Developmental Origins of Health and Disease


Book Description

This landmark publication provides the first definitive account of how and why subtle influences on the fetus and during early life can have such profound consequences for adult health and diseases. Although the epidemiological evidence for this link has long proved compelling, it is only much more recently that the scientific and physiological basis has begun to be studied in depth and fully understood. The compilation, written by many of the world's leading experts in this exciting field, summarizes these scientific and clinical advances.




Fetal Origins of Adult Disease


Book Description




Fetal and Infant Origins of Adult Disease


Book Description

Diet, smoking and other aspects of adult lifestyle have a limited ability to explain why people develop coronary heart disease, stroke, diabetes and obstructive lung disease in middle and old age. Recent research suggests that these diseases are importantly determined by failure of development of particular sugar or metabolic processes in foetal life and infancy. Non-insulin dependent diabetes, for example, may result from failure of growth of the pancreas during a critical early phase. The first chapters of this book on early life programming describe the origins of the hypothesis in geographical studies in England and Wales. This is followed by a series of unique studies of men and women born fifty and more years ago whose measurements at birth and growth and feeding in infancy were recorded at the time. Many thousands have been traced. In those who have died cause of death can be related to early growth. Examination of the living allows their blood pressures, cholesterol and insulin concentrations and other measurements to be related to particular, and different patterns of early growth.







Disease Control Priorities, Third Edition (Volume 5)


Book Description

Cardiovascular, respiratory, and related conditions cause more than 40 percent of all deaths globally, and their substantial burden is rising, particularly in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). Their burden extends well beyond health effects to include significant economic and societal consequences. Most of these conditions are related, share risk factors, and have common control measures at the clinical, population, and policy levels. Lives can be extended and improved when these diseases are prevented, detected, and managed. This volume summarizes current knowledge and presents evidence-based interventions that are effective, cost-effective, and scalable in LMICs.