Markers of chronic disease risk in term low birthweight Indian children aged 8–14 years
Yamini Gusain, Anku Malik, Suzanne Filteau, Renuka Pathak, Harshpal Singh Sachdev, Geeta Trilok-Kumar

TL;DR
This study examines chronic disease risk markers in Indian children born with low birth weight but at term, finding subtle differences that may increase with age.
Contribution
The study identifies early metabolic differences in term low birthweight children that could predict future chronic disease risks.
Findings
LBW children had lower height-for-age and BMI compared to normal birthweight children.
Overweight LBW children showed higher leptin and triglyceride levels compared to NBW children.
Underweight LBW children had higher adiponectin and lower leptin levels.
Abstract
Low birth weight (LBW) is a public health problem in India with consequences in the short and long term. It increases the risk of obesity and its related comorbidities including type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease (CVD) in later life. This study aimed to assess the risk markers of chronic disease in term born low birthweight Indian children aged 8–14 years. This was a cross-sectional follow-up of LBW children from DIViDS (Delhi Infant Vitamin D Supplementation) cohort and involved assessment of their anthropometric measurements, body composition, levels of adipokines and biomarkers of chronic diseases. Neighbourhood children born normal birth weight (NBW) (>2.5 kg) were enrolled for comparison. The study included 667 LBW and 87 NBW children. Height-for-age, body mass index for-age (BMIZ), fat-free mass index, and waist circumference of LBW children were lower than those of NBW…
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Taxonomy
TopicsBirth, Development, and Health · Child Nutrition and Water Access · Obesity, Physical Activity, Diet
