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Release Date: 00:01 on Monday 20 November UK Time
Contact: Dr. Tessa Roseboom
+31 20 566
4489
t.j.roseboom@amc.uva.nl
Children Born to Mothers Who Go Hungry During Early Pregnancy
Run Greater Risk of Heart Disease as Adults
[Coronary heart disease after prenatal exposure to the Dutch famine, 1944-45] Heart,
2000; 84:595-8.
Children born to mothers who go hungry during early pregnancy are at increased risk of
heart disease as adults, finds a study in Heart.
The evidence comes from the Dutch famine of 1944-45, which occurred when the Allied
forces failed to take hold of the bridge spanning the Rhine at Arnhem. At the height of
the famine, adults in Amsterdam were on rations as low as 400 kilocalories a day.
The researchers examined over 700 fifty year olds who had been born between November
1943 and February 1947 in a university hospital in Amsterdam. They also looked back at the
birth records.
Twenty-four -- just over 3 per cent -- had coronary heart disease. At birth they had
tended to weigh below average, to have had smaller head size, and to have had lighter
mothers than those people without heart disease. As adults they also had higher blood
pressure, weighed more, and a higher adverse cholesterol profile.
But people whose mothers starved during the first 13 weeks of pregnancy were three
times as likely to have heart disease as those who had not been conceived during the
famine. This effect was not seen for those whose mothers were starved during mid or late
pregnancy.
The authors conclude that not only does an "adverse fetal environment contribute
to several aspects of cardiovascular risk in adult life, but that the effects depend on
its timing during gestation."
Contact: Dr. Tessa Roseboom, Department of Clinical Epidemiology and Biostatistics,
University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands Tel: +31 20 566 4489 Fax: +31 20 691 2683 e-mail: t.j.roseboom@amc.uva.nl
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