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Developmental origins of obesity-related hypertension

journal contribution
posted on 2012-09-01, 00:00 authored by S Henry, B Barzel, Ryan Wood-BradleyRyan Wood-Bradley, S Burke, G Head, James ArmitageJames Armitage
1. In the past 30 years the prevalence of obesity and overweight have doubled. It is now estimated that globally over 500 million adults are obese and a further billion adults are overweight. Obesity is a cardiovascular risk factor and some studies suggest that up to 70% of cases of essential hypertension may be attributable, in part, to obesity. Increasingly, evidence supports a view that obesity-related hypertension may be driven by altered hypothalamic signalling, which results in inappropriately high appetite and sympathetic nerve activity to the kidney.

2. In addition to the adult risk factors for obesity and hypertension, the environment encountered in early life may ‘programme’ the development of obesity, hypertension and cardiovascular disease. In particular, maternal obesity or high dietary fat intake in pregnancy may induce changes in fetal growth trajectories and predispose individuals to develop obesity and related sequelae.

3. The mechanisms underlying the programming of obesity-related hypertension are becoming better understood. However, several issues require clarification, particularly with regard to the role of the placenta in transferring fatty acid to the fetal compartment, the impact of placental inflammation and cytokine production in obesity.

4. By understanding which factors are most associated with the development of obesity and hypertension in the offspring, we can focus therapeutic and behavioural interventions to most efficiently reduce the intergenerational propagation of the obesity cycle.

History

Journal

Clinical and experimental pharmacology and physiology

Volume

39

Issue

9

Pagination

799 - 806

Publisher

Blackwell Asia Publishing

Location

Richmond, Vic.

ISSN

0305-1870

eISSN

1440-1681

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal