Children who were small in the first trimester of pregnancy had more risk factors for heart disease at age 6.
A study published in the BMJ has linked poor growth in the first 3 months (the first trimester)
of pregnancy with poor heart health later in life.
The
rate of human development is highest during the first trimester of pregnancy,
and this is when the cardiovascular and metabolic organs form.
The growth of the fetus in this time is influenced by many
factors, including the age of the mother and whether she smokes, ethnicity and blood pressure. Various health problems can be
indicated by the size of a fetus during its first trimester.
Although studies have previously found a link between low birth
weight and risk of heart problems, researchers have not known until now whether
there is a link between small size in the first trimester and heart
disease later in
life.
Risk factors for heart disease
Researchers
in the Netherlands studied 1,184 children, dividing them into groups based on
the size they had been during the first trimester of pregnancy.
At the age of 6, the children were examined for risk factors for
heart disease. This involved checking the body mass index (BMI), body fat
distribution, blood pressure, cholesterol levels
and insulin concentrations of the children.
The researchers found that the
children who had been the smallest as fetuses had significantly greater risk
factors for heart disease than children who had been larger as fetuses in the
first trimester. The children who had been smaller in the first trimester had
greater fat mass and higher blood pressure and cholesterol.
Low
birth weight and small size in early pregnancy are not the cause of future
heart problems in themselves, but they are symptoms of factors that adversely
affect fetal development during pregnancy.
Scientists still do not know much about how problems affecting
fetal growth can lead to heart disease, so more ultrasoundstudies
looking at the first trimester are needed.
The study's authors say that, although heart disease may partly
originate in factors influencing first trimester development, there could also
be contributing factors from the mother in the pre-conception period, such as undernutrition, anemia or smoking.
More studies are needed to confirm the findings
Although
this study shows that the first trimester is an important period for
cardiovascular and metabolic development, it is important to remember that a
fetus that is small in the first trimester will not necessarily grow to have
heart problems in later life. In fact, the risk factors that the researchers
observed in the 6-year-old children were small, and none of the children had
heart disease.
The
authors of the study acknowledge that some of their results may have arisen by
chance. In the study's conclusion, the researchers state that "the large
number of statistical tests that we did may have led to false positive
associations."
And
some of the pregnancies may have been incorrectly classified, because it was
difficult to be accurate about how old the fetuses were when they were
measured.
Prof. Vincent WV Jaddoe, who co-authored the study, told Medical News Today:
"The first few months of pregnancy are a
critical stage in a baby's development, and this study suggests that fetal
growth within this time may influence their heart health later in life.
However, as the researchers acknowledge
themselves, further studies are needed to understand why this pattern exists
and what it might mean for preventing heart disease."
The BHF recommend that "if you are
pregnant, or planning a family, you should be thinking about your baby's heart
health as well as your own." This includes taking steps to quit smoking, for
women who smoke, and keeping a check on blood pressure.
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