AI Article Synopsis

  • Children born small for gestational age (SGA) with no catch-up growth are at risk for obesity, but little is known about their body fat characteristics before and after growth hormone (GH) treatment.
  • A study examined 27 prepubertal SGA children to analyze changes in body composition and fat distribution one year after GH treatment.
  • Results showed that while GH treatment improved height, it did not increase body mass index or overall fat mass, and both visceral and subcutaneous fat remained lower than normal, although the ratio of visceral to subcutaneous fat increased.

Article Abstract

Background: Children born small for gestational age (SGA) with catch-up growth are at high risk for developing obesity; however, the characteristics of body composition, especially fat distribution, before and after growth hormone (GH) treatment in SGA children without catch-up growth remains largely unknown.

Methods: Anthropometric characteristics, body composition by dual-energy X-ray absorption, and fat distribution by computed tomography at the umbilical level were examined in 27 prepubertal short-stature children born SGA before and 1 year after GH treatment.

Results: Before GH treatment, short-stature SGA children had lean phenotypes, and both visceral adipose tissue (VAT) and subcutaneous adipose tissue (SAT) were significantly lower than the age- and sex-matched Japanese reference values. Growth hormone treatment significantly increased height standard deviation scores (SDS), without affecting body mass index SDS. Percentage fat mass decreased with GH treatment; however, fat mass was not altered. Both VAT and SAT were significantly lower than the reference values after GH treatment. The ratio of VAT over SAT significantly increased by GH treatment.

Conclusions: Both VAT and SAT were within or below the age- and sex-matched Japanese reference values in short-stature children born SGA before and after GH treatment, indicating that GH treatment may not have unfavorable effects on adiposity in short-stature children born SGA, although it may alter fat distribution.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/ped.14337DOI Listing

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