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Intergenerational Cardiovascular Disease Risk Factors Involve Both Maternal and Paternal BMI
Authors:Idoia Labayen  Jonatan R. Ruiz  Francisco B. Ortega  Helle-Mai Loit  Jaanus Harro  Toomas Veidebaum  Michael Sj?str?m
Abstract:

OBJECTIVE

To examine the association between parental BMI and offspring cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk factors.

RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS

The study comprised 940 children (9.5 ± 0.4 years) and 873 adolescents (15.5 ± 0.5 years). Parental weight and height were reported by the mother and the father, and BMI was calculated. CVD risk factors included total (sum of five skinfolds) and central (waist circumference) body fat, blood pressure, cardiorespiratory fitness, insulin sensitivity, total cholesterol, HDL cholesterol, triglycerides, and fibrinogen.

RESULTS

Maternal and paternal BMI were positively associated with total and central fatness in offspring (P < 0.001). BMIs of both parents were significantly related to fibrinogen levels (P < 0.02), but these associations disappeared when controlling for fatness. There was a positive relationship between maternal and paternal BMI and waist circumference in the offspring regardless of total adiposity and height (P < 0.001). Maternal BMI was negatively associated with offspring cardiorespiratory fitness independently of fatness (P < 0.02). These relationships persisted when overweight descendants were excluded from the analysis. There were no significant associations between parental BMI and the other CVD risk factors.

CONCLUSIONS

Both maternal and paternal BMI increase CVD risk factors of their offspring, characterized by total and central body fat, and higher maternal BMI was associated with poorer cardiorespiratory fitness. Our findings give further support to the concept that adiposity in parents transmits susceptibility to CVD risk to descendants, which is detectable even in the absence of overweight in offspring.Parental obesity substantially increases the risk of obesity in offspring through genetic, biological, or environmental influences (1). The fetal overnutrition hypothesis suggests that maternal obesity and/or gestational diabetes may predispose offspring to increased adiposity in adulthood (2). Human studies showed a greater influence of maternal than paternal BMI on offspring adiposity (3,4). In contrast, others suggested that the contribution of the mother and the father on both prenatal and postnatal programming of intergenerational obesity may be similar according to the genomic imprinting (5).Most of the studies focused on the relationships of maternal and paternal BMI with their offspring BMI provided contradictory results (3,6,7), and only one study compared the association of maternal and paternal BMI with total body fat in the offspring (8). Whether the parental BMI-offspring body fat relationship applies to other established cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk factors remains to be elucidated.Excess adiposity leads to increased CVD risk factors and biological pathway alterations as insulin resistance, dyslipemia, hypertension, systemic inflammation, and low cardiorespiratory fitness (9). Therefore, the parental BMI-offspring CVD risk factor relationship may be influenced by the offspring body composition.The European Youth Heart Study (EYHS) provides an opportunity to better understand the parental-descendant aggregation of CVD factors by controlling for other potential confounding factors that could mediate in this relationship. Therefore, the aim of this study was to determine the association between both maternal and paternal BMI and the offspring CVD risk factors including total and central body fat, cardiorespiratory fitness, insulin sensitivity, blood pressure, blood lipids, and fibrinogen. We also examined the role of offspring adiposity in this relationship.
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