Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/2440/27491
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Type: Journal article
Title: Developmental origins of the metabolic syndrome: Prediction, plasticity, and programming
Author: McMillen, I.
Robinson, J.
Citation: Physiological Reviews, 2005; 85(2):571-633
Publisher: Amer Physiological Soc
Issue Date: 2005
ISSN: 0031-9333
1522-1210
Statement of
Responsibility: 
McMillen, I. Caroline and Jeffrey S. Robinson
Abstract: The "fetal" or "early" origins of adult disease hypothesis was originally put forward by David Barker and colleagues and stated that environmental factors, particularly nutrition, act in early life to program the risks for adverse health outcomes in adult life. This hypothesis has been supported by a worldwide series of epidemiological studies that have provided evidence for the association between the perturbation of the early nutritional environment and the major risk factors (hypertension, insulin resistance, and obesity) for cardiovascular disease, diabetes, and the metabolic syndrome in adult life. It is also clear from experimental studies that a range of molecular, cellular, metabolic, neuroendocrine, and physiological adaptations to changes in the early nutritional environment result in a permanent alteration of the developmental pattern of cellular proliferation and differentiation in key tissue and organ systems that result in pathological consequences in adult life. This review focuses on those experimental studies that have investigated the critical windows during which perturbations of the intrauterine environment have major effects, the nature of the epigenetic, structural, and functional adaptive responses which result in a permanent programming of cardiovascular and metabolic function, and the role of the interaction between the pre- and postnatal environment in determining final health outcomes.
Keywords: Animals
Humans
Epigenesis, Genetic
Aging
Phenotype
Models, Biological
Metabolic Syndrome
Description: Copyright © 2005 the American Physiological Society
DOI: 10.1152/physrev.00053.2003
Published version: http://physrev.physiology.org/cgi/content/abstract/85/2/571
Appears in Collections:Aurora harvest 6
Molecular and Biomedical Science publications

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