Affiliation:
1. Department of Global Public Health Karolinska Institutet Stockholm Sweden
2. Department of Nursing Umeå University Umeå Sweden
3. PROFITH “PROmoting FITness and Health through physical activity” research group Department of Physical Education and Sports Faculty of Sport Sciences University of Granada Spain
4. Department of Biosciences and Nutrition Karolinska Institutet Stockholm Sweden
5. Centre for Epidemiology and Community Medicine Region Stockholm Stockholm Sweden
Abstract
Background
Preterm delivery and low birth weight are prospectively associated with low cardiorespiratory fitness (
CRF
). However, whether birth weight, within the at‐term range, is associated with later
CRF
is largely unknown. Thus, the aim of the current study was to examine this issue and whether such association, if any, is explained by shared and/or nonshared familial factors.
Methods and Results
We conducted a prospective cohort study, including 286 761 young male adults and a subset of 52 544 siblings born at‐term. Objectively measured data were retrieved from total population registers.
CRF
was tested at conscription and defined as the maximal load obtained on a cycle ergometer. We used linear and nonlinear and fixed‐effects regression analyses to explore associations between birth weight and
CRF
. Higher birth weight, within the at‐term range, was strongly associated with increasing
CRF
in a linear fashion. Each
SD
increase in birth weight was associated with an increase of 7.9 (95%
CI
, 7.8–8.1) and 6.6 (95%
CI
; 5.9–7.3) Wmax in the total and sibling cohorts, respectively. The association did not vary with young adulthood body mass index.
Conclusions
Birth weight is strongly associated with increasing
CRF
in young adulthood among men born at‐term, across all categories of body mass index. This association appears to be mainly driven by factors that are not shared between siblings. Hence,
CRF
may to some extent be determined already in utero. Prevention of low birth weight, also within the at‐term‐range, can be a feasible mean of increasing adult
CRF
and health.
Publisher
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
Subject
Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine
Cited by
12 articles.
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