In utero undernourishment during WWII: Effects on height and weight of young adult women

Authors

  • Zbigniew Czapla Institute of Human Biology and Evolution, Faculty of Biology, Adam Mickiewicz University, Poznań, Poland
  • Grażyna Liczbińska Institute of Human Biology and Evolution, Faculty of Biology, Adam Mickiewicz University, Poznań, Poland
  • Janusz Piontek Institute of Human Biology and Evolution, Faculty of Biology, Adam Mickiewicz University, Poznań, Poland
  • Robert M. Malina Department of Kinesiology and Health Education, University of Texas, Austin, USA

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.2478/anre-2020-0004

Keywords:

prenatal stress, maternal nutritional status, foetal malnutrition, growth restriction, body size

Abstract

Under marginal nutritional conditions, growth in utero is related to subsequent growth and adult height. The aim of this research is to compare the young adult body size of women grouped by estimated duration of pregnancy relative to World War II. Subjects were 620 university students 18-25 years, for whom archival data for date of birth, age, height and weight were available; the BMI was calculated. Based on estimated time of pregnancy and birth relative to WWII, the women were grouped as follows: (1) pregnancy and birth before the war (n=203); (2) pregnancy before the war, birth during the war (n=54); (3) pregnancy and birth during the war (n=173); (4) pregnancy during the war, birth after the war (n=16); and (5) pregnancy and birth after the war (n=174). Heights of women born before and after WWII were significantly taller than heights of women born during the war. Though not significant, the height of women who were conceived before but born during the war was intermediate between those of women born before and during the war. The height of women conceived during the war but born after the war was similar to that of women conceived and born during the war. In contrast, BMIs and the distributions of women by weight status did not differ among the five pregnancy groups. The results suggested that heights of young adult women exposed in utero to the conditions of WWII (marginal nutritional status, maternal stress, among other factors) were shorter than women who were not exposed in utero to wartime conditions.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

References

Alastalo H, von Bonsdorff MB, Räikkönen K, Pesonen A-K, Osmond C, Barker DJP, et al. 2013. Early life stress and physical and psychosocial functioning in late adulthood. PloS One 8(7):e69011.
View in Google Scholar

Barker DJP, Lampl M, Roseboom T, Winder N. 2012. Resource allocation in utero and health in later life. Placenta 33(Suppl 2):e30–4.
View in Google Scholar

Barker DJP. 1992. Fetal and infant origins of adult disease. London: BMJ Books.
View in Google Scholar

Barker DJP. 1997. Maternal nutrition, fetal nutrition, and disease in later life. Nutrition 13(9):807–13.
View in Google Scholar

Barker DJP. 1998. In utero programming of chronic disease. Clin Sci (Lond) 95(2):115–28.
View in Google Scholar

Barker DJP. 2004. The developmental origins of chronic adult disease. Acta Paediatr Suppl 93(446):26–33.
View in Google Scholar

Black RE, Allen LH, Bhutta ZA, Caulfield LE, de Onis M, Ezzati M, Mathers C, Rivera J. 2008. Maternal and child undernutrition: global and regional exposure and health consequences. Lancet 371:243–60.
View in Google Scholar

Bhat RA, Kushtagi P. 2006. A re-look at the duration of human pregnancy. Singapore Med J 12:1044–48.
View in Google Scholar

Bielicki T, Szklarska A. 1999. Secular trends in stature in Poland: national and social class specific. Ann Hum Biol 26:251–58.
View in Google Scholar

Chazan B. 2007. Rozpoznanie ciąży i ustalenie terminu porodu. In: GH Bręborowicz, editor. Położnictwo i ginekologia. Warszawa: PZWL. 56.
View in Google Scholar

Czapla Z, Liczbińska G. 2014. Height as an indicator of economic status in the Polish territories under Russian rule at the turn of the 19th to 20th century. J Biosoc Sci 46(5):686–97.
View in Google Scholar

Czapla Z, Liczbińska G, Nowak O, Piontek J. 2019. Did family size affect differences in body height in non-urbanized societies? Evidence from the Lemko community in Poland in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. J Biosoc Sci 51(5):669–82.
View in Google Scholar

Entringer S, Buss C, Swanson JM, Cooper DM, Wing DA, Waffarn F, Wadhwa PD. 2012. Fetal programming of body composition, obesity, and metabolic function: The role of intrauterine stress and stress biology. J Nutr Metab 2012:632548.
View in Google Scholar

Fall C, Hindmarsh P, Dennison E, Kellingray S, Barker D, Cooper C. 1998. Programming of growth hormone secretion and bone mineral density in elderly men: a hypothesis. J Clin Endocrinol Metab 83(1):135–39.
View in Google Scholar

Gluckman PD, Hanson MA. 2004. Living with the past: evolution, development, and patterns of disease. Science 17; 305(5691):1733–36.
View in Google Scholar

