have a fast growth pattern tend
to start puberty earlier, but stop growing sooner - so they may
not be particularly tall as adults.
Lifelong pattern
Lead researcher Dr Ken Ong, paediatric endocrinologist
at the Medical Research Council Epidemiology Unit at Cambridge
University, said it was now clear that this growth pattern starts
at birth.
"Beyond links to early puberty, most importantly
this growth pattern appears to lead to an increased risk of obesity
that lasts from childhood through to adult life."
He added there could be a genetic link - perhaps
related to appetite - or that the findings may be explained by
feeding behaviours or patterns that run in families.
"Knowing that rapid infancy weight gain, early
puberty and obesity run together in families may help us identify
which children to best target our efforts at right from birth."
He added that parents should be encouraged to
breastfeed rather than bottle-feed.
The team are also beginning a study to look at
trying to avoid excessive calorie consumption in babies who are
formula fed.
Dr Tabitha Randell, consultant paediatric endocrinologist
at University Hospital Nottingham, said the big point was that
heavier mothers had heavier children.
"Age at menarche is strongly related to your
weight and it's well recognised that it's getting earlier and
earlier."
But she said that environmental factors were
just as important as genetics.
"It would be very interesting to have a look
at the effect of breastfeeding.
"It sets up feeding patterns. You lay down your
number of fat cells in the first couple of years of life," she
said.
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