Cardiovascular medicine
Blood pressure, arterial compliance, and left ventricular mass:
no relation to small size at birth in south Indian adults
K Kumarana, C H D Fallb, C N Martynb, M Vijayakumarc, C Steind, R Shiere
a Holdsworth
Memorial Hospital, Mysore, India, b MRC Environmental Epidemiology Unit,
Southampton, UK, c Vijaya Heart Foundation, Vijaya Hospitals,
Chennai, India, d Southampton
and South West Hampshire Health Authority, Southampton, UK, e London School of Hygiene and Tropical
Medicine, London, UK
Correspondence to: Dr K Kumaran, MRC Environmental Epidemiology Unit, Southampton General Hospital, Southampton SO16 6YD, UK email: kk{at}mrc.soton.ac.uk
Accepted 12 October
1999
OBJECTIVE
To determine whether reduced fetal growth
leads to raised blood pressure, reduced arterial compliance, and
increased left ventricular mass in an Indian population.
DESIGN
A retrospective cohort study of men and women
(age range 40-61 years) whose weight, length, and head circumference
at birth were recorded.
SETTING
The Holdsworth Memorial Hospital, Mysore, South India.
SUBJECTS
435 men and women born in the hospital between
1934 and 1953.
MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES
Systolic and diastolic blood
pressures; compliance in four arterial segments derived from pulse wave
velocity, measured by a non-invasive optical method; and left
ventricular mass measured using M mode echocardiography.
RESULTS
Small size at birth was not associated with
increased adult blood pressure or left ventricular mass, or with
reduced arterial compliance. Systolic blood pressure and left
ventricular mass were higher in subjects who were greater in length at
birth, rising by 1.64 mm Hg (95% confidence interval (CI)
0.08 to
+3.37 mm Hg) and 1.63 g/m2 (95% CI 0.13 to
3.13 g/m2), respectively, per one inch (2.5 cm) increase
in birth length, independently of adult size. Arterial compliance was
reduced in people whose mothers were lighter and had smaller pelvic
(external conjugate) diameters.
CONCLUSIONS
The higher prevalence of coronary heart
disease in Indian men and women of lower birth weight, shown in an
earlier study of the same cohort, cannot be explained by changes in
blood pressure, arterial compliance, and left ventricular mass. The
association of raised blood pressure and left ventricular mass with
longer birth length suggests that the way in which the intrauterine
environment influences coronary heart disease differs between Indian
and Western populations.
Keywords: birth size; blood pressure; arterial compliance; left ventricular mass
© 2000 by Heart
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