242 results on '"Phillips DI"'
Search Results
2. The permissible site discharge for on-site stormwater detention storages
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National Local Government Engineering Conference (5th : 1989 : Sydney, N.S.W.) and Phillips, DI
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- 1989
3. The Permissible Site Discharge from Redeveloped Urban Sites
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Hydrology and Water Resources Symposium (1989 : Christchurch, N.Z.) and Phillips, DI
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- 1989
4. On-site stormwater detention storages for small urban redevelopment projects
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National Local Government Engineering Conference (4th : 1987 : Perth, W.A.) and Phillips, DI
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- 1987
5. On-site Stormwater Detention Storages for Multi-dwelling Unit Developments - a Rational Approach to Design
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Hydrology and Water Resources Symposium (17th : 1986 : Brisbane, Qld.) and Phillips, DI
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- 1986
6. An Evaluation of the Performance of an On-site Stormwater Detention Storage
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Hydrology and Water Resources Symposium (16th : 1985 : Sydney, N.S.W.) and Phillips, DI
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- 1985
7. S72 Immunomodulatory effects of carbon particulates on macrophage handling of streptococcal infections
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Shaw, HL, primary, Wallington, JC, additional, Christodoulides, M, additional, Phillips, DI, additional, Wilkinson, TMA, additional, and Staples, KJ, additional
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- 2016
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8. Autosomal dominant inheritance of the tendency of develop thyroid autoantibodies
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Rees Smith B, Sandra M. McLachlan, Peter Lunt, L. Prentice, Meena Upadhyaya, and Phillips Di
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Genetics ,Adult ,Male ,business.industry ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Thyroid Gland ,General Medicine ,Iodide Peroxidase ,Thyroglobulin ,Anti-thyroid autoantibodies ,Graves Disease ,Endocrinology ,Internal Medicine ,Medicine ,Humans ,Female ,business ,Autoantibodies ,Genes, Dominant - Published
- 1991
9. Birthsize, gestational age and adrenal function in adult life: studies of dexamethasone suppression and ACTH1-24 stimulation
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Kajantie, E, primary, Eriksson, J, additional, Barker, DJ, additional, Forsen, T, additional, Osmond, C, additional, Wood, PJ, additional, Andersson, S, additional, Dunkel, L, additional, and Phillips, DI, additional
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- 2003
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10. Blood pressure response to psychological stressors in adults after prenatal exposure to the Dutch famine.
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Painter RC, de Rooij SR, Bossuyt PM, Phillips DI, Osmond C, Barker DJ, Bleker OP, and Roseboom TJ
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- 2006
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11. Fetal programming of body composition: relation between birth weight and body composition measured with dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry and anthropometric methods in older Englishmen.
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Kensara OA, Wootton SA, Phillips DI, Patel M, Jackson AA, Elia M, and Hertfordshire Study Group
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BACKGROUND: Reduced fetal growth is associated with differences in body composition in adult life that may predispose to cardiovascular disease and diabetes. Most published data are based on simple anthropometric measures, which incompletely describe body composition. OBJECTIVE: The objective was to assess body composition and fat distribution by using dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (DXA). DESIGN: This was a case-control study of 64-72-y-old white men (n = 32) with a low (mean: 2.76 kg) or high (mean: 4.23 kg) birth weight. RESULTS: Compared with the high-birth-weight group, after adjustment for weight and height, the low-birth-weight group had a higher percentage body fat (29.31% compared with 25.33%; P = 0.029) and fat mass (P = 0.039) but a lower fat-free soft tissue (56.32 compared with 59.22 kg; P = 0.024), muscle mass (27.25 compared with 29.22 kg; P = 0.022), and muscle-to-fat ratio. Low birth weight was also associated with a higher trunk-to-limb fat ratio after control for total fat mass (1.42 compared with 1.16; P = 0.005) or percentage body fat (P = 0.041). The same body mass index predicted a greater percentage body fat (P = 0.019) in the low- than in the high-birth-weight group, and the same ratio of trunk-to-limb skinfold thickness (or waist-to-hip ratio) predicted a higher trunk-to-limb fat ratio (P < 0.01). CONCLUSION: Lifelong differences in adult body composition and fat distribution between the low- and high-birth-weight groups are consistent with programming in early life. The use of BMI to predict percentage body fat and the use of the trunk-to-limb skinfold thickness ratio (and waist-to-hip ratio) to predict the trunk-to-limb fat ratio measured by DXA can be misleading when low- and high-birth-weight groups are compared. Copyright © 2005 American Society for Clinical Nutrition [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2005
12. Is birth weight related to later glucose and insulin metabolism? -- A systematic review.
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Newsome CA, Shiell AW, Fall CH, Phillips DI, Shier R, and Law CM
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AIM: To determine the relationship of birth weight to later glucose and insulin metabolism. METHODS: Systematic review of the published literature. Data sources were Medline and Embase. Included studies were papers reporting the relationship of birth weight with a measure of glucose or insulin metabolism after 1 year of age, including the prevalence of Type 2 diabetes mellitus (DM). Three reviewers abstracted information from each paper according to specified criteria. RESULTS: Forty-eight papers fulfilled the criteria for inclusion, mostly of adults in developed countries. Most studies reported an inverse relationship between birth weight and fasting plasma glucose concentrations (15 of 25 papers), fasting plasma insulin concentrations (20 of 26), plasma glucose concentrations 2 h after a glucose load (20 of 25), the prevalence of Type 2 DM (13 of 16), measures of insulin resistance (17 of 22), and measures of insulin secretion (16 of 24). The predominance of these inverse relationships and the demonstration in a minority of studies of other directions of the relationships could not generally be explained by differences between studies in the sex, age, or current size of the subjects. However, the relationship of birth weight with insulin secretion was inconsistent in studies of adults. CONCLUSIONS: The published literature shows that, generally, people who were light at birth have an adverse profile of later glucose and insulin metabolism. This is related to higher insulin resistance, but the relationship to insulin secretion in adults is less clear. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2003
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13. The effect of theophylline on thyrotoxic tremor.
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Buss, DC, Phillips, DI, Littley, MD, Marshall, RW, Routledge, PA, and Lazarus, JH
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1. The effect of intravenous aminophylline on theophylline-induced tremor were studied in six hyperthyroid patients before and after treatment to euthyroidism. 2. Baseline tremor power was significantly greater in the hyperthyroid compared with the euthyroid state (P less than 0.05). 3. Aminophylline produced a significantly greater increase in tremor power in the hyperthyroid compared with euthyroid state. 4. There was a significant increase in plasma theophylline clearance and reduction in t1/2 elimination when patients were hyperthyroid but volume of distribution did not change. 5. Intravenous aminophylline potentiates the tremor produced in hyperthyroidism despite an increase in plasma theophylline clearance. A pharmacodynamic mechanism is therefore likely. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 1989
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14. Type 1 diabetes mellitus in the context of high levels of rural deprivation: differences in demographic and anthropometric characteristics between urban and rural cases in NW Ethiopia.
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Balcha SA, Phillips DI, and Trimble ER
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Background: While there is increasing evidence for an altered clinical phenotype of Type 1 diabetes in several low-and middle-income countries, little is known about urban-rural differences and how the greater poverty of rural environments may alter the pattern of disease., Objective: Investigation of urban-rural differences in demographic and anthropometric characteristics of type 1 diabetes in a resource-poor setting., Research Design and Methods: Analysis of a unique case register, comprising all patients (rural and urban) presenting with Type 1 diabetes over a 20 yr. period in a poor, geographically defined area in northwest Ethiopia. The records included age, sex, place of residence, together with height and weight at the clinical onset., Results: A total of 1682 new cases of Type 1 diabetes were registered with a mean age of onset of 31.2 (SD 13.4) yr. The patients were thin with 1/3 presenting with a body mass index (BMI) <17kg/m
2 . There was a striking male predominance of cases when clinical onset was between 20 and 35 yr., this was more marked in the very poor rural dwellers compared to the urban population. While most patients with Type 1 diabetes presented with low BMIs and reduced height, stunting preferentially affected rural men., Conclusions: These data have led to the hypothesis that complex interactions among poor socioeconomic conditions in early life affect both pancreatic function and the development of autoimmunity and provide a possible explanation of the unusual phenotype of Type 1 diabetes in this very poor community., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2024 Balcha, Phillips and Trimble.)- Published
- 2024
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15. Community-based prevalence study of rheumatic heart disease in rural Ethiopia.
