Research
Cellular
Early life exposures affecting birth weight may be important in the development of hypertension and obesity in adults.
Practitioners should consider the impact of early life factors on long-term health outcomes in women.
StrongSupportsmedium confidence
CONCLUSIONS: Early life exposures affecting birth weight may be important in the development of hypertension and obesity in adults.
Why this rating
Based on a large cohort study design.
Source
Birth Weight and Adult Hypertension and Obesity in Women
Gary C. Curhan et al. · Circulation · 1996
DOI 10.1161/01.cir.94.6.1310
cohort · n=164040Cited 691×
Read the paper DOI resolved against Crossref · corpus check 2026-06-10
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- Women with birth weights < 5.0 lb have an age-adjusted odds ratio of 1.39 for hypertension compared to those in the middle category of birth weight in NHS I.Strong
- Women with birth weights > 10 lb have an age-adjusted odds ratio of 1.62 for being in the highest quintile of body mass index compared to those who weighed 7.1 to 8.5 lb at birth in NHS I.Strong
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