Saturday 23 February 2019

Childhood obesity starts in the womb?

The environmental pollutants which may also interfere with the fetal growth and influence health later, maternal exposure to especially traffic pollutants like as nitrogen dioxide, which can lead to babies being born with low birth weight may predispose the child to ill health to infant and adulthood.


Gestational diabetes
Gestational diabetes only happens during pregnancy. It means high blood sugar levels, but those levels were normal before pregnant. Sometimes after the baby is born, gestational diabetes usually goes away. Gestational diabetes makes more likely to develop type 2 diabetes, but it won’t definitely happen.
During pregnancy, the placenta makes hormones which can lead to a build-up of glucose in the blood. Usually, the pancreas can make enough insulin to metabolize. If not, the blood sugar levels in the blood will rise and can cause gestational diabetes. 


In any case, there are more deceptive impacts which aren't instantly known. There is an expanding theory that proves that the mothers eat less, weight and weight pick up in pregnancy, and complications of pregnancy such as gestational diabetes and preeclampsia can all affect the health of the child to be born. This happens in the longer term and to be a really imperative determinant of the risk of common infections like obesity and diabetes in later life.
In the last 20 or 30 years, researchers have followed up that the children born to those mothers and found that the experience of famine in utero was associated with quite significant defects on the health of the child such as increased obesity which in turn increases the risk of cardiovascular disease and abnormal blood lipids.
The emphases have now changed from the developed countries and are more likely recently to developing countries too, to the effects of maternal obesity, which is remarkably prevalent in the population. Any high-income country or a developed country now has the biggest man-made problem known as obesity. Those geographical reasons which are now showing the greatest rise obesity are those which historically have been undernourished or have suffered feminine. Countries like South Africa, for example, now have a new growing problem called maternal obesity, as the region transitions from dietary deprivation to dietary plenty.
Researchers have therefore been looking at the relationship between maternal obesity, the weight the mother puts on in pregnancy which leads risks to the child. The first thing to be noted is that there is an immediate and very obvious risk to the obese mother in relation to a heightened chance of developing diabetes in pregnancy. In turn, this can lead to a child being born too large or heavy.
Large for gestational age infants, as these babies are also known to have problems at delivery in that there a higher risk of the mother might not be being able to deliver the baby vaginally, with a greater chance for a cesarean section, and a higher risk of damage during delivery and of stillbirth and various other problems.
Babies that are born too large tend to become overweight adults and suffer from Obesity. There is a close association of adiposity at birth, that's the amount of fat, and adiposity in later childhood.
Children who are overweight at nursery school age tend to become obese adolescents, and obese adolescents have a higher risk of obesity in adulthood which leads to a variety of health conditions. Increasing evidence, therefore, suggests that being developed in the womb in the face of maternal obesity and maternal diabetes, the unborn has to experience a persistent effect of obesity and diabetes.
The mother is feeding the child the same diet as she might feed herself, so of course that's going to be the case, but the statisticians have adjusted for many of those socioeconomic and family environment factors, and still find that there is a relationship between development in utero in relation to obesity and excessive maternal weight gain and gestational diabetes in turn leading to the risk of obesity and diabetes developed in the offspring.
According to the few recent studies that mean the utero environment can definitely lead to obesity in the child, observational, longitudinal studies like these can never really conclusively recommend causality.

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