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Gemechu T, Mahmoud H, Parry EH, Phillips DI, and Yacoub MH
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- Adolescent, Adult, Age Distribution, Child, Cluster Analysis, Developing Countries, Ethiopia epidemiology, Female, Health Surveys, Humans, Male, Mass Screening methods, Needs Assessment, Prevalence, Prognosis, Rheumatic Heart Disease physiopathology, Risk Assessment, Severity of Illness Index, Sex Distribution, Socioeconomic Factors, Surveys and Questionnaires, Survival Rate, Young Adult, Echocardiography methods, Rheumatic Heart Disease diagnostic imaging, Rheumatic Heart Disease epidemiology, Rural Population statistics & numerical data
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Background Chronic Rheumatic Heart disease (RHD) continues to be a health problem in many low and middle income countries and especially in sub-Saharan Africa. Echocardiography has shown that the disease is far more widespread than may be detected by clinical assessment, but data are lacking on the prevalence and epidemiological features in rural Africa. Design Community-based prevalence survey Methods We used transthoracic echocardiography to carry out a population-based study of RHD in a rural area of Ethiopia. A total of 987 participants aged 6 to 25 were selected by cluster sampling. The prevalence of RHD was assessed by the current consensus World Heart Federation criteria. Results There were 37 definite cases of RHD and a further 19 borderline cases giving an overall prevalence of 37.5 cases per 1000 population (95% CI 26.9-51.8) rising to 56.7 (95% CI 43.9-73.5) if the borderline cases are included. The prevalence of definite disease rose to a peak of 60 cases per 1000 in those aged 16-20 years before falling to 11 cases per 1000 in subjects aged 21-25 years. Of the 37 with definite disease, 36 had evidence of mitral valve and seven evidence of aortic valve disease. Conclusions RHD has a high prevalence in rural Ethiopia. Although follow-up is needed to determine how the disease develops with advancing age, the data provide evidence that the disease is an important health problem in rural sub-Saharan Africa requiring urgent concerted action.
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- 2017
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16. Diagnostic virology and patient care: from vaguely interesting to vitally important.
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Pitt SJ and Phillips DI
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- History, 20th Century, History, 21st Century, Humans, Viral Vaccines therapeutic use, Virology trends, Virus Diseases diagnosis, Virus Diseases virology, Viruses genetics, Viruses immunology, Viruses isolation & purification, Virology history, Virus Diseases prevention & control
- Abstract
The existence of pathogenic viruses was inferred by experiments at the turn of the twentieth century. Key developments in detection of viruses, including electron microscopy and monolayer cell culture, were made in the middle of that century. However, in terms of patient care, the results from the virology laboratory often arrived the patient was 'better or dead'. The advent of molecular techniques, particularly polymerase chain reaction and more recently whole genome sequencing made timely and accurate diagnosis of viral infections feasible. A range of approaches have been taken to identify and characterise new viruses. Vaccines against viruses have made it possible to eliminate two pathogenic mammalian viruses altogether, with several others close to eradication. The role of biomedical scientists working in diagnostic virology is more relevant to patient care than ever.
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- 2017
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17. Prenatal Undernutrition and Autonomic Function in Adulthood.
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de Rooij SR, Jones A, Phillips DI, Osmond C, Karemaker JM, Roseboom TJ, and Painter RC
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- Autonomic Nervous System Diseases physiopathology, Blood Pressure physiology, Female, Heart Rate physiology, Humans, Middle Aged, Netherlands, Pregnancy, Autonomic Nervous System Diseases etiology, Gestational Age, Pregnancy Complications, Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects physiopathology, Starvation complications
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Objectives: Early-life adversity has been shown to be associated with cardiovascular disease and mortality in later life, but little is known about the mechanisms that underlie this association. Prenatal undernutrition, a severe early-life stressor, is associated with double the risk of coronary heart disease and increased blood pressure responses to psychological stress. In the present study, we tested the hypothesis that prenatal undernutrition induces alterations in the autonomic nervous system, which may increase the risk of developing heart disease., Methods: We studied autonomic function in 740 men and women (mean [SD] age, 58 [0.9] years) who were members of the Dutch famine birth cohort. We compared those exposed to famine during early (n = 64), mid (n = 107), or late gestation (n = 127) to those unexposed to famine in utero (n = 442). Participants underwent a series of 3 psychological stressors (Stroop, mirror tracing, and speech) while their blood pressure and heart rate were recorded continuously., Results: Data had sufficient quality in 602 participants for derivation of autonomic function indices by spectral analysis. The stress protocol led to significant sample-level changes in systolic blood pressure, heart rate, and all cardiovascular control measures (all p values < .001). None of the autonomic function parameters, at rest or in response to stress, differed significantly (all p values > .050) according to prenatal famine exposure., Conclusions: Prenatal undernutrition was not associated with autonomic function in late adulthood. We conclude that altered autonomic function does not seem to explain our previous findings of increased coronary heart disease risk among those exposed to famine prenatally., Competing Interests: The authors declare no conflicts of interest;
- Published
- 2016
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18. Medical traditions and chronic disease in Ethiopia: a story of wax and gold?
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Levene D, Phillips DI, and Alemu S
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- Delivery of Health Care, Ethiopia, Humans, Primary Health Care, Chronic Disease, Medicine, African Traditional
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Effective medical care for non-communicable diseases (NCD) remains lamentably poor in Ethiopia and many low-income countries. Consequently, where modern medicine does not reach or is rejected, traditional treatments prevail. These are fragmented and esoteric by nature, and their understanding of illness is so fundamentally different that confusion proliferates when attempts are made to introduce modern medical care. Ethiopia is host to a variety of longstanding medical belief systems that coexist and function together, where modern medicine is often viewed as just another choice. This multiplicity of approaches to illness is accompanied by the Ethiopian custom of weaving layers of meaning, often contradictory, into speech and conversation - sometimes referred to as 'wax and gold', the 'wax' being the literal and the 'gold' the deeper, even hidden, meaning or significance. We argue that engagement with traditional belief systems and understanding these subtleties of meaning could assist in more effective NCD care., (© The Author(s) 2016.)
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- 2016
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19. David Barker, Buruli ulcer and the epidemiology of a neglected tropical disease.
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Phillips DI
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- Buruli Ulcer epidemiology, Buruli Ulcer microbiology, History, 20th Century, Humans, Life Style, Neglected Diseases epidemiology, Neglected Diseases microbiology, Nutritional Status, Prevalence, Uganda epidemiology, United Kingdom epidemiology, Buruli Ulcer history, Mycobacterium ulcerans isolation & purification, Neglected Diseases history
- Abstract
In 1969, David Barker, his wife and four children moved to Uganda to work at Makerere Medical School in the capital Kampala. During the 1960s, Makerere had become a research and teaching centre with an international reputation based on the work of Trowell, Burkitt, Hutt and many others who had pioneered studies explaining the disease patterns in the West Nile area on the basis of the local climate, nutrition and lifestyle. David Barker was funded by the Medical Research Council to carry out research on a poorly understood disease, Buruli ulcer, joining Scottish surgeon Wilson Carswell, who was later to achieve fame as the role model for Dr Garrigan in Giles Foden's novel The Last King of Scotland.
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- 2015
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20. The relationship between umbilical cord length and chronic rheumatic heart disease: a prospective cohort study.
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Goodman A, Kajantie E, Osmond C, Eriksson J, Koupil I, Thornburg K, and Phillips DI
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- Adult, Age Factors, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Chronic Disease, Female, Humans, Infant, Newborn, Male, Middle Aged, Patient Admission, Prospective Studies, Registries, Rheumatic Heart Disease diagnosis, Risk Assessment, Risk Factors, Sweden epidemiology, Time Factors, Rheumatic Heart Disease epidemiology, Umbilical Cord anatomy & histology
- Abstract
Background: One previous, preliminary study reported that the length of the umbilical cord at birth is related to the risk of developing chronic rheumatic heart disease in later life. We sought to replicate this finding., Design: Prospective, population-based birth cohort., Methods: We traced 11,580 individuals born between 1915 and 1929 in Uppsala, Sweden. We identified cases with a main or secondary diagnosis of chronic rheumatic heart disease in the Swedish national inpatient, outpatient or death registers. Archived obstetric records provided data on umbilical cord length, gestational age, birthweight and placental weight., Results: There were 136 patients with chronic rheumatic heart disease (72 men and 64 women) with a mean age at first hospital admission of 68 years (range 36-92). There was evidence of a positive association between umbilical cord length and risk of subsequent chronic rheumatic heart disease. The overall hazard ratio in the Swedish study (1.13, 95% confidence interval 1.01 to 1.27) was similar to that of the previous study, with some suggestion of larger effect in men than in women. No other birth characteristics were predictive except for weak evidence of a protective effect of higher birthweight in men., Conclusions: People with longer umbilical cords at birth are more likely to develop chronic rheumatic heart disease in later life. As longer umbilical cords have more spiral arteries and a higher vascular resistance, we hypothesize that the increased pressure load on the heart leads to changes in endothelial biology and increased vulnerability to the autoimmune process initiated by infection with β-haemolytic streptococci., (© The European Society of Cardiology 2014.)
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- 2015
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21. Retinopathy in type 1 diabetes mellitus: Major differences between rural and urban dwellers in northwest Ethiopia.
