Report on the 2nd World Congress on Fetal Origins of Adult Disease, Brighton, U.K., June 7–10, 2003

被引:15
作者
Mark Hanson
Peter Gluckman
Dennis Bier
John Challis
Tom Fleming
Terrence Forrester
Keith Godfrey
Penelope Nestel
Chittaranjan Yajnik
机构
[1] Center for Developmental Origins of Health and Disease,Department of Physiology
[2] University of Southhampton,Division of Cell Sciences
[3] Princess Anne Hospital,Department of Obstetrics
[4] Liggins Institute,undefined
[5] Children's Nutrition Research Center,undefined
[6] Baylor College of Medicine,undefined
[7] University of Toronto,undefined
[8] School of Biological Sciences,undefined
[9] University of Southampton,undefined
[10] Bassett Crescent East,undefined
[11] Tropical Metabolism Research Unit,undefined
[12] Tropical Medicine Research Institute,undefined
[13] Gynaecology and Child Health,undefined
[14] University of the West Indies,undefined
[15] MRC Environmental Epidemiology Unit,undefined
[16] University of Southampton,undefined
[17] USAID's Micronutrient Global Leadership Project Coordinator,undefined
[18] ILSI Research Foundation,undefined
[19] Diabetes Unit,undefined
[20] King Edward Memorial Hospital Research Center,undefined
[21] Rasta Peth,undefined
关键词
D O I
10.1203/01.PDR.0000115682.23617.03
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
In 1989, reports suggested that the fetal environment, as reflected in birth size, was related to the risk of noncommunicable diseases in adult life. This association was first described for coronary heart disease but rapidly extended to include type 2 diabetes, osteoporosis, and metabolic and endocrine homeostasis. This led to the development of the fetal origins of adult disease paradigm, which resulted in a refocusing of research effort over the next 10 y to consider the lifelong consequences of perinatal influences on chronic diseases. Previously, perinatal influences had largely been seen in terms of teratogenic effects or acute birth injury rather than whether trajectories and responses made during early development had lifelong consequences. Indeed, in developmental biology, it is widely recognized that adaptive plastic responses during early development often have consequences for function in later adulthood. Although the relative importance of this newly recognized set of phenomena to the burden of human disease has been controversial, the research precipitated by those early observations has confirmed their robustness and started to provide a mechanistic basis to this biology. Two world congresses have been held to review progress in this research. Both have been characterized by a unique multidisciplinary attendance ranging from molecular, experimental, and developmental biologists to epidemiologists and health economists.
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页码:894 / 897
页数:3
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