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A principal components approach to parent-to-newborn body composition associations in South India

Title: A principal components approach to parent-to-newborn body composition associations in South India
Authors: Veena, SR; Krishnaveni, GV; Wills, AK; Hill, JC; Fall, CHD
Source: BMC Pediatrics , 9 , Article 16. (2009)
Publisher Information: BIOMED CENTRAL LTD
Publication Year: 2009
Collection: University College London: UCL Discovery
Subject Terms: PUNE MATERNAL NUTRITION; BRITISH WOMENS HEART; BIRTH-WEIGHT; GLUCOSE-TOLERANCE; LEG LENGTH; NEONATAL ANTHROPOMETRY; CARDIOVASCULAR-DISEASE; INSULIN-RESISTANCE; DIABETES-MELLITUS; FETAL-GROWTH
Description: Background: Size at birth is influenced by environmental factors, like maternal nutrition and parity, and by genes. Birth weight is a composite measure, encompassing bone, fat and lean mass. These may have different determinants. The main purpose of this paper was to use anthropometry and principal components analysis (PCA) to describe maternal and newborn body composition, and associations between them, in an Indian population. We also compared maternal and paternal measurements (body mass index (BMI) and height) as predictors of newborn body composition.Methods: Weight, height, head and mid-arm circumferences, skinfold thicknesses and external pelvic diameters were measured at 30 +/- 2 weeks gestation in 571 pregnant women attending the antenatal clinic of the Holdsworth Memorial Hospital, Mysore, India. Paternal height and weight were also measured. At birth, detailed neonatal anthropometry was performed. Unrotated and varimax rotated PCA was applied to the maternal and neonatal measurements.Results: Rotated PCA reduced maternal measurements to 4 independent components (fat, pelvis, height and muscle) and neonatal measurements to 3 components (trunk+head, fat, and leg length). An SD increase in maternal fat was associated with a 0.16 SD increase (beta) in neonatal fat (p < 0.001, adjusted for gestation, maternal parity, newborn sex and socio-economic status). Maternal pelvis, height and (for male babies) muscle predicted neonatal trunk+head (beta = 0.09 SD; p = 0.017, = 0.12 SD; p = 0.006 and beta = 0.27 SD; p < 0.001). In the mother-baby and father-baby comparison, maternal BMI predicted neonatal fat (beta = 0.20 SD; p < 0.001) and neonatal trunk+head (beta = 0.15 SD; p = 0.001). Both maternal (beta = 0.12 SD; p = 0.002) and paternal height (beta = 0.09 SD; p = 0.030) predicted neonatal trunk+head but the associations became weak and statistically non-significant in multivariate analysis. Only paternal height predicted neonatal leg length (beta = 0.15 SD; p = 0.003).Conclusion: Principal components ...
Document Type: article in journal/newspaper
File Description: application/pdf
Language: English
Relation: https://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/id/eprint/1306189/
Availability: https://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/id/eprint/1306189/1/1471-2431-9-16.pdf; https://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/id/eprint/1306189/
Rights: open
Accession Number: edsbas.1F1CA087
Database: BASE