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Alemu S, Dessie A, Tsegaw A, Patterson CC, Parry EH, Phillips DI, and Trimble ER
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- Adult, Blindness epidemiology, Cataract epidemiology, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1 complications, Diabetic Retinopathy etiology, Ethiopia epidemiology, Female, Humans, Hypertension complications, Hypertension epidemiology, Life Style, Male, Middle Aged, Prevalence, Visual Acuity, Young Adult, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1 epidemiology, Diabetic Retinopathy epidemiology, Rural Population statistics & numerical data, Urban Population statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Aim: To audit levels of diabetes-related eye disease in Type 1 diabetes mellitus (T1DM) patients in northwest Ethiopia. In particular to establish whether, despite identical clinical goals, major differences between the physically demanding life-style of rural subsistence farmers and the sedentary life-style of urban dwellers would influence the prevalence of diabetes-related eye complications., Methods: A robust infrastructure for chronic disease management that comprehensively includes all rural dwellers was a pre-requisite for the investigation. A total of 544 T1DM were examined, representing 80% of all T1DM patients under regular review at both the urban and rural clinics and representative of patient age and gender (62.1% male, 37.9% female) of T1DM patients from this region; all were supervised by the same clinical team. Eye examinations were performed for visual acuity, cataract and retinal changes (retinal photography). HbA1c levels and the presence or absence of hypertension were recorded., Results/conclusions: Urban and rural groups had similar prevalences of severe visual impairment/blindness (7.0% urban, 5.2% rural) and cataract (7.3% urban, 7.1% rural). By contrast, urban dwellers had a significantly higher prevalence of retinopathy compared to rural patients, 16.1% and 5.0%, respectively (OR 2.9, p<0.02, after adjustment for duration, age, gender and hypertension). There was a 3-fold greater prevalence of hypertension in urban patients, whereas HbA1c levels were similar in the two groups. Since diabetic retinopathy is closely associated with microvascular disease and endothelial dysfunction, the possible influences of hypertension to increase and of sustained physical activity to reduce endothelial dysfunction are discussed., (Copyright © 2015 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.)
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- 2015
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22. Early-life factors are associated with nocturnal cortisol and glucose effectiveness in Afro-Caribbean young adults.
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Thompson DS, Ferguson TS, Wilks RJ, Phillips DI, Osmond C, Samms-Vaughan M, Forrester TE, and Boyne MS
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- Adiponectin blood, Adult, Birth Weight physiology, Blood Glucose metabolism, Caribbean Region, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 blood, Female, Gestational Age, Humans, Insulin-Like Growth Factor I metabolism, Male, Myostatin blood, Pregnancy, Young Adult, Hydrocortisone metabolism
- Abstract
Context: Early-life factors (including intrauterine growth retardation) may influence the development of type 2 diabetes. We postulated that birth size is associated with cortisol levels, which itself could alter serum adipomyokines (i.e. adiponectin, IGF-I, myostatin) and glucose metabolism., Design: An observational study with 60 Afro-Caribbean young adults from a birth cohort., Measurements: Fasting blood was drawn for serum adiponectin, IGF-I and myostatin. A frequently sampled intravenous glucose tolerance test measured insulin sensitivity (SI), acute insulin response (AIRg), disposition index (DI) and glucose effectiveness (Sg). Body composition was assessed by dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry. Salivary cortisol was collected at home at 0800 and 2300 h. Sex-adjusted correlations were used to explore the relationships between birth size, cortisol and the metabolic variables., Results: The participants were 55% male, mean age 23·1 ± 0·5 years. Birth weight correlated positively with 2300-h cortisol (P = 0·04), although not after adjusting for gestational age. Gestational age was correlated with 2300 h cortisol (r = 0·38, P = 0·03), even after adjusting for birth weight (P = 0·02). 2300 h cortisol was not associated with adiponectin, IGF-I, myostatin, SI, AIRg or DI, but was negatively correlated with Sg (r = -0·30, P = 0·05) even after adjusting for birth and adult anthropometry. Adiponectin, IGF-I and myostatin were unrelated to glucose metabolism., Conclusions: Gestational age is associated with higher nocturnal cortisol, which in turn is associated with lower glucose effectiveness in adulthood. Higher glucose effectiveness could therefore be a compensatory mechanism to improve glucose uptake., (© 2014 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
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- 2015
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23. Is susceptibility to chronic rheumatic heart disease determined in early infancy? An analysis of mortality in Britain during the 20th century.
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Phillips DI and Osmond C
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Background: The reason why some individuals but not others are susceptible to rheumatic fever and chronic rheumatic heart disease is not understood. Because of the substantial evidence that poverty is an important determinant of the disease and must operate in early life, we have investigated the role of the early environment in an ecological study using 20(th) century mortality as an index of disease prevalence., Methods: We analysed 37,321 deaths from rheumatic heart disease in England and Wales during 1968-78. We compared the geographical distribution of deaths with previous infant mortality records from 1911 onwards. These records included details of mortality at different ages and from different causes. They also included data on housing and population density., Results: Mortality from rheumatic heart disease showed a strong correlation with past infant mortality that was consistently stronger with postneonatal mortality (deaths from one month to one year) than with neonatal mortality (deaths during the first month of life). Areas with high infant mortality from diarrhoea or bronchitis had the highest subsequent mortality from rheumatic heart disease. Although rheumatic heart disease was linked with early overcrowding, regression analyses suggested that overcrowding could not per se explain the infant mortality associations., Conclusions: Chronic rheumatic heart disease may have its origins in early infancy. Our findings raise the possibility that susceptibility to rheumatic fever and rheumatic heart disease may be linked with infection in the postneonatal period. Alternatively, they may be explained by the operation of environmental factors that both predispose to infection in infancy and the subsequent liability to heart disease.
- Published
- 2014
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24. Prenatal origins of temperament: fetal growth, brain structure, and inhibitory control in adolescence.
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Schlotz W, Godfrey KM, and Phillips DI
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- Adolescent, Birth Weight, Cerebral Cortex anatomy & histology, Cohort Studies, Female, Gestational Age, Humans, Longitudinal Studies, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Surveys and Questionnaires, Temperament, Brain anatomy & histology, Fetal Development, Internal-External Control
- Abstract
Objective: Individual differences in the temperamental dimension of effortful control are constitutionally based and have been associated with an adverse prenatal developmental environment, with structural brain alterations presenting a potential mechanism. We investigated this hypothesis for anatomically defined brain regions implicated in cognitive and inhibitory motor control., Methods: Twenty-seven 15-16 year old participants with low, medium, or high fetal growth were selected from a longitudinal birth cohort to maximize variation and represent the full normal spectrum of fetal growth. Outcome measures were parent ratings of attention and inhibitory control, thickness and surface area of the orbitofrontal cortex (lateral (LOFC) and medial (MOFC)) and right inferior frontal gyrus (rIFG), and volumetric measures of the striatum and amygdala., Results: Lower birth weight was associated with lower inhibitory control, smaller surface area of LOFC, MOFC and rIFG, lower caudate volume, and thicker MOFC. A mediation model found a significant indirect effect of birth weight on inhibitory control via caudate volume., Conclusions: Our findings support a neuroanatomical mechanism underlying potential long-term consequences of an adverse fetal developmental environment for behavioral inhibitory control in adolescence and have implications for understanding putative prenatal developmental origins of externalizing behavioral problems and self-control.
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- 2014
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25. Dietary total antioxidant capacity is related to glucose tolerance in older people: the Hertfordshire Cohort Study.
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Okubo H, Syddall HE, Phillips DI, Sayer AA, Dennison EM, Cooper C, and Robinson SM
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- Aged, Body Mass Index, Body Weight, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2, Diet, Fasting, Female, Glucose Tolerance Test, Humans, Insulin blood, Life Style, Linear Models, Male, Middle Aged, Motor Activity, Nutrition Assessment, Prospective Studies, Surveys and Questionnaires, United Kingdom, Antioxidants administration & dosage, Blood Glucose metabolism, Glucose Intolerance blood
- Abstract
Background and Aims: Dietary antioxidants may play a protective role in the aetiology of type 2 diabetes. However, observational studies that examine the relationship between the antioxidant capacity of the diet and glucose metabolism are limited, particularly in older people. We aimed to examine the relationships between dietary total antioxidant capacity (TAC) and markers of glucose metabolism among 1441 men and 1253 women aged 59-73 years who participated in the Hertfordshire Cohort Study, UK., Methods and Results: Diet was assessed by food frequency questionnaire. Dietary TAC was estimated using published databases of TAC measured by four different assays: oxygen radical absorbance capacity (ORAC), ferric-reducing ability of plasma (FRAP), total radical-trapping antioxidant parameter (TRAP) and trolox equivalent antioxidant capacity (TEAC). Fasting and 120-min plasma glucose and insulin concentrations were measured during a standard 75-g oral glucose tolerance test. In men, dietary TAC estimated by all four assays was inversely associated with fasting insulin concentration and homoeostasis model assessment of insulin resistance (HOMA-IR); with the exception of ORAC, dietary TAC was also inversely related to 120-min glucose concentration. There were no associations with fasting glucose or 120-min insulin concentrations. In women, with the exception of the association between ORAC and 120-min insulin concentration, dietary TAC estimated by all assays showed consistent inverse associations with fasting and 120-min glucose and insulin concentrations and HOMA-IR. These associations were more marked among women with BMI ≥ 30 kg/m(2)., Conclusion: These findings suggest dietary TAC may have important protective effects on glucose tolerance, especially in older obese women., (Copyright © 2013 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
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- 2014
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26. Size at birth, morning cortisol and cardiometabolic risk markers in healthy Indian children.
