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Review
. 2016 Apr;7(2):123-31.
doi: 10.1017/S2040174415007199. Epub 2015 Oct 27.

Early life nutritional programming of health and disease in The Gambia

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Review

Early life nutritional programming of health and disease in The Gambia

S E Moore. J Dev Orig Health Dis. 2016 Apr.

Abstract

Exposures during the early life (periconceptional, prenatal and early postnatal) period are increasingly recognized as playing an important role in the aetiology of chronic non-communicable diseases (NCD), including coronary heart disease, stroke, hypertension, Type 2 diabetes and osteoporosis. The 'Developmental Origins of Health and Disease' (DOHaD) hypothesis states that these disorders originate through unbalanced nutrition early in life and risk is highest when there is a 'mismatch' between the early- and later-life environments. Thus, the DOHaD hypothesis would predict highest risk in countries where an excess of infants are born with low birth weight and where there is a rapid transition to nutritional adequacy or excess in adulthood. Here, I will review data from work conducted in rural Gambia, West Africa. Using demographic data dating back to the 1940s, the follow-up of randomized controlled trials of nutritional supplementation in pregnancy and the 'experiment of nature' that seasonality in this region provides, we have investigated the DOHaD hypothesis in a population with high rates of maternal and infant under-nutrition, a high burden from infectious disease, and an emerging risk of NCDs.

Keywords: DOHaD; Gambia; epigenetics; immune programming; sub-Saharan Africa.

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Figures

Fig. 1
Fig. 1
Kaplan–Meier survival plots by season of birth. Adapted from Moore et al. Thin line represents ‘hungry season’ (July–December) births; thick line represents ‘harvest season’ (January–June) births.

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