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      The Developmental Origins of Adult Disease

      Journal of the American College of Nutrition
      Informa UK Limited

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          Abstract

          Low birthweight is now known to be associated with increased rates of coronary heart disease and the related disorders stroke, hypertension and non-insulin dependent diabetes. These associations have been extensively replicated in studies in different countries and are not the result of confounding variables. They extend across the normal range of birthweight and depend on lower birthweights in relation to the duration of gestation rather than the effects of premature birth. The associations are thought to be consequences of developmental plasticity, the phenomenon by which one genotype can give rise to a range of different physiological or morphological states in response to different environmental conditions during development. Recent observations have shown that impaired growth in infancy and rapid childhood weight gain exacerbate the effects of impaired prenatal growth. A new vision of optimal early human development is emerging which takes account of both short and long-term outcomes.

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          Most cited references40

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          Phenotypic Plasticity and the Origins of Diversity

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            Nephron number in patients with primary hypertension.

            A diminished number of nephrons has been proposed as one of the factors contributing to the development of primary hypertension. To test this hypothesis, we used a three-dimensional stereologic method to compare the number and volume of glomeruli in 10 middle-aged white patients (age range, 35 to 59 years) with a history of primary hypertension or left ventricular hypertrophy (or both) and renal arteriolar lesions with the number and volume in 10 normotensive subjects matched for sex, age, height, and weight. All 20 subjects had died in accidents. Patients with hypertension had significantly fewer glomeruli per kidney than matched normotensive controls (median, 702,379 vs. 1,429,200). Patients with hypertension also had a significantly greater glomerular volume than did the controls (median, 6.50x10(-3) mm3 vs. 2.79x10(-3) mm3; P<0.001) but very few obsolescent glomeruli. The data support the hypothesis that the number of nephrons is reduced in white patients with primary hypertension. Copyright 2003 Massachusetts Medical Society
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              Fetal origins of coronary heart disease

              D Barker (1995)

                Author and article information

                Journal
                Journal of the American College of Nutrition
                Journal of the American College of Nutrition
                Informa UK Limited
                0731-5724
                1541-1087
                December 2004
                December 2004
                : 23
                : sup6
                : 588S-595S
                Article
                10.1080/07315724.2004.10719428
                15640511
                23bc25c0-ed3f-4b71-99b3-f565297e07c0
                © 2004
                History

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