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Krishnaveni GV, Veena SR, Dhube A, Karat SC, Phillips DI, and Fall CH
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- Birth Weight physiology, Child, Female, Humans, Hypothalamo-Hypophyseal System metabolism, India, Infant, Newborn, Male, Pituitary-Adrenal System metabolism, Prospective Studies, Risk Factors, Cardiovascular Diseases blood, Cardiovascular Diseases epidemiology, Hydrocortisone blood
- Abstract
Objective: Prenatal programming of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis may link reduced foetal growth with higher adult chronic disease risk. South Asians have a high prevalence of low birth weight and a thin-fat phenotype, which is associated with subsequent type 2 diabetes and the metabolic syndrome. Altered HPA activity could be one of the pathological processes underlying this link., Methods: Plasma morning cortisol and corticosteroid-binding globulin (CBG) concentrations were determined in 528 children aged 9·5 years from a prospective birth cohort in India. They had detailed anthropometry at birth, and current measurements of anthropometry, plasma glucose, insulin and lipid concentrations and blood pressure. Insulin resistance (Homeostasis Model Assessment) and insulin secretion (the 30-min insulin increment) were also assessed., Results: None of the birth measurements were associated with cortisol concentrations, but both birth weight (P = 0·03) and length (P = 0·004) were inversely associated with CBG concentrations. Cortisol concentrations were inversely associated with current body mass index (P = 0·02), and positively associated with glucose (fasting: P < 0·001; 30-min: P = 0·002) concentrations, and systolic blood pressure (P = 0·005), but not insulin resistance or the insulin increment., Conclusion: Higher morning cortisol is associated with higher cardiometabolic risk markers in Indian children. Although cortisol concentrations did not appear to be related to birth size, small size at birth was associated with higher CBG levels, and may be one of the processes by which foetal undernutrition affects adult health. The findings suggest a need for dynamic testing of HPA axis activity (such as measuring stress responses)., (© 2013 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
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- 2014
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27. The developmental origins of chronic rheumatic heart disease.
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Eriksson JG, Kajantie E, Phillips DI, Osmond C, Thornburg KL, and Barker DJ
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- Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Chronic Disease epidemiology, Cohort Studies, Female, Finland epidemiology, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Pregnancy, Rheumatic Heart Disease epidemiology, Rheumatic Heart Disease microbiology, Young Adult, Birth Weight, Body Size, Maternal Nutritional Physiological Phenomena, Placenta physiology, Rheumatic Heart Disease etiology
- Abstract
Objectives: Programming is the phenomenon whereby the body's structures and functions are permanently set by nutrition and other influences during early development. There is increasing evidence that programming in utero initiates cardiovascular disease. We hypothesized that susceptibility to developing chronic rheumatic heart disease on exposure to Streptococcus pyogenes is programmed., Methods: We studied hospital admissions and deaths from chronic rheumatic heart disease in 20,431 people born in Helsinki, Finland, during 1924-1944. One hundred and one people, 56 men, and 45 women, had chronic rheumatic heart disease., Results: The disease was not associated with body or placental size at birth. It was, however, associated with a long umbilical cord so that the hazard ratio for the disease was 1.23 (95% CI 1.04-1.45, P = 0.02) for every 10 cm increase in cord length. This association was present in people with mitral valve disease, hazard ratio 1.5 (1.20-1.89, P < 0.0001), but not in people with aortic valve disease, hazard ratio 1.0 (0.76-1.33, P = 0.97). Growing up in large households increased the risk of rheumatic heart disease., Conclusion: Longer umbilical cords have more spirals and a greater density of spirals per unit of length. Increased spiraling will increase the resistance to flow and the pressure load on the fetal heart. This could affect the development of the heart's valves and make them more vulnerable to the autoimmune process initiated by Streptococcus pyogenes. The mitral valve may be more vulnerable than the aortic valve because the valve leaflets are larger and therefore have greater wall stress., (Copyright © 2013 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.)
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- 2013
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28. The relationship between depression, anxiety and cardiovascular disease: findings from the Hertfordshire Cohort Study.
- Author
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Holt RI, Phillips DI, Jameson KA, Cooper C, Dennison EM, and Peveler RC
- Subjects
- Aged, Blood Glucose, Cardiovascular Diseases blood, Cholesterol, HDL blood, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Insulin Resistance, Male, Middle Aged, Odds Ratio, Psychiatric Status Rating Scales, Risk Factors, Self Report, Sex Distribution, Triglycerides blood, United Kingdom epidemiology, Anxiety epidemiology, Cardiovascular Diseases epidemiology, Cardiovascular Diseases psychology, Depression epidemiology
- Abstract
Background: Previous studies suggest a link between depression, anxiety and cardiovascular disease (CVD). The aim of the study was to determine the relationship between depressive and anxiety symptoms and CVD in a population based cohort., Methods: In total 1578 men and 1,417 women from the Hertfordshire Cohort Study were assessed for CVD at baseline and after 5.9 ± 1.4 years. Depressive and anxiety symptoms were measured using the HADS scale., Results: Baseline HAD-D score, but not HAD-A, was significantly associated with baseline plasma triglycerides, glucose and insulin resistance (men only) and HDL cholesterol (women only). After adjustment for CVD risk factors, higher baseline HAD-D scores were associated with increased odds ratios for CVD (men: 1.162 [95% CI 1.096-1.231]; women: 1.107 [1.038-1.181]). Higher HAD-A scores associated with increased CVD in men only. High HAD-D scores predicted incident CVD (adjusted OR 1.130 [1.034-1.235]), all-cause mortality (adjusted HR 1.081, [1.012-1.154]) and cardiovascular mortality (adjusted HR 1.109 [1.002-1.229]) in men but not in women., Limitations: The use of a self-report measure of depressive and anxiety symptoms, 'healthy' responder bias and the low number of cardiovascular events are all limitations., Conclusions: Depressive and anxiety symptoms are commoner in people with CVD. These symptoms are independent predictors of CVD in men. Although HAD-D score was significantly associated with several cardiovascular risk factors, this did not fully explain the association between HAD-D and CVD., (Copyright © 2013 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2013
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29. The paradox of overnutrition in aging and cognition.
- Author
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Fielding RA, Gunstad J, Gustafson DR, Heymsfield SB, Kral JG, Launer LJ, Penninger J, Phillips DI, and Scarmeas N
- Subjects
- Adipose Tissue physiopathology, Aged, Animals, Bariatric Surgery, Brain metabolism, Brain pathology, Cognition Disorders epidemiology, Dementia epidemiology, Dementia etiology, Dementia prevention & control, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 physiopathology, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 psychology, Disease Models, Animal, Genetic Predisposition to Disease, Humans, Intracellular Signaling Peptides and Proteins genetics, Intracellular Signaling Peptides and Proteins physiology, Mice, Middle Aged, Muscle Weakness etiology, Muscle, Skeletal growth & development, Nerve Net physiopathology, Obesity genetics, Obesity physiopathology, Obesity surgery, Sarcopenia complications, Sarcopenia physiopathology, Aging physiology, Cognition Disorders etiology, Overnutrition epidemiology, Overnutrition physiopathology, Overnutrition psychology
- Abstract
Populations of many countries are becoming increasingly overweight and obese, driven largely by excessive calorie intake and reduced physical activity; greater body mass is accompanied by epidemic levels of comorbid metabolic diseases. At the same time, individuals are living longer. The combination of aging and the increased prevalence of metabolic disease is associated with increases in aging-related comorbid diseases such as Alzheimer's disease, cerebrovascular dementia, and sarcopenia. Here, correlative and causal links between diseases of overnutrition and diseases of aging and cognition are explored., (© 2013 New York Academy of Sciences.)
- Published
- 2013
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30. Birth weight and perceived stress reactivity in older age.
- Author
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Schlotz W and Phillips DI
- Subjects
- Aged, Chronic Disease, Cohort Studies, Confounding Factors, Epidemiologic, Disease Susceptibility, Female, Humans, Male, Pregnancy, Regression Analysis, Risk Factors, Socioeconomic Factors, Stress, Psychological physiopathology, Stress, Psychological psychology, Surveys and Questionnaires, United Kingdom epidemiology, Birth Weight physiology, Fetal Development physiology, Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects, Stress, Psychological epidemiology
- Abstract
Stress reactivity is a disposition that underlies individual differences in stress responses, thereby affecting vulnerability for the development of disease. Besides genetic and early postnatal environmental factors, stress reactivity has been shown to be influenced by an adverse prenatal developmental environment, but it is unclear if such effects persist into older age. We tested associations between fetal growth and perceived stress reactivity in 421 participants from the Hertfordshire Cohort at age 66-75 years. Regression analysis showed a U-shaped association between birth weight and perceived stress reactivity with increased levels of stress reactivity at the lower and upper end of the birth weight distribution. These effects were stable after adjustment for markers of early adversity and recent adversity and chronic stress. Although the effects were small, they are consistent with findings from studies in younger cohorts, and demonstrate that such effects can persist into older age., (Copyright © 2012 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.)
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- 2013
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31. Epilepsy, poverty and early under-nutrition in rural Ethiopia.
