Abstract
Abdominal adiposity and metabolic ill health in Asian Indians are a growing public health concern. Causal pathways are unknown. Preventive measures in adults have had limited success. The aim of this observational case-control study was to compare adipose tissue partitioning in 69 healthy full term Asian Indian and white European newborns born in Pune, India and London, UK, respectively. The main outcome measures were total and regional adipose tissue content measured by whole body magnetic resonance imaging. Although smaller in weight (95% CI for difference −0.757 to −0.385 kg, p < 0.001), head circumference (−2.15 to −0.9 cm, p < 0.001), and length (−2.9 to −1.1 cm p < 0.001), the Asian Indian neonates had significantly greater absolute adiposity in all three abdominal compartments, internal (visceral) (0.012–0.023 L, p < 0.001), deep s.c. (0.003–0.017 L, p = 0.006) and superficial s.c. (0.006–0.043 L, p = 0.011) and a significant reduction in nonabdominal superficial s.c. adipose tissue (−0.184 to −0.029 L, p = 0.008) in comparison to the white European babies despite similar whole body adipose tissue content (−0.175 to 0.034 L, p = 0.2). We conclude that differences in adipose tissue partitioning exist at birth. Investigative, screening, and preventive measures must involve maternal health, intrauterine life, and infancy.
Similar content being viewed by others
Log in or create a free account to read this content
Gain free access to this article, as well as selected content from this journal and more on nature.com
or
Abbreviations
- AT:
-
adipose tissue
References
Wild S, Roglic G, Green A, Sicree R, King H 2004 Global prevalence of diabetes: estimates for the year and projections for 2030. Diabetes Care 27: 1047–1053
Lopez AD, Murray CC 1998 The global burden of disease, 1990–2020. Nat Med 4: 1241–1243
Barnett AH, Dixon AN, Bellary S, Hanif MW, O'Hare JP, Raymond NT, Kumar S 2006 Type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular risk in the UK south Asian community. Diabetologia 49: 2234–2246
Yajnik CS, Lubree HG, Rege SS, Naik SS, Deshpande JA, Deshpande SS, Joglekar CV, Yudkin JS 2002 Adiposity and hyperinsulinemia in Indians are present at birth. J Clin Endocrinol Metab 87: 5575–5580
Yajnik CS, Fall CH, Coyaji KJ, Hirve SS, Rao S, Barker DJ, Joglekar C, Kellingray S 2003 Neonatal anthropometry: the thin-fat Indian baby: The Pune Maternal Nutrition Study. Int J Obes Relat Metab Disord 27: 173–180
Harrington TA, Thomas EL, Frost G, Modi N, Bell JD 2004 Distribution of adipose tissue in the newborn. Pediatr Res 55: 437–441
Uthaya S, Thomas EL, Hamilton G, Doré CJ, Bell J, Modi N 2005 Altered adiposity after extremely preterm birth. Pediatr Res 57: 211–215
Yajnik CS, Deshpande SS, Jackson AA, Refsum H, Rao S, Fisher DJ, Bhat DS, Naik SS, Coyaji KJ, Joglekar CV, Joshi N, Lubree HG, Deshpande VU, Rege SS, Fall CH 2008 Vitamin B12 and folate concentrations during pregnancy and insulin resistance in the offspring: the Pune Maternal Nutrition Study. Diabetologia 51: 29–38
Misra A, Vikram NK 2004 Insulin resistance syndrome (metabolic syndrome) and obesity in Asian Indians: evidence and implications. Nutrition 20: 482–491
Chambers JC, Elliott P, Zabaneh D, Zhang W, Li Y, Froguel P, Balding D, Scott J, Kooner JS 2008 Common genetic variation near MC4R is associated with waist circumference and insulin resistance. Nat Genet 40: 716–718
Benyshek DC, Watson JT 2006 Exploring the thrifty genotype's food-shortage assumptions: a cross-cultural comparison of ethnographic accounts of food security among foraging and agricultural societies. Am J Phys Anthropol 131: 120–126
Pollard TM, Unwin N, Fischbacher C, Chamley JK 2008 Differences in body composition and cardiovascular and type 2 diabetes risk factors between migrant and British-born British Pakistani women. Am J Hum Biol 20: 545–549
