Affiliation:
1. Medical Research Council Epidemiology Resource Centre (N.C.H., M.K.J., J.R.P., S.M.R., H.M.I., K.M.G., C.C., E.M.D.), Southampton General Hospital, Southampton. SO16 6YD, United Kingdom
2. University of Southampton, and Medical Physics and Bioengineering (P.T.), Southampton General Hospital, Southampton. SO16 6YD, United Kingdom
Abstract
Abstract
Background: We have previously demonstrated that maternal body build and lifestyle factors predict neonatal bone mineral accrual. However, the paternal determinants of neonatal bone mass are not known. In this study we explored the relationship between a father’s bone mass and that of his offspring.
Methods: A total of 278 pregnancies (142 male and 136 female neonates) were recruited from the Southampton Women’s Survey, a unique, well-established cohort of women, aged 20–34 yr, who had been assessed before and during pregnancy. The neonates and their fathers underwent whole body dual-x-ray absorptiometry (DXA) within 2 wk of birth using a Lunar DPX (General Electric Corp., Madison, WI) and Hologic Discovery instrument (Hologic Inc., Bedford, MA), respectively; correlation and regression methods were used to explore the parental determinants of neonatal bone mass.
Results: After adjusting the paternal DXA indices for father’s age and the neonatal for baby’s gestational age and age at DXA scan, there were highly significant positive associations between baby’s whole body bone area, bone mineral content, and bone mineral density and the corresponding indices in the father (P = 0.003, 0.0002, 0.046, respectively) among female infants. These relationships were independent of maternal height and fat stores. The associations for male infants with paternal DXA indices did not achieve statistical significance.
Conclusions: The father’s skeletal size predicts skeletal size more strongly in female than male offspring, independently of the mother’s body build. These data point toward the importance of considering paternal genotype in studies exploring the developmental origins of osteoporotic fracture and raise intriguing mechanistic questions about the gender specificity of influences on intrauterine bone mineral accrual.
Subject
Biochemistry, medical,Clinical Biochemistry,Endocrinology,Biochemistry,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism
Reference26 articles.
1. A theoretical analysis of the relative influences of peak BMD, age-related bone loss and menopause on the development of osteoporosis.;Hernandez;Osteoporos Int,2003
2. Childhood growth, physical activity, and peak bone mass in women.;Cooper;J Bone Miner Res,1995
3. Birth weight and weight at 1 year are independent determinants of bone mass in the seventh decade: the Hertfordshire cohort study.;Dennison;Pediatr Res,2005
4. Maternal height, childhood growth and risk of hip fracture in later life: a longitudinal study.;Cooper;Osteoporos Int,2001
5. Neonatal bone mass: influence of parental birthweight, maternal smoking, body composition, and activity during pregnancy.;Godfrey;J Bone Miner Res,2001
Cited by
52 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献