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Vaid N, Fekadu S, Alemu S, Dessie A, Wabe G, Phillips DI, Parry EH, and Prevett M
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Age Factors, Case-Control Studies, Epilepsy economics, Epilepsy physiopathology, Ethiopia ethnology, Female, Humans, Male, Malnutrition economics, Malnutrition physiopathology, Middle Aged, Nutritional Status physiology, Poverty economics, Socioeconomic Factors, Young Adult, Epilepsy ethnology, Malnutrition ethnology, Poverty ethnology, Rural Population
- Abstract
Purpose: The incidence of epilepsy in Ethiopia is high compared with industrialised countries, but in most cases the cause of epilepsy is unknown. Childhood malnutrition remains widespread. We performed a case-control study to determine whether epilepsy is associated with poverty and markers of early under-nutrition., Methods: Patients with epilepsy (n=112), aged 18-45years, were recruited from epilepsy clinics in and around two towns in Ethiopia. Controls with a similar age and gender distribution (n=149) were recruited from patients and relatives attending general outpatient clinics. We administered a questionnaire to define the medical and social history of cases and controls, and then performed a series of anthropometric measurements. Unconditional logistic regression was used to estimate multivariate adjusted odds ratios. Multiple linear regression was used to estimate adjusted case-control differences for continuously distributed outcomes., Results: Epilepsy was associated with illiteracy/low levels of education, odds ratio=3.0 (95% confidence interval: 1.7-5.6), subsistence farming, odds ratio=2.6 (1.2-5.6) and markers of poverty including poorer access to sanitation (p=0.009), greater overcrowding (p=0.008) and fewer possessions (p<0.001). Epilepsy was also associated with the father's death during childhood, odds ratio=2.2 (1.0-4.6). Body mass index was similar in cases and controls, but patients with epilepsy were shorter and lighter with reduced sitting height (p<0.001), bitrochanteric diameter (p=0.029) and hip size (p=0.003). Patients with epilepsy also had lower mid-upper arm circumference (p=0.011) and lean body mass (p=0.037)., Conclusion: Epilepsy in Ethiopia is strongly associated with poor education and markers of poverty. Patients with epilepsy also had evidence of stunting and disproportionate skeletal growth, raising the possibility of a link between early under-nutrition and epilepsy., (Copyright © 2012 British Epilepsy Association. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2012
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32. Obesity comorbidity in unipolar major depressive disorder: refining the core phenotype.
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Levitan RD, Davis C, Kaplan AS, Arenovich T, Phillips DI, and Ravindran AV
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Body Mass Index, Case-Control Studies, Comorbidity, Depressive Disorder, Major classification, Female, Health Surveys, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Risk, United States, Young Adult, Depressive Disorder, Major epidemiology, Depressive Disorder, Major psychology, Obesity epidemiology, Obesity psychology, Phenotype
- Abstract
Objective: While a significant body of research has demonstrated high comorbidity rates between depression and obesity, the vast majority of this work has considered depression as a unitary diagnosis. Given that increased appetite and weight gain are highly characteristic of the "atypical" subtype of depression, while classic depression is characterized by decreased appetite and weight loss, it would be important to examine whether increased obesity risk is consistent across the major vegetative subtypes of depression or is limited to the atypical subtype., Method: Using data from the 2001-2002 National Epidemiologic Survey on Alcohol and Related Conditions (NESARC), we identified 5,092 US adults with past or current major depression based on DSM-IV-TR criteria and 1,500 gender-matched controls. Each depressed subject was designated as having classic, atypical, or undifferentiated depression based on core vegetative symptoms. Logistic regression models examined rates of current obesity (defined as a current body mass index [kg/m2] > 30) across the 3 depressive subgroups and nondepressed controls, adjusting for demographic differences. To limit the possible effect of current depressive symptoms on observed obesity rates, secondary analyses were completed in individuals with past depression only., Results: Subjects with atypical depression had markedly elevated obesity rates compared to population controls and to other depressed subjects, with corresponding pairwise odds ratios consistently greater than 2.0 (P < .001). In contrast, obesity rates were not significantly different in subjects with classic depression and nondepressed controls. These results were manifest in individuals with either current or past depression and were independent of gender and age., Conclusions: While many individuals with classic depression will present with obesity due to the high prevalence of both disorders, only atypical depression is associated with an elevated risk of obesity relative to the population at large. Refining the target phenotype(s) for future work on depression and obesity might improve our understanding, prevention, and treatment of this complex clinical problem., (© Copyright 2012 Physicians Postgraduate Press, Inc.)
- Published
- 2012
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33. Transgenerational inheritance of stress pathology.
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Matthews SG and Phillips DI
- Subjects
- Animals, Biological Evolution, Endocrine System metabolism, Endocrine System pathology, Female, Humans, Male, Pregnancy, Inheritance Patterns physiology, Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects psychology, Stress, Psychological genetics, Stress, Psychological pathology
- Abstract
It is becoming increasingly evident that maternal exposure to adversity during pregnancy leads to life-long effects in offspring. While there appears to be some commonality in the effects of maternal stress on endocrine and behavioral outcomes in the first generation offspring, it is clear that effects are highly dependent on species, sex and age, as well as on the time in pregnancy when stress is experienced. Recent studies have identified that the effects of maternal stress are not confined to the first generation and that they can extend over multiple generations. These effects are also evident in humans. While our understanding of the potential mechanisms by which transgenerational programming of the stress response occurs remain largely undetermined, recent studies have begun to identify potential mechanisms of transfer. These include modified maternal adaptations to pregnancy, altered maternal behavior and transgenerational epigenetic programming. Such transgenerational programming of stress responses and pathologies has important societal consequences as it could provide a biological explanation for the generational persistence of human behaviors in populations exposed to adversity., (Copyright © 2011 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2012
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34. Is perinatal neuroendocrine programming involved in the developmental origins of metabolic disorders?
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Phillips DI and Matthews SG
- Abstract
The discovery that small size at birth and during infancy are associated with a higher risk of diabetes and related metabolic disease in later life has pointed to the importance of developmental factors in these conditions. The birth size associations are thought to reflect exposure to adverse environmental factors during early development but the mechanisms involved are still not fully understood. Animal and human work has pointed to the importance of changes in the set-point of a number of key hormonal systems controlling growth and development. These include the IGF-1/GH axis, gonadal hormones and, in particular, the systems mediating the classical stress response. Several studies show that small size at birth is linked with increased activity of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis and sympathoadrenal system in adult life. More recent human studies have shown associations between specific adverse experiences during pregnancy, such as famine or the consumption of adverse diets, and enhanced stress responses many decades later. The mediators of these neuroendocrine responses are biologically potent and are likely to have a direct influence on the risk of metabolic disease. These neuroendocrine changes may also have an evolutionary basis being part of broader process, termed phenotypic plasticity, by which adverse environmental cues experienced during development modify the structure and physiology of the adult towards a phenotype adapted for adversity. The changes are clearly advantageous if they lead to a phenotype which is well-adapted for the adult environment, but may lead to disease if there is subsequent overnutrition or other unexpected environmental conditions.
- Published
- 2011
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35. Population mutation scanning of human GHR by meltMADGE and identification of a paucimorphic variant.
- Author
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Alharbi KK, Hou G, Chen XH, Gaunt TR, Syddall HE, Sayer AA, Dennison EM, Phillips DI, Cooper C, and Day IN
- Subjects
- DNA Mutational Analysis economics, Exons genetics, Female, Gene Frequency, Genetic Variation, Humans, Introns genetics, Male, Phenotype, Polymerase Chain Reaction, Sequence Analysis, DNA, Carrier Proteins genetics, DNA Mutational Analysis methods, Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide genetics, Population Surveillance methods
- Abstract
Current studies of human genetic diversity are focused in two areas: first, detection of rare mutations in highly selected clinical cases; and second, in common single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) and haplotype effects in the general population. Less frequent SNPs and "paucimorphisms" remain underexplored, although lower frequency coding SNPs are more likely to have functional impact. We have developed a cost-efficient mutation scanning technology, meltMADGE, for population mutation scanning. Previous research in GHR has explored its role in extreme (-3 SD) growth retardation and, subsequently, "moderate" (-2 SD) growth retardation cases. Here, we describe meltMADGE assays for the entire coding region of GHR. As a first step we have established long polymerase chain reaction subbanks for GHR from 2423 unselected subjects and have applied meltMADGE scanning assays of exons 4 and 5 to these subbanks. A novel paucimorphism present at 439+30A>C (allele frequency: 0.0021) in intron 5 (location chr5:42,695,221 in GRCh37/hg19) was identified in 10 individuals, confirmed by sequencing and analysis made for major phenotypic effects. This approach is relevant to the deep sampling of populations for less frequent sequence diversity, some of which is expected to exert significant phenotypic effects.
- Published
- 2011
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36. Self-reported depression and anxiety after prenatal famine exposure: mediation by cardio-metabolic pathology?
- Author
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de Rooij SR, Painter RC, Phillips DI, Räikkönen K, Schene AH, and Roseboom TJ
- Abstract
Evidence from previous studies suggests an association between prenatal exposure to famine and increased risk for depression. The aim of this study was to investigate whether prenatal exposure to the Dutch famine is associated with self-reported depression/anxiety and whether a potential association is mediated by the presence of cardio-metabolic disease. A total of 819 persons, born as term singletons around the 1944-1945 Dutch famine, filled out the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS) and were asked about their medical history. As indicators of cardio-metabolic disease we included type 2 diabetes (T2D), hypertension and coronary heart disease (CHD). In the total study population, exposure to famine during early gestation was associated with the presence of self-reported mild-to-severe anxiety. Evidence was found for several interactions between exposure in early gestation and sex. Subsequent analyses according to sex showed that men exposed to famine during early gestation scored higher on the HADS depression scale. Self-reported mild-to-severe anxiety symptoms were more prevalent among early exposed men. No such differences were found in women. T2D and hypertension were not correlated with any of the depression and anxiety measures. Adjusting for the presence of CHD did minimally attenuate the size of the reported associations. In conclusion, the present results do not match those previously reported in prenatally famine-exposed individuals. We found only weak evidence for an association between prenatal famine exposure and symptoms of depression and anxiety, which was shown exclusively in men exposed during early gestation.
- Published
- 2011
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37. Body size at birth and cardiovascular response to and recovery from mental stress in children.
