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. 2013 Nov 19;12(1):150.
doi: 10.1186/1475-2891-12-150.

Obesity in prematurely born children and adolescents: follow up in pediatric clinic

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Obesity in prematurely born children and adolescents: follow up in pediatric clinic

Tetyana L Vasylyeva et al. Nutr J. .

Abstract

Background: Understanding associated risk for obesity is a prerequisite to develop early life interventions to arrest the increasing epidemic of metabolic syndrome and obesity among preterm born children and adolescents.

Findings: A retrospective review of 160 charts was conducted to determine the associated risk of being obese during childhood and adolescent period in preterm children. Birth weight, gestational age, weight gain, demographics, maternal health, socioeconomics, and clinical factors during early neonatal life were evaluated. The number of obese children increased with age and was observed more in the adolescent population. Obese children were significantly heavier at age 24 months old compared to their peers (p = 0.001). Analysis of associated risk for maternal demographics, maternal age, maternal marital status or race, prenatal factors, maternal substance abuse or diabetes, neonatal factors, weight for gestational age or birth weight did not show any statistically significant risk for future obesity. Duration of gestational age (OR 1.6; p = 0.017) and heavier birth weight (OR 3.2; p = 0.001) were associated with risk of obesity.

Conclusion: Among preterm born babies in the study, the highest risk of developing excessive weight during childhood and adolescent periods are babies born at more advanced gestational age. Strong positive association was found between birth weight and body weight in childhood. By 24 months old, there was a distinguished group of toddlers, who were heavier than their peers and remained with excessive weight as they got older. Primary care pediatricians should draw attention to premature babies, overweight infants and toddlers.

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Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Number of obese children (%) among pre-term born pediatric population.
Figure 2
Figure 2
Obese adolescent showed significantly higher weight at the age of 24 months as compared with peers who were not obese later in childhood. Graph (A) is a comparison of Body Mass Index (BMI), graph (B) is a comparison of percentile of BMIs and graph (C) is a comparison of weight for height percentile.

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