Gluckman PD, Hanson MA, Cooper C, Thornburg KL 2008 Effect of in utero and early-life conditions on adult health and disease. N Engl J Med 359: 61–73
Yasui K, Mihara S, Zhao C, Okamoto H, Saito-Ohara F, Tomida A, Funato T, Yokomizo A, Naito S, Imoto I, Tsuruo T, Inazawa J 2004 Alteration in copy numbers of genes as a mechanism for acquired drug resistance. Cancer Res 64: 1403–1410
Epel ES, Blackburn EH, Lin J, Dhabhar FS, Adler NE, Morrow JD, Cawthon RM 2004 Accelerated telomere shortening in response to life stress. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 101: 17312–17315
Lumey LH, Stein AD 1997 Offspring birth weights after maternal intrauterine undernutrition: a comparison within sibships. Am J Epidemiol 146: 810–819
Sinclair KD, Allegrucci C, Singh R, Gardner DS, Sebastian S, Bispham J, Thurston A, Huntley JF, Rees WD, Maloney CA, Lea RG, Craigon J, McEvoy TG, Young LE 2007 DNA methylation, insulin resistance, and blood pressure in offspring determined by maternal periconceptional B vitamin and methionine status. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 104: 19351–19356
Guan H, Arany E, van Beek JP, Chamson-Reig A, Thyssen S, Hill DJ, Yang K 2005 Adipose tissue gene expression profiling reveals distinct molecular pathways that define visceral adiposity in offspring of maternal protein-restricted rats. Am J Physiol Endocrinol Metab 288: E663–E673
Shrewsbury V, Wardle J 2008 Socioeconomic status and adiposity in childhood: a systematic review of cross-sectional studies, 1990–2005. Obesity (Silver Spring) 16: 275–284
Snijder MB, Dekker JM, Visser M, Bouter LM, Stehouwer CD, Kostense PJ, Yudkin JS, Heine RJ, Nijpels G, Seidell JC 2003 Associations of hip and thigh circumferences independent of waist circumference with the incidence of type 2 diabetes: the Hoorn Study. Am J Clin Nutr 77: 1192–1197
Tankó LB, Bagger YZ, Alexandersen P, Larsen PJ, Christiansen C 2003 Peripheral adiposity exhibits an independent dominant antiatherogenic effect in elderly women. Circulation 107: 1626–1631
Tran TT, Yamamoto Y, Gesta S, Kahn CR 2008 Beneficial effects of subcutaneous fat transplantation on metabolism. Cell Metab 7: 410–420
Armitage JA, Taylor PD, Poston L 2005 Experimental models of developmental programming: consequences of exposure to an energy rich diet during development. J Physiol 565: 3–8
Ozanne SE, Hales CN 2004 Lifespan catch-up growth and obesity in male mice. Nature 427: 411–412
Acknowledgements
The assistance of Himangi Lubree, Lalita Ramdas, and Anjali Ganpule in Pune, is acknowledged and Jaime Bernardo Torres Salazar por inspiration.
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Corresponding author
Additional information
Supported through the author's core research programmes funded by the UK Medical Research Council, the Wellcome Trust, the International Atomic Energy Agency, and Chelsea & Westminster NHS Foundation Trust.
Rights and permissions
About this article
Cite this article
Modi, N., Thomas, E., Uthaya, S. et al. Whole Body Magnetic Resonance Imaging of Healthy Newborn Infants Demonstrates Increased Central Adiposity in Asian Indians. Pediatr Res 65, 584–587 (2009). https://doi.org/10.1203/PDR.0b013e31819d98be
Received:
Accepted:
Issue date:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1203/PDR.0b013e31819d98be
This article is cited by
-
Association of increased abdominal adiposity at birth with altered ventral caudate microstructure
International Journal of Obesity (2021)
-
The longitudinal association between early-life screen viewing and abdominal adiposity—findings from a multiethnic birth cohort study
International Journal of Obesity (2021)
-
Developmental undernutrition, offspring obesity and type 2 diabetes
Diabetologia (2019)
-
Free-breathing 3-D quantification of infant body composition and hepatic fat using a stack-of-radial magnetic resonance imaging technique
Pediatric Radiology (2019)
-
Confessions of a thin-fat Indian
European Journal of Clinical Nutrition (2018)