- Author
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Feldt K, Räikkönen K, Pyhälä R, Jones A, Phillips DI, Eriksson JG, Pesonen AK, Heinonen K, Järvenpää AL, Strandberg TE, and Kajantie E
- Subjects
- Blood Pressure Determination, Cardiac Output, Cardiography, Impedance, Child, Electrocardiography, Female, Finland, Gestational Age, Humans, Male, Recovery of Function, Stress, Psychological complications, Vascular Resistance, Birth Weight, Blood Pressure, Body Height, Cardiovascular System innervation, Heart Rate, Stress, Psychological physiopathology, Sympathetic Nervous System physiopathology
- Abstract
Cardiovascular (CV) response to mental stress, a predictor of CV disease risk, may be determined already in utero. However, the underlying mechanisms remain unclear, and previous studies have used adult subjects and neglected CV recovery. We investigated 147 girls and 136 boys aged 8 years who underwent the Trier Social Stress Test for children to determine whether body size at birth is associated with CV activity. Blood pressure (BP), electrocardiogram and impedance-derived indices were recorded and analyzed from continuous measurements using Vasotrac APM205A and Biopac MP150 systems. Among girls, lower birth weight was associated with lower baseline systolic BP (SBP) and diastolic BP (DBP) values (1.9 mm Hg and 1.5 mm Hg per 1 s.d. birth weight for gestational age, respectively), higher SBP and DBP response to mental stress (1.6 mm Hg and 1.1 mm Hg per 1 s.d. birth weight for gestational age, respectively), slower BP recovery and overall higher cardiac sympathetic activity. In contrast, among boys lower birth weight was associated with higher baseline levels of SBP (2.1 mm Hg per 1 s.d. birth weight for gestational age) and total peripheral resistance (TPR), overall lower cardiac sympathetic activity, lower TPR response to mental stress and a more rapid BP and cardiac sympathetic recovery. In boys, the associations with baseline levels and cardiac sympathetic activity became significant only after adjusting for current body size. These sex-specific results suggest that individual differences in childhood CV response to and recovery from mental stress may have prenatal origins. This phenomenon may be important in linking smaller body size at birth to adult CV disease.
- Published
- 2011
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38. Evidence for developmental programming of cerebral laterality in humans.
- Author
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Jones A, Osmond C, Godfrey KM, and Phillips DI
- Subjects
- Adult, Algorithms, Body Temperature physiology, Child, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Humans, Male, Models, Biological, Pregnancy, Pregnancy Complications physiopathology, Pregnancy Complications psychology, Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects physiopathology, Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects psychology, Stress, Psychological physiopathology, Cerebral Cortex embryology, Cerebral Cortex physiology, Embryonic Development physiology, Functional Laterality physiology
- Abstract
Adverse fetal environments are associated with depression, reduced cognitive ability and increased stress responsiveness in later life, but underlying mechanisms are unknown. Environmental pressures on the fetus, resulting from variations in placental function and maternal nutrition, health and stress might alter neurodevelopment, promoting the development of some brain regions over others. As asymmetry of cerebral activity, with greater right hemisphere activity, has been associated with psychopathology, we hypothesized that regional specialization during fetal life might be reflected persistently in the relative activity of the cerebral hemispheres. We tested this hypothesis in 140 healthy 8-9 year-old children, using tympanic membrane temperature to assess relative blood flow to the cerebral hemispheres at rest and following psychosocial stress (Trier Social Stress Test for Children). Their birth weight and placental weight had already been measured when their mothers took part in a previous study of pregnancy outcomes. We found that children who had a smaller weight at birth had evidence of greater blood flow to the right hemisphere than to the left hemisphere (r = -.09, P = .29 at rest; r = -.18, P = .04 following stress). This finding was strengthened if the children had a relatively low birth weight for their placental weight (r = -.17, P = .05 at rest; r = -.31, P = .0005 following stress). Our findings suggest that lateralization of cerebral activity is influenced persistently by early developmental experiences, with possible consequences for long-term neurocognitive function.
- Published
- 2011
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39. Maternal BMI, parity, and pregnancy weight gain: influences on offspring adiposity in young adulthood.
- Author
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Reynolds RM, Osmond C, Phillips DI, and Godfrey KM
- Subjects
- Body Composition, Energy Intake, Female, Humans, Life Style, Male, Maternal-Fetal Exchange physiology, Nutritional Status, Obesity genetics, Prenatal Care, Skinfold Thickness, White People, Body Mass Index, Obesity epidemiology, Parity, Pregnancy physiology, Weight Gain
- Abstract
Context: The prevalence of obesity among women of childbearing age is increasing. Emerging evidence suggests that this has long-term adverse influences on offspring health., Objective: The aim was to examine whether maternal body composition and gestational weight gain have persisting effects on offspring adiposity in early adulthood., Design and Setting: The Motherwell birth cohort study was conducted in a general community in Scotland, United Kingdom., Participants: We studied 276 men and women whose mothers' nutritional status had been characterized in pregnancy. Four-site skinfold thicknesses, waist circumference, and body mass index (BMI), were measured at age 30 yr; sex-adjusted percentage body fat and fat mass index were calculated., Main Outcome Measure: Indices of offspring adiposity at age 30 yr were measured., Results: Percentage body fat was greater in offspring of mothers with a higher BMI at the first antenatal visit (rising by 0.35%/kg/m2; P<0.001) and in offspring whose mothers were primiparous (difference, 1.5% in primiparous vs. multiparous; P=0.03). Higher offspring percentage body fat was also independently associated with higher pregnancy weight gain (7.4%/kg/wk; P=0.002). There were similar significant associations of increased maternal BMI, greater pregnancy weight gain, and parity with greater offspring waist circumference, BMI, and fat mass index., Conclusions: Adiposity in early adulthood is influenced by prenatal influences independently of current lifestyle factors. Maternal adiposity, greater gestational weight, and parity all impact on offspring adiposity. Strategies to reduce the impact of maternal obesity and greater pregnancy weight gain on offspring future health are required.
- Published
- 2010
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40. Maternal prenatal licorice consumption alters hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenocortical axis function in children.
- Author
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Räikkönen K, Seckl JR, Heinonen K, Pyhälä R, Feldt K, Jones A, Pesonen AK, Phillips DI, Lahti J, Järvenpää AL, Eriksson JG, Matthews KA, Strandberg TE, and Kajantie E
- Subjects
- 11-beta-Hydroxysteroid Dehydrogenase Type 2 antagonists & inhibitors, Adult, Area Under Curve, Child, Circadian Rhythm drug effects, Circadian Rhythm physiology, Dose-Response Relationship, Drug, Female, Humans, Hydrocortisone metabolism, Male, Pregnancy, Saliva metabolism, Stress, Psychological metabolism, Glycyrrhiza, Glycyrrhizic Acid pharmacology, Hypothalamo-Hypophyseal System drug effects, Pituitary-Adrenal System drug effects, Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects metabolism
- Abstract
Overexposure to glucocorticoids has been proposed as a mechanism by which prenatal adversity 'programs' the function of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenocortical axis (HPAA), thereby increasing the risk of adult diseases. Glycyrrhizin, a natural constituent of licorice, potently inhibits 11β-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase type 2, the feto-placental barrier to the higher maternal cortisol levels. We studied if maternal consumption of glycyrrhizin in licorice associates with HPAA function in children. Diurnal salivary cortisol and salivary cortisol during the Trier Social Stress Test for Children (TSST-C) were measured in children (n=321, mean age=8.1, SD=0.3 years) whose mothers consumed varying levels of glycyrrhizin in licorice during pregnancy; exposure-level groups were labeled high (≥500 mg/week), moderate (250-499 mg/week) and zero-low (0-249 mg/week). In comparison to the zero-low exposure group, children in the high exposure group had 19.2% higher salivary cortisol awakening peak, 33.1% higher salivary cortisol awakening slope, 15.4% higher salivary cortisol awakening area under the curve (AUC), 30.8% higher baseline TSST-C salivary cortisol levels, and their salivary cortisol levels remained high throughout the TSST-C protocol (P-values <0.05). These effects appeared dose-related. Our findings lend support to prenatal 'programming' of HPAA function by overexposure to glucocorticoids., (Copyright © 2010 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2010
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41. Insulin-requiring diabetes in Ethiopia: associations with poverty, early undernutrition and anthropometric disproportion.
