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Effect of integration of supplemental nutrition with public health programmes in pregnancy and early childhood on cardiovascular risk in rural Indian adolescents: long term follow-up of Hyderabad nutrition trial

Objective To determine whether integration of nutritional supplementation with other public health programmes in early life reduces the risk of cardiovascular disease in undernourished populations. Design Approximately 15 years’ follow-up of participants born within an earlier controlled, community...

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Autores principales: Kinra, Sanjay, Rameshwar Sarma, K V, Ghafoorunissa, Mendu, Vishnu Vardhana Rao, Ravikumar, Radhakrishnan, Mohan, Viswanthan, Wilkinson, Ian B, Cockcroft, John R, Davey Smith, George, Ben-Shlomo, Yoav
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BMJ Publishing Group Ltd. 2008
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2500199/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18658189
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmj.a605
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author Kinra, Sanjay
Rameshwar Sarma, K V
Ghafoorunissa,
Mendu, Vishnu Vardhana Rao
Ravikumar, Radhakrishnan
Mohan, Viswanthan
Wilkinson, Ian B
Cockcroft, John R
Davey Smith, George
Ben-Shlomo, Yoav
author_facet Kinra, Sanjay
Rameshwar Sarma, K V
Ghafoorunissa,
Mendu, Vishnu Vardhana Rao
Ravikumar, Radhakrishnan
Mohan, Viswanthan
Wilkinson, Ian B
Cockcroft, John R
Davey Smith, George
Ben-Shlomo, Yoav
author_sort Kinra, Sanjay
collection PubMed
description Objective To determine whether integration of nutritional supplementation with other public health programmes in early life reduces the risk of cardiovascular disease in undernourished populations. Design Approximately 15 years’ follow-up of participants born within an earlier controlled, community trial of nutritional supplementation integrated with other public health programmes. Setting 29 villages (15 intervention, 14 control) near Hyderabad city, south India. Participants 1165 adolescents aged 13-18 years. Intervention Balanced protein-calorie supplementation (2.51 MJ, 20 g protein) offered daily to pregnant women and preschool children aged under 6 years, coupled with integrated delivery of vertical public health programmes. Main outcome measures Height, adiposity, blood pressures, lipids, insulin resistance (homoeostasis model assessment (HOMA) score), and arterial stiffness (augmentation index). Results The participants from the intervention villages were 14 mm (95% confidence interval 4 to 23; P=0.007) taller than controls but had similar body composition. The participants from the intervention villages had more favourable measures of insulin resistance and arterial stiffness: 20% (3% to 39%; P=0.02) lower HOMA score and 3.3% (1% to 5.7%; P=0.008) lower augmentation index. No strong evidence existed for differences in blood pressures and serum lipids. Conclusions In this undernourished population, integrated delivery of supplemental nutrition with other public health programmes in pregnancy and early childhood was associated with a more favourable profile of cardiovascular disease risk factors in adolescence. This pragmatic study provides the most robust evidence to date on this important hypothesis for which classic trials are unlikely. Improved maternal and child nutrition may have a role in reducing the burden of cardiovascular disease in low income and middle income countries.
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spelling pubmed-25001992008-09-08 Effect of integration of supplemental nutrition with public health programmes in pregnancy and early childhood on cardiovascular risk in rural Indian adolescents: long term follow-up of Hyderabad nutrition trial Kinra, Sanjay Rameshwar Sarma, K V Ghafoorunissa, Mendu, Vishnu Vardhana Rao Ravikumar, Radhakrishnan Mohan, Viswanthan Wilkinson, Ian B Cockcroft, John R Davey Smith, George Ben-Shlomo, Yoav BMJ Research Objective To determine whether integration of nutritional supplementation with other public health programmes in early life reduces the risk of cardiovascular disease in undernourished populations. Design Approximately 15 years’ follow-up of participants born within an earlier controlled, community trial of nutritional supplementation integrated with other public health programmes. Setting 29 villages (15 intervention, 14 control) near Hyderabad city, south India. Participants 1165 adolescents aged 13-18 years. Intervention Balanced protein-calorie supplementation (2.51 MJ, 20 g protein) offered daily to pregnant women and preschool children aged under 6 years, coupled with integrated delivery of vertical public health programmes. Main outcome measures Height, adiposity, blood pressures, lipids, insulin resistance (homoeostasis model assessment (HOMA) score), and arterial stiffness (augmentation index). Results The participants from the intervention villages were 14 mm (95% confidence interval 4 to 23; P=0.007) taller than controls but had similar body composition. The participants from the intervention villages had more favourable measures of insulin resistance and arterial stiffness: 20% (3% to 39%; P=0.02) lower HOMA score and 3.3% (1% to 5.7%; P=0.008) lower augmentation index. No strong evidence existed for differences in blood pressures and serum lipids. Conclusions In this undernourished population, integrated delivery of supplemental nutrition with other public health programmes in pregnancy and early childhood was associated with a more favourable profile of cardiovascular disease risk factors in adolescence. This pragmatic study provides the most robust evidence to date on this important hypothesis for which classic trials are unlikely. Improved maternal and child nutrition may have a role in reducing the burden of cardiovascular disease in low income and middle income countries. BMJ Publishing Group Ltd. 2008-07-31 /pmc/articles/PMC2500199/ /pubmed/18658189 http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmj.a605 Text en © Kinra et al 2008 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research
Kinra, Sanjay
Rameshwar Sarma, K V
Ghafoorunissa,
Mendu, Vishnu Vardhana Rao
Ravikumar, Radhakrishnan
Mohan, Viswanthan
Wilkinson, Ian B
Cockcroft, John R
Davey Smith, George
Ben-Shlomo, Yoav
Effect of integration of supplemental nutrition with public health programmes in pregnancy and early childhood on cardiovascular risk in rural Indian adolescents: long term follow-up of Hyderabad nutrition trial
title Effect of integration of supplemental nutrition with public health programmes in pregnancy and early childhood on cardiovascular risk in rural Indian adolescents: long term follow-up of Hyderabad nutrition trial
title_full Effect of integration of supplemental nutrition with public health programmes in pregnancy and early childhood on cardiovascular risk in rural Indian adolescents: long term follow-up of Hyderabad nutrition trial
title_fullStr Effect of integration of supplemental nutrition with public health programmes in pregnancy and early childhood on cardiovascular risk in rural Indian adolescents: long term follow-up of Hyderabad nutrition trial
title_full_unstemmed Effect of integration of supplemental nutrition with public health programmes in pregnancy and early childhood on cardiovascular risk in rural Indian adolescents: long term follow-up of Hyderabad nutrition trial
title_short Effect of integration of supplemental nutrition with public health programmes in pregnancy and early childhood on cardiovascular risk in rural Indian adolescents: long term follow-up of Hyderabad nutrition trial
title_sort effect of integration of supplemental nutrition with public health programmes in pregnancy and early childhood on cardiovascular risk in rural indian adolescents: long term follow-up of hyderabad nutrition trial
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2500199/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18658189
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmj.a605
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