Growth outcomes for Australian Aboriginal children aged 11 years who were born with intrauterine growth retardation at term gestation.

Paediatr Perinat Epidemiol

Menzies School of Health Research, Institute of Advanced Studies, Charles Darwin University, Northern Territory, Australia.

Published: September 2007

AI Article Synopsis

  • Long-term growth issues are common in intrauterine growth-retarded (IUGR) babies, but research on disadvantaged populations is limited.
  • A study in Northern Territory, Australia, compared growth outcomes between IUGR and non-IUGR children, finding that IUGR children were significantly shorter and lighter than their non-IUGR peers.
  • The study also revealed no significant differences in growth among IUGR children based on their ponderal index at birth, indicating that IUGR may not have additional growth impacts in disadvantaged populations like Aboriginal communities.

Article Abstract

Long-term poor growth outcomes are well documented for intrauterine growth-retarded babies (IUGR) in developed populations but there is a paucity of IUGR studies from disadvantaged populations where the greatest burden of IUGR occurs. Using a Northern Territory, Aboriginal cohort recruited at birth and followed up at a mean age of 11.4 years, comparisons of body size were made between children born at term who had been IUGR (n = 121) and those non-IUGR (n = 341), and between those IUGR babies who had an appropriate ponderal index at birth (n = 72) and those with a low ponderal index (n = 49). Compared with non-IUGR children, at follow-up the IUGR children were almost 2 cm shorter (P = 0.10), 4 kg lighter (P < 0.01) and their head circumferences were almost a 1 cm smaller (P < 0.01). For the 121 term IUGR children, there were no significant differences in growth outcomes according to ponderal index measures at birth. These findings from an Australian Aboriginal sample are consistent with other comparisons of IUGR and non-IUGR children in developed populations and suggest there may be no additional effects of IUGR on growth in childhood for disadvantaged populations similar to the Aboriginal population in the Northern Territory.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-3016.2007.00852.xDOI Listing

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