Background: Childhood BMI may influence subsequent growth in height as well as the timing of puberty. The aim of the present study was to investigate associations between BMI in childhood and subsequent height gain/pubertal growth. Methods: Longitudinal growth data were used (GrowUp 1990 Gothenburg cohort, n = 1,901). The QEPS growth-model was used to characterize height gain in relation to the highest BMI SDS value between 3.5 and 8 y of age. Children were defined as overweight/obese (OwOb) or normal weight/underweight (NwUw), using the 2012 International Obesity Task Force criteria. results: A negative association between childhood BMI SDS and pubertal height gain was observed. Already at birth, OwOb children were heavier than NwUw children, and had a greater height velocity during childhood. Onset of puberty was 3.5/3.0 mo earlier in OwOb girls/boys, and they had 2.3/3.1 cm less pubertal height gain from the QEPS-models specific P-function than NwUw children. Adult height was not related to childhood BMI. conclusion: We found that pubertal height gain was inversely related to peak BMI in childhood. Higher childhood BMI SDS was associated with more growth before onset of puberty, earlier puberty, and less pubertal height gain, resulting in similar adult heights for OwOb and NwUw children.
Aim The study aims to investigate secular changes in adult height among Nordic reference populations during the last four decades and in parents of Swedish study participants, and to study during which growth phase(s) infancy, childhood or puberty changes in height and tempo occurred. Methods Length and height data were obtained from publications on populations used as current and previous national height references in Denmark, Finland, Norway and Sweden. Measurements from birth until adult height and original parental heights of participants in Swedish reference populations born 1956, 1974, and 1990 were used. Results Adult height has increased progressively in Nordic populations born in 1950s–1990s; for females by 6 mm/decade Norway, 4 mm; Sweden, 6 mm; Finland and Denmark, 7 mm; for males by 9 mm/decade, in Sweden, 5 mm; Finland, 7 mm; Denmark 8 mm; Norway, 15 mm. This was due to more growth during childhood despite earlier timing of mid‐puberty. Heights of Swedish parents born 1920s–1960s increased 11 mm/decade for mothers, 14 mm/decade for fathers. Conclusion The Nordic countries comprise some of the tallest populations in the world yet continue to show a positive secular change in adult height alongside a faster tempo of growth by earlier timing of puberty, highlighting the need to regularly update national height references.
Aim We aimed to develop up‐to‐date references with standard deviation scores (SDS) for prepubertal and total height. Methods Longitudinal length/height measures from 1572 healthy children (51.5% boys) born at term in 1989‐1991 to non‐smoking mothers and Nordic parents were obtained from the GrowUp 1990 Gothenburg cohort. A total height SDS reference from birth to adult height was constructed from Quadratic‐Exponential‐Pubertal‐Stop (QEPS) function estimated heights based on individual growth curves. A prepubertal height SDS reference, showing growth trajectory in the absence of puberty, was constructed using the QE functions. Results The total height reference showed taller prepubertal mean heights (for boys 1‐2 cm; for girls 0.5‐1.0 cm) with a narrower normal within ± 2SDS range vs the GrowUp 1974 Gothenburg reference. Adult height was increased by + 0.9 cm for women (168.6 cm) and by + 1.6 cm for men (182.0 cm). Height in children growing at −2SDS (the cut‐off used for referrals) differed up to 2 cm vs the GrowUp 1974 Gothenburg reference, 3 cm vs Swedish 1981 references and World Health Organisation (WHO) 0‐5 years standard, and 6‐8 cm vs the WHO 5‐19 years reference. Conclusion Up‐to‐date total and prepubertal height references offer promise of improved growth monitoring compared with the references used in Sweden today.
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