Górny S, Dobrzańska A. 1981. Zmiany struktury wyżywienia i budowy fizycznej ludności Polski. Roczniki Nauk Rolniczych, Tom 181.
View in Google Scholar

Hales CN, Barker DJP. 2001. The thrifty phenotype hypothesis. Br Med Bull 60:5–20.
View in Google Scholar

Hales CN, Barker DJP. 2013. Type 2 (non-insulin-dependent) diabetes mellitus: the thrifty phenotype hypothesis. Int J Epidemiol 42(5):1215–22.
View in Google Scholar

Havari E, Peracchi F. 2017. Growing up in wartime: Evidence from the era of two world wars. Econ Hum Biol 25:9–32.
View in Google Scholar

Jaenisch R, Bird A. 2003. Epigenetic regulation of gene expression: how the genome integrates intrinsic and environmental signals. Nat Genet 33(Suppl):245–54.
View in Google Scholar

Jansson T, Powell TL. 2007. Role of the placenta in fetal programming: underlying mechanism and potential interventional approaches. Clin Sci (Lond) 113(1):1–13.
View in Google Scholar

Jovanović H, Prebeg Ž, Stanić I, Vuletić G. 2003. Impact of war on growth patterns in school children in Croatia. Coll Antropol 27(2):573–79.
View in Google Scholar

Kalichman L, Malkin I, Kobyliansky E. 2007. Changes in reproductive indices in Chuvashian women whose maturation was during World War II. Maturitas. 56(2):205–11.
View in Google Scholar

Kołodziej H, Łopuszańska M, Lipowicz A, Szklarska A, Bielicki T. 2015. Secular trends in height and body mass in 19-year old Polish men based on six national surveys from 1965 till 2010. Am J Hum Biol 27:704–9.
View in Google Scholar

Liczbińska G, Czapla Z, Malina RM, Piontek J. 2017. Body size of young adult Polish college-age women born before, during, and after WWII. Am J Hum Biol 29(6). doi: 10.1002/ajhb.23040.
View in Google Scholar

Liczbińska G, Czapla Z, Piontek J, Malina RM. 2018. Age at menarche in Polish University students born before, during and after World War II: Economic effects, Econ Hum Biol 28:23–8.
View in Google Scholar

Liczbińska G, Czapla Z, Piontek J, Malina RM. 2018. The impact of the Second World War on the young Polish population. In: da Silva H, Matos PT, Palma Sardica JMPA, editor. War Hecatomb. Peter Lang AG International Academic Publishers Bern, 227–48.
View in Google Scholar

Lucas A. 1991. Programming by early nutrition in man. Ciba Found Symp 156:38–50.
View in Google Scholar

Łuczak C. 1989. Dzień po dniu w okupowanym Poznaniu. Poznań: Wydawnictwo Poznańskie.
View in Google Scholar

Łopuszańska-Dawid M, Kołodziej H, Lipowicz A, Szklarska A, Kopiczko A, Bielicki T. 2019. Social class-specific secular trends in height among 19-year old Polish men: 6th national surveys from 1965 till 2010. Econ Hum Biol 37:100832.
View in Google Scholar

Lumey LH, Ravelli ACJ, Wiessing LG, Koppe JG, Treffers PE, Stein ZA. 1993. The Dutch famine birth cohort study: design, validation of exposure, and selected characteristics of subjects after 43 years follow up. Paediatr Perinat Epidemiol 7(4):354–67.
View in Google Scholar

Lumey LH, Stein AD. 1997. Offspring birth weights after maternal intrauterine undernutrition: a comparison within sib-ships. Am J Epidemiol 146(10):810–25.
View in Google Scholar

Meng X, Qian N. 2009. The long-term consequences of famine on survivors: Evidence from a unique natural experiment using China’s great Famine. NBR Working Paper N.14917.
View in Google Scholar

Perälä MM, Männistö S, Kaartinen NE, Kajantie E, Osmond C, Barker DJP. et al. 2012. Body size at birth is associated with food and nutrient intake in adulthood. PloS One 7(9):e46139.
View in Google Scholar

Portrait FRM, Wingerden TF, van Deeg DJH. 2017. Early life undernutrition and adult height: The Dutch famine of 1944–45. Econ Hum Biol 27(Pt B):339–48.
View in Google Scholar

Prebeg Z, Bralic I. 2000. Changes in menarcheal age in girls exposed to war conditions. Am J Hum Biol 12(4):503–8.
View in Google Scholar

Ravelli ACJ, van der Meulen JHP, Osmond C, Barker DJP, Bleker OP. 1999. Obesity at age of 50 y in men and women exposed to famine prenatally. Am J Clin Nutr 70(5):811–16.
View in Google Scholar

Roseboom TJ, de Rooij S, Painter R. 2006. The Dutch famine and its long-term consequences for adult health. Early Hum Dev 82(8):485–91.
View in Google Scholar

