Affiliation:
1. UCL Great Ormond Street Institute of Child Health , 30 Guilford Street , London WC1N 1EH, UK
2. Department of Radiology, Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children , Great Ormond Street , London WC1N 3JH, UK
Abstract
Abstract
Background and objectives
Several studies have linked longer legs with favorable adult metabolic health outcomes and greater offspring birth weight. A recent Mendelian randomization study suggested a causal link between height and cardiometabolic risk; however, the underlying reasons remain poorly understood.
Methodology
Using a cross-sectional design, we tested in a convenience sample of 70 healthy young women whether birth weight and tibia length as markers of early-life conditions associated more strongly with metabolically beneficial traits like organ size and skeletal muscle mass (SMM) than a statistically derived height-residual variable indexing later, more canalized growth.
Results
Consistent with the ‘developmental origins of health and disease’ hypothesis, we found relatively strong associations of tibia length—but not birth weight—with adult organ size, brain size, SMM and resting energy expenditure measured by magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry and indirect calorimetry, respectively.
Conclusions and implications
Building on prior work, these results suggest that leg length is a sensitive marker of traits directly impacting metabolic and reproductive health. Alongside findings in the same sample relating tibia length and height-residual to MRI-measured pelvic dimensions, we suggest there may exist a degree of coordination in the development of long bone, lean mass and pelvic traits, possibly centered on early, pre-pubertal growth periods. Such phenotypic coordination has important implications for fitness, serving to benefit both adult health and the health of offspring in subsequent generations.
Funder
National Institute for Health Research
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Subject
Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics,Medicine (miscellaneous)
Reference50 articles.
1. Associations of components of adult height with coronary heart disease in postmenopausal women: The British women’s heart and health study;Lawlor;Heart,2004
2. Leg length, insulin resistance, and coronary heart disease risk: The Caerphilly Study;Smith;J Epidemiol Community Health,2001
3. Adult height and the risk of cause-specific death and vascular morbidity in 1 million people: individual participant meta-analysis;Emerging Risk Factors Collaboration;Int J Epidemiol,2012
4. Short leg length, a marker of early childhood deprivation, is associated with metabolic disorders underlying type 2 diabetes: The PROMISE cohort study;Johnston;Diabetes Care,2013
5. Adult height, coronary heart disease and stroke: A multi-locus Mendelian randomization meta-analysis;Nüesch;Int J Epidemiol,2016
Cited by
6 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