Body composition of New Zealand-born term babies differs by ethnicity, gestational age and sex

被引:9
作者
Alexander, T. [1 ,2 ]
Conlon, C. A. [3 ]
Gamble, G. [1 ]
von Hurst, P. R. [3 ]
van Dorp, L. [3 ]
Ichhpuniani, B. [3 ]
Housh, R. [4 ]
Ke, P. [4 ]
Bloomfield, F. H. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Auckland, Liggins Inst, Auckland, New Zealand
[2] Middlemore Hosp, Kidz 1, Neonatal Unit, Auckland, New Zealand
[3] Massey Univ, Sch Sport Exercise & Nutr, Auckland, New Zealand
[4] Boston Univ, Sargent Coll, Coll Hlth & Rehabil Sci, Boston, MA 02215 USA
关键词
Air displacement plethysmography; Metabolic risk; Thin-fat phenotype; Fat-free mass index; Maori; BIRTH-WEIGHT; PRETERM INFANTS; OBESITY; GROWTH; MOTHER; MASS; FAT;
D O I
10.1016/j.earlhumdev.2019.104924
中图分类号
R71 [妇产科学];
学科分类号
100211 ;
摘要
Background: Body composition provides important information on nutrition and future metabolic risk. New Zealand has a diverse ethnic population for which there are no newborn body composition data. Aim: To determine body composition in a cohort of New Zealand-born term babies. Study design: Observational study. Subjects: Healthy, term infants between 37(+0) and 41(+6) weeks' gestation in two hospitals in Auckland, New Zealand. Outcome measures: Body composition by air displacement plethysmography and anthropometry measured within 5 days of birth. Parent-identified ethnicity was prioritised according to Ministry of Health criteria. Data were analysed using t-test, ANOVA with Tukey post-hoc tests, quantile regression and are mean(SD). Results: 440 babies (54% male) were included. Pacific Island/Maori (PI/M) were heavier at birth than Asian/Middle Eastern/Latin American/African (Asian +) babies (3403(506) vs 3181(485) g, p < .05). PI/M and European (E) babies were longer with larger head and waist circumferences than Asian + babies (all p < .05). Absolute fat mass (FM) was not different amongst ethnicities (E, 365(156), PI/M, 347(183), Asian+ , 357(188) g) but PI/M babies had significantly lower FM% than Asian + (9.8(4.3) vs 10.9(4.5) %, p < .05). Fat-free mass (FFM) was greater in PI/M (3056(400) g) than E (2952(345) g (p < .05) and both PI/M and E had greater FFM than Asian + (2824(363) g, p < .05). Early term babies had less FFM than term and late-term babies (2732(370), 3012(352), 3173(302)g, p < .001) respectively. Conclusions: Asian+ babies were the smallest babies with the least FFM yet had similar FM and the highest FM %, indicative of a thin, fat phenotype from birth.
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页数:5
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