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Journal issues
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International Journal of Obesity
COLD BABIES MAKE FAT ADULTSThe idea that your metabolism could be determined by your star sign is unlikely to be taken seriously by even the most ardent disciple of astrology, and yet two scientists have just published some data suggesting that your chances of being obese could be determined by the season of your birth. David Phillips at the University of Southampton and Jim Young of Northwestern University in Chicago have just published a paper in the International Journal of Obesity in which they analyse the birth-weight and current weight and obesity of 1750 men and women born in the English county of Hertfordshire between 1920 and 1930. Obese adults were defined as those having a Body Mass Index greater than 30 (BMI = weight divided by height squared; kg/m2). As in studies by other workers, they found that BMI increased with increasing birth weight - i.e. big babies tend to make big adults. However, this was only true for those born in the first 6 months of the year, and there was no relation between birth weight and BMI in those born July-December. Moreover, this trend for higher birth weight and BMI in those born January-June meant that the prevalence of obesity was much greater in this group. It is well known that our body weight is influenced by
our genes and that body size tends to track throughout
life, but the observation that the relation between birth
weight and adult weight only applies to those born in the
winter months indicates that there also must be an early
environmental, non-genetic influence on the factors
controlling body weight throughout the next 60-70 years of
life. This early seasonal effect prompted Phillips and
Young to analyse data from the Meteorological Office for
the decade 1920-1930 to see if some winters were colder
than others, and if the average temperature in December or
January was above or below 4°C, winters were classified
as mild or cold, respectively. Analysing the data in this
way showed that the relationship between birth weight, BMI
and obesity in subjects born in the first 6 months of the
year only applied to those born following a cold winter.
In other words, those babies born in the first 6 months of
the year when the winter was cold were much more likely to
be obese than those born in the first 6 months following a
mild winter or in the last 6 months of any year. These seasonal effects provide a new and intriguing area for further research, but one cannot help wondering how long it will be before the astrologers catch-on to the idea of offering people medical profiles based on their star sign! Further information may be obtained from Dr J B Young (fax: +1 312 503 8104; email: jbyoung@nwu.edu) or Dr D I W Phillips (Fax: +44 (0)1703 704021; email: diwp@mrc.soton.ac.uk). For reprints of this paper, please contact Tracé Noel at the Nature Publishing Group on + 44 (0) 1256 2887 or on t.noel@nature.com. |