- Author
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Fekadu S, Yigzaw M, Alemu S, Dessie A, Fieldhouse H, Girma T, Trimble ER, Phillips DI, and Parry EH
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Bone Development, Case-Control Studies, Child, Diabetes Mellitus drug therapy, Ethiopia epidemiology, Female, Humans, Insulin therapeutic use, Male, Malnutrition epidemiology, Sex Factors, Socioeconomic Factors, Young Adult, Body Weights and Measures, Child Development physiology, Child Nutrition Disorders, Diabetes Complications epidemiology, Diabetes Mellitus epidemiology, Malnutrition complications, Poverty Areas
- Abstract
Background/objectives: Most insulin-requiring diabetes patients in Ethiopia have an atypical form of the disease, which resembles previous descriptions of malnutrition-related diabetes. As so little is known about its aetiology, we have carried out a case-control study to evaluate its social and nutritional determinants., Subjects/methods: Men and women with insulin-requiring diabetes (n=107), aged 18-40 years, were recruited in two centres, Gondar and Jimma, 750 km northwest and 330 km southwest of the capital, Addis Ababa, respectively. Controls of similar age and sex (n=110) were recruited from patients attending other hospital clinics., Results: Diabetes was strongly associated with subsistence farming, odds ratio=3.5 (95% confidence interval: 1.5-7.8) and illiteracy/low levels of education, odds ratio=4.0 (2.0-8.0). Diabetes was also linked with a history of childhood malnutrition, odds ratio=5.5 (1.0-29.0) the mother's death during childhood, odds ratio=3.9 (1.0-14.8), and markers of poverty including poorer access to sanitation (P=0.004), clean water (P=0.009), greater overcrowding (P=0.04), increased distance from the clinic (P=0.01) and having fewer possessions (P=0.01). Compared with controls, people with diabetes had low mid upper arm circumference, body mass index (BMI) and fat/lean body mass (P<0.01). In addition, men with the disease tended to be shorter, were lighter (P=0.001), with reduced sitting height (P=0.015) and reduced biacromial (P=0.003) and bitrochanteric (P=0.008) diameters., Conclusions: Insulin-requiring diabetes in Ethiopia is strongly linked with poor education and markers of poverty. Men with the disease have associated disproportionate skeletal growth. These findings point towards a nutritional aetiology for this condition although the nature of the nutritional deficiency and its timing during growth and development remains obscure.
- Published
- 2010
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42. Depression and anxiety: Associations with biological and perceived stress reactivity to a psychological stress protocol in a middle-aged population.
- Author
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de Rooij SR, Schene AH, Phillips DI, and Roseboom TJ
- Subjects
- Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Saliva metabolism, Anxiety metabolism, Anxiety physiopathology, Anxiety psychology, Blood Pressure physiology, Depression metabolism, Depression physiopathology, Depression psychology, Heart Rate physiology, Hydrocortisone metabolism, Stress, Psychological metabolism, Stress, Psychological physiopathology, Stress, Psychological psychology
- Abstract
Background: Depression and anxiety have been linked to higher as well as lower reactivity to stressful circumstances. Large, population-based studies investigating the association between depression and anxiety, perceived and physiological stress responses are lacking., Methods: We studied 725 men and women, aged 55-60 years, from a population-based cohort, who filled out the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS). We performed a standardized interview on medical history and lifestyle. We measured continuous blood pressure (BP) and heart rate (HR) reactivity, saliva cortisol reactivity and perceived stress during a psychological stress protocol., Results: Albeit not statistically significant in all groups, systolic BP (SBP), diastolic BP (DBP), HR and cortisol reactivity to the psychological stress protocol were lower in those with mild-to-severe depression or anxiety symptoms and those ever clinically diagnosed with depression or anxiety, while perceived levels of stress were higher compared to those without depression or anxiety symptomatology. Maximum SBP, HR and cortisol stress responses significantly decreased and perceived stress scores significantly increased with increasing scores on the HADS depression subscale (HADS-D) and HADS anxiety subscale (HADS-A) (all P<0.05). The same held for stress responses in relation to the total HADS score (all P<0.05) and, in this case, the maximum DBP stress response was also significantly lower with an increasing HADS score (P=0.05). In addition, the maximum DBP stress response was significantly lower for those ever clinically diagnosed with depression (P=0.04). Adjusting for sex, use of anti-hypertensive medication, anti-depressant and anxiolytic medication, smoking, alcohol consumption, socio-economic status (SES) and body mass index (BMI) did not attenuate the results., Conclusion: The present study results suggest that the biological stress response of middle-aged men and women who experienced depressed and anxious feelings does not completely correspond with how stressed they feel at that moment. Although differences were not substantial in all cases, response to a psychological stress protocol seemed to be decreased in the groups with experience of depressed and anxious feelings, while the perception of stress seemed to be increased., (Copyright 2009 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2010
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43. Childhood separation experience predicts HPA axis hormonal responses in late adulthood: a natural experiment of World War II.
- Author
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Pesonen AK, Räikkönen K, Feldt K, Heinonen K, Osmond C, Phillips DI, Barker DJ, Eriksson JG, and Kajantie E
- Subjects
- Age Factors, Aged, Fathers, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Saliva metabolism, Sex Factors, Stress, Psychological metabolism, Adrenocorticotropic Hormone blood, Hydrocortisone blood, Hydrocortisone metabolism, Hypothalamo-Hypophyseal System metabolism, Maternal Deprivation, Parent-Child Relations, Pituitary-Adrenal System metabolism, World War II
- Abstract
Background: Animal models have linked early maternal separation with lifelong changes in hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenocortical (HPA) axis activity. Although this is paralleled in human studies, this is often in the context of other life adversities, for example, divorce or adoption, and it is not known whether early separation in the absence of these factors has long term effects on the HPA axis., Aims: The Finnish experience in World War II created a natural experiment to test whether separation from a father serving in the armed forces or from both parents due to war evacuation are associated with alterations in HPA axis response to psychosocial stress in late adulthood., Method: 282 subjects (M=63.5 years, SD=2.5), of whom 85 were non-separated, 129 were separated from their father, and 68 were separated from both their caregivers during WWII, were enlisted to participate in a Trier Social Stress Test (TSST), during which we measured salivary cortisol and, for 215 individuals, plasma cortisol and ACTH concentrations. We used mixed models to study whether parental separation is associated with salivary and plasma cortisol or plasma ACTH reactivity, and linear regressions to analyse differences in the baseline, or incremental area under the cortisol or ACTH curves., Results: Participants separated from their father did not differ significantly from non-separated participants. However, those separated from both parents had higher average salivary cortisol and plasma ACTH concentrations across all time points compared to the non-separated group. They also had higher salivary cortisol reactivity to the TSST. Separated women had higher baselines in plasma cortisol and ACTH, whereas men had higher reactivity in response to stress during the TSST. Participants who had experienced the separation in early childhood were more affected than children separated during infancy or school age., Conclusions: Separation from parents during childhood may alter an individual's stress physiology much later in adult life., (Copyright 2009 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2010
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44. Poor sleep and altered hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenocortical and sympatho-adrenal-medullary system activity in children.
- Author
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Räikkönen K, Matthews KA, Pesonen AK, Pyhälä R, Paavonen EJ, Feldt K, Jones A, Phillips DI, Seckl JR, Heinonen K, Lahti J, Komsi N, Järvenpää AL, Eriksson JG, Strandberg TE, and Kajantie E
- Subjects
- Child, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Humans, Male, Saliva chemistry, Stress, Psychological physiopathology, Wakefulness, Adrenal Cortex physiopathology, Hydrocortisone analysis, Medulla Oblongata physiopathology, Pituitary-Adrenal System physiopathology, Sleep Wake Disorders etiology, Sympathetic Nervous System physiopathology
- Abstract
Context: Neuroendocrine alterations, with well-known links with health, may offer insight into why poor sleep is associated with poor health. Yet, studies testing associations between sleep and neuroendocrine activity in children are scarce., Objective: The aim of this study was to determine whether actigraphy-based sleep pattern is associated with hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenocortical axis and sympatho-adrenal-medullary system activity in children., Design and Setting: We conducted a cross-sectional study in a birth cohort in Helsinki, Finland., Participants: We studied 282 8-yr-old children., Main Outcome Measures: We measured diurnal salivary cortisol and salivary cortisol and alpha-amylase (a sympatho-adrenal-medullary system marker) responses to the Trier Social Stress Test for Children (TSST-C)., Results: Children with short (
77.4%) displayed higher diurnal cortisol levels across the entire day (P < 0.03), higher cortisol levels after the TSST-C stressor (P < 0.04), and higher overall alpha-amylase levels across the entire TSST-C protocol (P < 0.05). The effects were not confounded by factors that may alter sleep or hormonal patterns., Conclusions: Poor sleep may signal altered neuroendocrine functioning in children. The findings may offer insight into the pathways linking poor sleep with poor health. - Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Lower maternal folate status in early pregnancy is associated with childhood hyperactivity and peer problems in offspring.
- Author
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Schlotz W, Jones A, Phillips DI, Gale CR, Robinson SM, and Godfrey KM
- Subjects
- Adult, Attention Deficit Disorder with Hyperactivity etiology, Child, Child Behavior psychology, Female, Fetal Development physiology, Gestational Age, Head embryology, Humans, Male, Pregnancy, Prospective Studies, Sex Factors, Child Behavior Disorders etiology, Folic Acid blood, Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects psychology, Prenatal Nutritional Physiological Phenomena physiology
- Abstract
Background: Maternal nutrition during pregnancy has been linked with fetal brain development and psychopathology in the offspring. We examined for associations of maternal folate status and dietary intake during pregnancy with brain growth and childhood behavioural difficulties in the offspring., Methods: In a prospective cohort study, maternal red blood cell folate (RCF) was measured at 14 weeks of pregnancy and total folate intake (TFI) from food and supplements was assessed in early and late pregnancy. The offspring's head circumference and body weight were measured at birth and in infancy, and 100 mothers reported on children's behavioural difficulties at a mean age of 8.75 years using the Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire., Results: Lower maternal RCF and TFI in early pregnancy were associated with higher childhood hyperactivity (RCF: beta = -.24; p = .013; TFI: beta = -.24; p = .022) and peer problems scores (RCF: beta = -.28; p = .004; TFI: beta = -.28; p = .009) in the offspring. Maternal gestational RCF was positively associated with head circumference at birth (adjusted for gestational age), and mediation analyses showed significant inverse indirect associations of RCF with hyperactivity/inattention and peer problems via fetal brain growth. Adjustment for mother's smoking and drinking alcohol during pregnancy did not change the results., Conclusions: Although the associations are small and residual confounding is possible, our data provide preliminary support for the hypothesis that lower folate status in early pregnancy might impair fetal brain development and affect hyperactivity/inattention and peer problems in childhood.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. The prevalence of polycystic ovary syndrome in a community sample assessed under contrasting diagnostic criteria.
