Prenatal Exposure to Maternal Cigarette Smoke and Offspring Body Mass Index: A Prospective Study of Québec Children

Concern is mounting over the increase in prevalence and severity of overweight and obesity in children worldwide. Intrauterine life has been identified as a critical period for the development of overweight or obesity and other related chronic diseases. Prenatal exposure to maternal cigarette smoke...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Gravel, Jonathan
Language:en
Published: 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10393/20247
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spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-OOU.-en#10393-202472013-01-11T13:33:11ZPrenatal Exposure to Maternal Cigarette Smoke and Offspring Body Mass Index: A Prospective Study of Québec ChildrenGravel, JonathanObesitySmokingBarker HypothesisChildrenQuébecConcern is mounting over the increase in prevalence and severity of overweight and obesity in children worldwide. Intrauterine life has been identified as a critical period for the development of overweight or obesity and other related chronic diseases. Prenatal exposure to maternal cigarette smoke (PEMCS) has consistently emerged as an important risk factor for excess weight in the offspring and is a targetable behaviour for prevention strategies. This study examines first the relationship between PEMCS and overweight status of children at 10 years of age and second, whether PEMCS is associated with distinct longitudinal BMI trajectories. Analyses include multivariate and multinomial logistic regression and longitudinal group based modeling methods. PEMCS was found to be a significant risk factor for overweight in children independent of birth weight and catch-up growth. However, PEMCS was not associated with BMI trajectory membership. Our results lend support to the paradigm of in-utero excess weight prevention.2011-09-28T14:18:20Z2011-09-28T14:18:20Z20112011-09-28Thèse / Thesishttp://hdl.handle.net/10393/20247en
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic Obesity
Smoking
Barker Hypothesis
Children
Québec
spellingShingle Obesity
Smoking
Barker Hypothesis
Children
Québec
Gravel, Jonathan
Prenatal Exposure to Maternal Cigarette Smoke and Offspring Body Mass Index: A Prospective Study of Québec Children
description Concern is mounting over the increase in prevalence and severity of overweight and obesity in children worldwide. Intrauterine life has been identified as a critical period for the development of overweight or obesity and other related chronic diseases. Prenatal exposure to maternal cigarette smoke (PEMCS) has consistently emerged as an important risk factor for excess weight in the offspring and is a targetable behaviour for prevention strategies. This study examines first the relationship between PEMCS and overweight status of children at 10 years of age and second, whether PEMCS is associated with distinct longitudinal BMI trajectories. Analyses include multivariate and multinomial logistic regression and longitudinal group based modeling methods. PEMCS was found to be a significant risk factor for overweight in children independent of birth weight and catch-up growth. However, PEMCS was not associated with BMI trajectory membership. Our results lend support to the paradigm of in-utero excess weight prevention.
author Gravel, Jonathan
author_facet Gravel, Jonathan
author_sort Gravel, Jonathan
title Prenatal Exposure to Maternal Cigarette Smoke and Offspring Body Mass Index: A Prospective Study of Québec Children
title_short Prenatal Exposure to Maternal Cigarette Smoke and Offspring Body Mass Index: A Prospective Study of Québec Children
title_full Prenatal Exposure to Maternal Cigarette Smoke and Offspring Body Mass Index: A Prospective Study of Québec Children
title_fullStr Prenatal Exposure to Maternal Cigarette Smoke and Offspring Body Mass Index: A Prospective Study of Québec Children
title_full_unstemmed Prenatal Exposure to Maternal Cigarette Smoke and Offspring Body Mass Index: A Prospective Study of Québec Children
title_sort prenatal exposure to maternal cigarette smoke and offspring body mass index: a prospective study of québec children
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/10393/20247
work_keys_str_mv AT graveljonathan prenatalexposuretomaternalcigarettesmokeandoffspringbodymassindexaprospectivestudyofquebecchildren
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