AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates how factors like birthweight and postnatal growth affect insulin resistance in adolescents, specifically looking at the triglyceride-glucose index.
  • Evidence suggests that rapid weight gain in the first six months and from ages 8 to 18 years significantly relates to a higher triglyceride-glucose index, while birthweight does not.
  • Findings indicate the need for monitoring rapid growth during childhood and adolescence to better manage the risk of insulin resistance.

Article Abstract

Background: Developmental models suggest that the phenotypes may arise from an immediate or mediated adaptive metabolic response of the perinatal growth. Evidence on the cumulative effects of growth and factors associated with risk of insulin resistance in adolescents is lacking.

Objective: To investigate the association between birthweight, weight gain during infancy, childhood and adolescence and the triglyceride-glucose index in adolescents.

Methods: This is a cohort of 217 children born at term, followed for the first six months, and reassessed at 8 and 18 years of age. The variables of interest were birthweight, postnatal growth defined as rapid postnatal growth when the weight gain from birth to six months of age was greater than 0.67 z-score, and the same criterion was used for high BMI gain from ages 6 months to 8 years, and from 8 to 18 years. Socioeconomic condition, nutritional status, practice of physical exercises and consumption of ultra-processed foods were verified. Multivariate linear regression analysis was used to verify the effect of the variables on the triglyceride-glucose index.

Results: Birthweight was not associated with triglyceride-glucose index in adolescence. Rapid postnatal growth during the first 6 months, higher BMI gain from 8 to 18 years and higher waist circumference contributed significantly to explain higher triglyceride-glucose index.

Conclusion For Practice: Our findings suggest that rapid postnatal growth may be one of the first signs of a higher triglyceride-glucose index in adolescence and that attention should be paid to the greater gain in body mass between childhood and adolescence for the risk of a higher triglyceride-glucose index.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10995-023-03868-1DOI Listing

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