Roseboom TJ, Painter RC, de Rooij SR, van Abeelen AFM, Veenendaal AFM, Osmonf, C, et al. 2011a. Effect of famine on placental size and efficiency. Placenta. 32(5):395–9.
View in Google Scholar

Roseboom TJ, Painter RC, van Abeelen AFM, Veenendaal MVE, de Rooij SR. 2011b. Hungry in the womb: What are the consequences? Lessons from the Dutch famine. Maturitas. 70(2):141–5.
View in Google Scholar

Scholte RS, van den Berg G, Lindeboom ML. 2015. Long-run effects of gestation during the Dutch Hunger Winter famine on labor market and hospitalization outcomes. J Health Econ 39:17–30.
View in Google Scholar

Schulz LC, 2010. The Dutch Hunger Winter and the developmental origins of health and disease. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 107(39):16757–8.
View in Google Scholar

Smith CA. 1947. The effects of wartime starvation in Holland upon pregnancy and its product. Am J Obstet Gynecol 53(4):599–608.
View in Google Scholar

Stanner SA, Bulmer K, Andres C, Lantseva OE, Borodina V, Poteen VV, et al. 1997. Does malnutrition in utero determine diabetes and coronary heart disease in adulthood? Results from the Leningrad siege study, a cross sectional study. BMJ 315(71119):1342–9.
View in Google Scholar

Statistica 2011. Statistica Version 10. Stat-Soft, Inc.
View in Google Scholar

Statistical Package of SPSS, version 19.0.
View in Google Scholar

Stein AD, Zybert PA, van de Bor M, Lumey LH. 2004a. Intrauterine famine exposure and body proportions at birth: the Dutch Hunger Winter. Int J Epidemiol 33(4):831–6.
View in Google Scholar

Stein AD, Zybert PA, Lumey LH. 2004b. Acute under nutrition is not associated with excess of females at birth in humans: the Dutch Hunger Winter. Proc Biol Sci 271(Suppl):138–41.
View in Google Scholar

Szostak-Węgierek D, Cichocka A. 2012. Żywienie kobiet ciężarnych. Warszawa: PZWL.
View in Google Scholar

Victoria C, Adair L, Fall C, Hallal PC, Martorell R, Richter L, Sachdev HS. 2008. Maternal and child undernutrition: consequences for adult health and human capital. Lancet 371:340–57.
View in Google Scholar

Waterland RA, Jirtle RL. 2004. Early nutrition, epigentic changes at transposons and imprinted genes, and enhanced susceptability to adult chronic diseases. Nutrition. 20(1):63–8.
View in Google Scholar

Wells JCK. 2003. The thrifty phenotype hypothesis: thrifty offspring or thrifty mother? J Theor Biol 221(1):143–61.
View in Google Scholar

World Health Organization (WHO) 1995. Physical status: the use and interpretation of anthropometry. Report of a WHO Expert Committee. WHO Technical Report Series. World Health Organization, Geneva.
View in Google Scholar

Wu G, Bazer FW, Cudd TA, Meininger CJ, Spencer TE. 2004. Maternal nutrition and fetal development. J Nutr 134(9):2169–72.
View in Google Scholar

Yehuda R, Daskalakis NP, Bierer LM, Bader HN, Klengel T, Holsboer F, et al. 2016. Holocaust exposure induced intergenerational effects on FKBP5 methylation. Biol Psychiatry 80(5):372–80.
View in Google Scholar

Yehuda R, Engel SM, Brand SR, Seckl J, Marcus SM, Berkowitz GS. 2005. Transgenerational effects of posttraumatic stress disorder in babies of mothers exposed to the World Trade Center attacks during pregnancy. J Clin Endocrinol Metab 90(7):4115–8.
View in Google Scholar

Yehuda R, Teicher MH, Seckl JR, Grossman RA, Morris A, Bierer LM. 2007. Parental posttraumatic stress disorder as a vulnerability factor for low cortisol trait in off-spring of holocaust survivors. Arch Gen Psychiatry 64(9):1040–8.
View in Google Scholar

Ylihärsilä H, Kajantie E, Osmond C, Forsén T, Barker DJP, Eriksson JG. 2007. Birth size, adult body composition and muscle strength in later life. Int J Obes (Lond), 31(9):1392–9.
View in Google Scholar

Downloads

Published

2020-03-30

How to Cite

Czapla, Z., Liczbińska, G., Piontek, J., & Malina, R. M. (2020). In utero undernourishment during WWII: Effects on height and weight of young adult women. Anthropological Review, 83(1), 19–29. https://doi.org/10.2478/anre-2020-0004

Issue

Section

Articles

Most read articles by the same author(s)

<< < 1 2 3 > >> 

Similar Articles

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 > >> 

You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.