- Author
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March WA, Moore VM, Willson KJ, Phillips DI, Norman RJ, and Davies MJ
- Subjects
- Adult, Cohort Studies, Female, Humans, Hyperandrogenism diagnosis, Polycystic Ovary Syndrome classification, Polycystic Ovary Syndrome diagnosis, Prevalence, Retrospective Studies, South Australia epidemiology, Hyperandrogenism epidemiology, Polycystic Ovary Syndrome epidemiology
- Abstract
Background: Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) is considered to be the most common endocrine disorder in women of reproductive age, yet debate over appropriate diagnostic criteria and design limitations with sampling methodology have left some doubt as to the actual prevalence in the community. The objective of this study was to create a representative prevalence estimate of PCOS in the community under the National Institutes of Health (NIH) criteria and the more recent Rotterdam consensus criteria and Androgen Excess Society (AES) criteria., Methods: A retrospective birth cohort study was carried out in which 728 women born during 1973-1975 in a single maternity hospital were traced and interviewed in adulthood (age = 27-34 year; n = 728). Symptoms of PCOS (hyperandrogenism, menstrual dysfunction and polycystic ovaries) were identified by examination and the presence of polycystic ovaries in those that did not consent to the ultrasound were imputed., Results: The estimated prevalence of PCOS in this birth cohort using the NIH criteria was 8.7 +/- 2.0% (with no need for imputation). Under the Rotterdam criteria, the prevalence was 11.9 +/- 2.4% which increased to 17.8 +/- 2.8% when imputed data were included. Under the AES recommendations, PCOS prevalence was 10.2 +/- 2.2%, and 12.0 +/- 2.4% with the imputed data. Of the women with PCOS, 68-69% did not have a pre-existing diagnosis., Conclusions: The Rotterdam and AES prevalence estimates were up to twice that obtained with the NIH criteria in this, as well other prevalence studies. In addition, this study also draws attention to the issue of many women with PCOS in the community remaining undiagnosed.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Minireview: transgenerational inheritance of the stress response: a new frontier in stress research.
- Author
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Matthews SG and Phillips DI
- Subjects
- Animals, Family Characteristics, Female, Humans, Hypothalamo-Hypophyseal System physiology, Maternal-Fetal Exchange physiology, Models, Biological, Pituitary-Adrenal System physiology, Pregnancy, Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects physiopathology, Research Design, Inheritance Patterns physiology, Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects psychology, Research trends, Stress, Physiological genetics
- Abstract
It is well established in animal models that the prenatal environment can have a major impact on stress axis function throughout life. These changes can predispose to various metabolic, cardiovascular, and neurobiological pathophysiologies. Emerging evidence indicates that the same programming effects occur in humans. It is now becoming clear that the pathophysiological effects are not confined to the first-generation offspring and that there is transgenerational memory of fetal experience that can extend across multiple generations. The complex mechanisms by which transgenerational transmission of stress responsiveness occur are rapidly becoming a focus of investigation. Understanding these fundamental biological processes will allow for development of intervention strategies that prevent or reverse adverse programming of the stress response.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Fetal origins of mental health: evidence and mechanisms.
- Author
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Schlotz W and Phillips DI
- Subjects
- Female, Humans, Mental Disorders physiopathology, Pregnancy, Pregnancy Complications physiopathology, Fetal Development, Fetus anatomy & histology, Mental Disorders etiology
- Abstract
The concept of fetal programming states that changes in the fetal environment during sensitive periods of organ development may cause long-lasting changes in the structure and functioning of these organs later in life and influence the risk for chronic diseases such as coronary heart disease and type 2 diabetes. Fetal growth is a summary marker of the fetal environment and is reflected by relatively easy-to-obtain measures of size at birth such as birth weight. In the last two decades, a body of evidence emerged linking fetal growth with behavioural and mental health outcomes later in life. Cognitive functioning and behavioural problems in childhood, in particular inattention/hyperactivity, have been shown to be inversely related to fetal growth. Although results are mixed, risk for personality disorders and schizophrenia seems to be linked with fetal growth and adversity, while the evidence for mood disorders is weak. Vulnerability for psychopathology may also be influenced by prenatal adversity. There is evidence for associations of fetal growth with temperament in childhood as well as stress reactivity and distress. The associations of fetal growth with mental health later in life are potentially caused by specific prenatal factors such as maternal smoking, alcohol, toxins/drugs, nutrition, psychosocial stress and infection during pregnancy. The mechanisms likely involve changes in neurodevelopment and in the set point of neuroendocrine systems, and there is evidence that prenatal adversity interacts with genetic and postnatal environmental factors. Future studies should examine the effects of specific prenatal factors and attempt to disentangle genetic and prenatal environmental effects.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Insulin-requiring diabetes in rural Ethiopia: should we reopen the case for malnutrition-related diabetes?
- Author
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Alemu S, Dessie A, Seid E, Bard E, Lee PT, Trimble ER, Phillips DI, and Parry EH
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Body Mass Index, Child, Diabetes Mellitus etiology, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1 classification, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1 etiology, Ethiopia epidemiology, Female, Humans, Incidence, Male, Malnutrition complications, Middle Aged, Rural Population statistics & numerical data, Urban Population statistics & numerical data, Young Adult, Diabetes Mellitus epidemiology, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1 epidemiology, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 epidemiology, Malnutrition epidemiology
- Abstract
Aims/hypothesis: We evaluated the incidence of insulin-requiring diabetes in a rural area of sub-Saharan Africa., Methods: Health surveillance data from a chronic disease programme in two zones of Ethiopia, Gondar and Jimma, were studied. The two zones have a population of more than 5,000,000 people., Results: In Gondar Zone (1995-2008) and Jimma Zone (2002-2008) 2,280 patients presented with diabetes, of whom 1,029 (45%) required insulin for glycaemic control at diagnosis. The annual incidence of insulin-requiring diabetes was 2.1 (95% CI 2.0-2.2) per 100,000 and was twice as high in men (2.9 per 100,000) as in women (1.4 per 100,000). In both sexes incidence rates peaked at the age of 25 to 29 years. Incidence rates in the urban areas of Gondar and Jimma were five times higher than in the surrounding rural areas. Patients with insulin-requiring diabetes from rural and urban areas had a very low BMI and most were subsistence farmers or unemployed., Conclusions/interpretation: The typical patient with diabetes in rural Ethiopia is an impoverished, young adult male with severe symptoms requiring insulin for glycaemic control. The low incidence rates in rural compared with urban areas suggest that many cases of this disease remain undiagnosed. The disease phenotype encountered in this area of Africa is very different from the classical type 1 diabetes seen in the West and most closely resembles previous descriptions of malnutrition-related diabetes, a category not recognised in the current WHO Diabetes Classification. We believe that the case for this condition should be reopened.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Programming of hypertension: associations of plasma aldosterone in adult men and women with birthweight, cortisol, and blood pressure.
- Author
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Reynolds RM, Walker BR, Phillips DI, Dennison EM, Fraser R, Mackenzie SM, Davies E, and Connell JM
- Subjects
- Adrenocorticotropic Hormone, Age Factors, Aged, Aldosterone metabolism, Analysis of Variance, Blood Pressure Determination, Cohort Studies, Dexamethasone, Female, Humans, Hypertension physiopathology, Linear Models, Logistic Models, Male, Multivariate Analysis, Pituitary-Adrenal System physiology, Probability, Risk Factors, Sex Factors, Statistics, Nonparametric, Aldosterone blood, Birth Weight, Hydrocortisone blood, Hypertension blood, Hypertension diagnosis
- Abstract
Animal models suggest that explanations for the association of low birthweight with adult hypertension may include chronic activation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal or renin-angiotensin-aldosterone axes. In humans, low birthweight predicts elevated plasma cortisol, but associations with aldosterone have not been reported. We measured aldosterone in serum samples from 205 men and 106 women from 67 to 78 years of age, from Hertfordshire, UK, for whom birthweight was recorded. Participants underwent an overnight low-dose (0.25 mg) dexamethasone suppression test and a low-dose (1 mug) ACTH (corticotropin) stimulation test and were genotyped for the -344 C/T polymorphism of the CYP11B2 gene encoding aldosterone synthase. Median aldosterone was 6.22 ng/dL (range 0.15 to 38.74) and was higher in men than women (P<0.0001). Higher aldosterone levels after both dexamethasone and ACTH stimulation were associated with higher blood pressure (r=0.20, P=0.001; r=0.33, P<0.0001, respectively) and with lower birthweight (r=-0.16, P=0.008; r=-0.21, P=0.001, respectively). These associations remained significant after adjusting for age, gender, obesity, and genotype. Our findings supplement previous evidence that aldosterone is an important regulator of blood pressure and suggest that factors in early life that retard fetal growth and program activation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis in humans result not only in higher glucocorticoid activity but also in increased mineralocorticoid activity.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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