Influence of Adipose Tissue on Early Metabolic Programming: Conditioning Factors and Early Screening
Metadatos
Afficher la notice complèteAuteur
Puche Juárez, María; Toledano, Juan M.; Ochoa Herrera, Julio José; Díaz Castro, Javier; Moreno Fernández, JorgeEditorial
MDPI
Materia
Fetal programming Adipose tissue Pregnancy Adipogenesis Obesity
Date
2023-04-22Referencia bibliográfica
Puche-Juarez, M.; Toledano, J.M.; Ochoa, J.J.; Diaz-Castro, J.; Moreno-Fernandez, J. Influence of Adipose Tissue on Early Metabolic Programming: Conditioning Factors and Early Screening. Diagnostics 2023, 13, 1510. [https://doi.org/10.3390/diagnostics13091510]
Patrocinador
FPU21/04865 funded by Ministry of Education of SpainRésumé
Background: Obesity and being overweight have become one of the world’s most severe
health issues, not only because of the pathology but also because of the development of related
comorbidities. Even when children reach adulthood, the mother’s environment during pregnancy has
been found to have a significant impact on obesity prevention in children. Thus, both maternal dietary
habits and other factors such as gestational diabetes mellitus, excessive weight gain during pregnancy,
smoking, or endocrine factors, among others, could influence newborn growth, adiposity, and
body composition at birth, in childhood and adolescence, hence programming health in adulthood.
Methods: The aim of this review is to analyze the most recent human studies on the programming
of fetal adipose tissue to determine which modifiable factors may influence adiposity and thus
prevent specific disorders later in life by means of a bibliographic review of articles related to the
subject over the last ten years. Conclusions: The importance of a healthy diet and lifestyle not only
during pregnancy and the first months of life but also throughout childhood, especially during
the first two years of life as this is a period of great plasticity, where the foundations for optimal
health in later life will be laid, preventing the emergence of noncommunicable diseases including
obesity, diabetes mellitus type 2, hypertension, being overweight, and any other pathology linked to
metabolic syndrome, which is so prevalent today, through health programs beginning at a young age