13.07.2015 Views

Early Life Nutrition and Lifelong Health - Derbyshire Local Medical ...

Early Life Nutrition and Lifelong Health - Derbyshire Local Medical ...

Early Life Nutrition and Lifelong Health - Derbyshire Local Medical ...

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles

YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.

BMA Board of Science47. Osmond C, Barker DJP, Winter PD et al (1993) <strong>Early</strong> growth <strong>and</strong> death from cardiovasculardisease in women. British <strong>Medical</strong> Journal 307: 1519-24.48. Barker DJP, Osmond C, Forsen TJ et al (2005) Trajectories of growth among children whohave coronary events as adults. New Engl<strong>and</strong> Journal of Medicine 353: 1802-9.49. Eriksson JG, Forsen T, Tuomilehto HJ et al (2001) <strong>Early</strong> growth <strong>and</strong> coronary heart disease inlater life: longitudinal study. British <strong>Medical</strong> Journal 322: 949-53.50. Gluckman PD, Hanson MA, Spencer HG et al (2005) Environmental influences duringdevelopment <strong>and</strong> their later consequences for health <strong>and</strong> disease: implications for theinterpretation of empirical studies. Proceedings of the Royal Society 272: 671-7.51. Koupilova I, Leon DA, McKeigue PM et al (1999) Is the effect of birth weight oncardiovascular mortality mediated through high blood pressure? Journal of Hypertension17: 19-25.52. Rich-Edwards J, Stampfer MJ, Manson JE et al (1997) Birth weight <strong>and</strong> risk of cardiovasculardisease in a cohort of women followed up since 1976. British <strong>Medical</strong> Journal 315: 396-400.53. Kajantie E, Osmond C, Barker D et al (2005) Size at birth as a predictor of mortality inadulthood: a follow-up study of 350,000 person-years. International Journal ofEpidemiology 34: 655-63.54. Lawlor DA, Ronalds G & Clark H (2005) Birth weight is inversely associated with incidentcoronary heart disease <strong>and</strong> stroke among individuals born in the 1950s: findings from theAberdeen Children of the 1950s prospective cohort study. Circulation 112: 1414-8.55. Bergvall N, Iliadou A, Tuvemo T et al (2005) Birth characteristics <strong>and</strong> risk of high systolicblood pressure in early adulthood: socio-economic factors <strong>and</strong> familial effects. Epidemiology16: 635-40.56. Vasan RS, Pencine MJ, Cobain M et al (2005) Estimated risks for developing obesity in theFramingham Study. Annals of Internal Medicine 143: 473-80.57. Gamborg M, Byberg L, Rasmussen F et al (2007) Birth weight <strong>and</strong> systolic blood pressure inadolescence <strong>and</strong> adulthood: meta-regression <strong>and</strong> analysis of sex- <strong>and</strong> age-specific resultsfrom 20 Nordic studies. American Journal of Epidemiology 166: 634-45.58. Hardy R, Wadsworth ME, Langenberg C et al (2004) Birth weight, childhood growth <strong>and</strong>blood pressure at 43 years in a British birth cohort. International Journal of Epidemiology33: 121-9.59. Newsome CA, Shiell AW, Fall CHD et al (2003) Is birth weight related to later glucose <strong>and</strong>insulin metabolism? – A systematic review. Diabetic Medicine 20: 339-48.60. Kensara OA, Wootton SA, Phillips DI et al (2005) Fetal programming of body composition:relation between birth weight <strong>and</strong> body composition measured with dual-energy x-rayabsorptiometry <strong>and</strong> anthropometric methods in older Englishmen. American Journal ofClinical <strong>Nutrition</strong> 82: 980-7.61. Bertram CE & Hanson MA (2001) Animal models <strong>and</strong> programming of the metabolicsyndrome. British <strong>Medical</strong> Bulletin 60: 103-21.62. McMillen IC & Robinson JS (2005) Developmental origins of the metabolic syndrome:prediction, plasticity, <strong>and</strong> programming. Physiological Reviews 85: 571-633.63. Armitage J, Taylor P & Poston L (2005) Experimental models of developmentalprogramming; consequences of exposure to an energy rich diet during development.Journal of Physiology 565: 3-8.64. Bayol SA, Farrington SJ & Stickl<strong>and</strong> NC (2007) A maternal ‘junk food’ diet in pregnancy <strong>and</strong>lactation promotes an exacerbated taste for junk food <strong>and</strong> a greater propensity for obesityin rat offspring. British Journal of <strong>Nutrition</strong> 98: 843-51.65. Samuelsson A-M, Matthews PA, Argenton M et al (2008) Diet induced obesity in femalemice leads to offspring hyperphagia, adiposity, hypertension <strong>and</strong> insulin resistance: a novelmurine model of developmental programming. Hypertension 51: 383-92.<strong>Early</strong> life nutrition <strong>and</strong> lifelong health 79

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!