Publication details

Parental heights and maternal education as predictors of length/height of children at birth, age 3 and 19 years, independently on diet: the ELSPAC study

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Authors

BIENERTOVÁ VAŠKŮ Julie ZLÁMAL Filip PRUŠA Tomáš NOVÁK Jan MIKEŠ Ondřej ČUPR Pavel POHOŘALÁ Aneta ŠVANCARA Jan ANDRÝSKOVÁ Lenka PIKHART Hynek

Year of publication 2017
Type Article in Periodical
Magazine / Source European Journal of Clinical Nutrition
MU Faculty or unit

Faculty of Medicine

Citation
Doi http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/ejcn.2016.244
Field Physiology
Keywords Parental heights
Description BACKGROUND/OBJECTIVES: Little is currently known about the relationship between the parental diet during pregnancy and the growth of the child from early childhood until early adulthood. This study was designed to examine whether the dietary patterns of the parents during a pregnancy and of the respective child at 3 years are associated with the length/height-for-age z-score of child at birth, 3 years of age and at 19 years of age. SUBJECTS/METHODS: Dietary patterns of pregnant women and their partners, and offspring at 3 years that were enroled in the 1990-1991 period in the Czech part of the European Longitudinal Study of Pregnancy and Childhood. Multivariable linear regression models were used to estimate the relationship between the dietary patterns of parents (835 child-mother-father trios) during pregnancy and the length/height-for-age z-score of their offspring at birth, 3 years and 19 years. RESULTS: The maternal health-conscious food pattern was found to predict lower child height at 3 years, but not at birth nor at 19 years of age. An increase in the health-conscious pattern score of the maternal diet was associated with significantly lower height-for-age z-score at 3 years; however, the observed effect lost its significance after the adjustment for diet of the child at 3 years. CONCLUSIONS: After full adjustment, the only significant predictors of the height-for-age z-score of the child at 3 years were the heights of both parents and maternal education. More research into the association of maternal diet in pregnancy and height of child is necessary.
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