Developmental Origins of Health and Disease: Brief History of the Approach and Current Focus on Epigenetic Mechanisms
University of California, Irvine
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Abstract
"Barker's hypothesis" emerged almost 25 years ago from epidemiological studies of birth and death records that revealed a high geographic correlation between rates of infant mortality and certain classes of later adult deaths as well as an association between birthweight and rates of adult death from ischemic heart disease. These observations led to a theory that undernutrition during gestation was an important early origin of adult cardiac and metabolic disorders due to fetal programming that permanently shaped the body's structure, function, and metabolism and contributed to adult disease. This theory stimulated interest in the fetal origins of adult disorders, which expanded and coalesced approximately 5…
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4Topics & keywords
Topics
Keywords
- Overnutrition
- Disease
- Epigenetics
- Malnutrition
- Pregnancy
- Fetal programming
- Offspring
- Biology
UN Sustainable Development Goals
- Zero hunger
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