Impact of maternal obesity and diabetes on fetal pancreatic development

Publikation: Bidrag til bog/antologi/rapportBidrag til bog/antologiForskningfagfællebedømt

Standard

Impact of maternal obesity and diabetes on fetal pancreatic development. / Nielsen, Jens Høiriis; Jaksch, Caroline Anna Mikaela; Lessi, Isabela; Damasceno, Debora C.

Fetal and Early Postnatal Programming and its Influence on Adult Health. Boca Raton : CRC Press, 2017. s. 125-140.

Publikation: Bidrag til bog/antologi/rapportBidrag til bog/antologiForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Nielsen, JH, Jaksch, CAM, Lessi, I & Damasceno, DC 2017, Impact of maternal obesity and diabetes on fetal pancreatic development. i Fetal and Early Postnatal Programming and its Influence on Adult Health. CRC Press, Boca Raton, s. 125-140.

APA

Nielsen, J. H., Jaksch, C. A. M., Lessi, I., & Damasceno, D. C. (2017). Impact of maternal obesity and diabetes on fetal pancreatic development. I Fetal and Early Postnatal Programming and its Influence on Adult Health (s. 125-140). CRC Press.

Vancouver

Nielsen JH, Jaksch CAM, Lessi I, Damasceno DC. Impact of maternal obesity and diabetes on fetal pancreatic development. I Fetal and Early Postnatal Programming and its Influence on Adult Health. Boca Raton: CRC Press. 2017. s. 125-140

Author

Nielsen, Jens Høiriis ; Jaksch, Caroline Anna Mikaela ; Lessi, Isabela ; Damasceno, Debora C. / Impact of maternal obesity and diabetes on fetal pancreatic development. Fetal and Early Postnatal Programming and its Influence on Adult Health. Boca Raton : CRC Press, 2017. s. 125-140

Bibtex

@inbook{b3980c042a2143298e66644258c23d27,
title = "Impact of maternal obesity and diabetes on fetal pancreatic development",
abstract = "The global epidemics of obesity and type 2 diabetes (T2D) are serious threats to human health and health-care expenses. Although genetics is an important factor, it does not explain this dramatic increase that involves environmental factors such as nutrients, gut microbiota, and lifestyles. Twenty-five years ago, the concept of “fetal programming” or “Developmental Origins of Health and Disease” was introduced stating that the intrauterine environment during pregnancy has an impact on gene expression that may persist through adulthood and be transmitted to the next generations. It was found that both under- and overnutrition before and during pregnancy may cause metabolic diseases like obesity and T2D. Studies in humans have shown that offspring of mothers with obesity, type 1 diabetes (T1D), T2D, or gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) are prone to develop metabolic disorders such as obesity, T2D, and GDM in adult life (Carrapato 2003; Hummel et al. 2013; Ruchat et al. 2013; Yan and Yang 2014). In certain populations, up to 15% of pregnant women develop GDM (King 1998) and offspring of GDM mothers has an up to eightfold increased risk of developing T2D or 126prediabetes later in life (Clausen et al. 2008). Obesity is a risk factor for development of GDM (Black et al. 2013; Fox et al. 2014), and the prevalence of obesity in women of reproductive age (20–44 years) in the United States is around 33% (Huda et al. 2010). Among pregnant women in 20 U.S. states, 20.5% were prepregnant obese in 2009 (Fisher et al. 2013). The clinical consequences of obesity and diabetes in pregnancy for the offspring will be dealt with in Chapters 13 and 14 of this book.",
author = "Nielsen, {Jens H{\o}iriis} and Jaksch, {Caroline Anna Mikaela} and Isabela Lessi and Damasceno, {Debora C.}",
year = "2017",
month = jun,
language = "English",
pages = "125--140",
booktitle = "Fetal and Early Postnatal Programming and its Influence on Adult Health",
publisher = "CRC Press",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - Impact of maternal obesity and diabetes on fetal pancreatic development

AU - Nielsen, Jens Høiriis

AU - Jaksch, Caroline Anna Mikaela

AU - Lessi, Isabela

AU - Damasceno, Debora C.

PY - 2017/6

Y1 - 2017/6

N2 - The global epidemics of obesity and type 2 diabetes (T2D) are serious threats to human health and health-care expenses. Although genetics is an important factor, it does not explain this dramatic increase that involves environmental factors such as nutrients, gut microbiota, and lifestyles. Twenty-five years ago, the concept of “fetal programming” or “Developmental Origins of Health and Disease” was introduced stating that the intrauterine environment during pregnancy has an impact on gene expression that may persist through adulthood and be transmitted to the next generations. It was found that both under- and overnutrition before and during pregnancy may cause metabolic diseases like obesity and T2D. Studies in humans have shown that offspring of mothers with obesity, type 1 diabetes (T1D), T2D, or gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) are prone to develop metabolic disorders such as obesity, T2D, and GDM in adult life (Carrapato 2003; Hummel et al. 2013; Ruchat et al. 2013; Yan and Yang 2014). In certain populations, up to 15% of pregnant women develop GDM (King 1998) and offspring of GDM mothers has an up to eightfold increased risk of developing T2D or 126prediabetes later in life (Clausen et al. 2008). Obesity is a risk factor for development of GDM (Black et al. 2013; Fox et al. 2014), and the prevalence of obesity in women of reproductive age (20–44 years) in the United States is around 33% (Huda et al. 2010). Among pregnant women in 20 U.S. states, 20.5% were prepregnant obese in 2009 (Fisher et al. 2013). The clinical consequences of obesity and diabetes in pregnancy for the offspring will be dealt with in Chapters 13 and 14 of this book.

AB - The global epidemics of obesity and type 2 diabetes (T2D) are serious threats to human health and health-care expenses. Although genetics is an important factor, it does not explain this dramatic increase that involves environmental factors such as nutrients, gut microbiota, and lifestyles. Twenty-five years ago, the concept of “fetal programming” or “Developmental Origins of Health and Disease” was introduced stating that the intrauterine environment during pregnancy has an impact on gene expression that may persist through adulthood and be transmitted to the next generations. It was found that both under- and overnutrition before and during pregnancy may cause metabolic diseases like obesity and T2D. Studies in humans have shown that offspring of mothers with obesity, type 1 diabetes (T1D), T2D, or gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) are prone to develop metabolic disorders such as obesity, T2D, and GDM in adult life (Carrapato 2003; Hummel et al. 2013; Ruchat et al. 2013; Yan and Yang 2014). In certain populations, up to 15% of pregnant women develop GDM (King 1998) and offspring of GDM mothers has an up to eightfold increased risk of developing T2D or 126prediabetes later in life (Clausen et al. 2008). Obesity is a risk factor for development of GDM (Black et al. 2013; Fox et al. 2014), and the prevalence of obesity in women of reproductive age (20–44 years) in the United States is around 33% (Huda et al. 2010). Among pregnant women in 20 U.S. states, 20.5% were prepregnant obese in 2009 (Fisher et al. 2013). The clinical consequences of obesity and diabetes in pregnancy for the offspring will be dealt with in Chapters 13 and 14 of this book.

M3 - Book chapter

SP - 125

EP - 140

BT - Fetal and Early Postnatal Programming and its Influence on Adult Health

PB - CRC Press

CY - Boca Raton

ER -

ID: 195255095