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E Hyppönen a Department of Paediatric Epidemiology
and Biostatistics, Institute of Child Health, London WC1N 1EH, b Department of Epidemiology and Population Health,
London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, London WC1E 7HT, c Department of Public Health and Caring Sciences,
Geriatrics, University of Uppsala, Uppsala SE-751 25, Sweden Correspondence to: D A Leon david.leon{at}lshtm.ac.uk
Evidence for an inverse association of impaired fetal
growth with stroke is less securely established than that with coronary heart disease. Even less is known about the association of fetal growth
with occlusive stroke and haemorrhagic stroke.
The cohort comprises all 14 611 births in the Uppsala Academic
Hospital between 1915 and 1929.1 Socioeconomic
circumstances and neonatal characteristics, including gestational
age (number of completed weeks since last menstrual period), were
available for 96% of the subjects from hospital records and follow up
is 98% complete. Analyses were restricted to singletons born at 30-45 weeks' gestation for whom information was available in the 1960 and
1970 censuses. Data on occurrence of first stroke were obtained from
the Swedish national hospital discharge register2 and from
the national cause of death register. Two subtypes of stroke were
defined The 10 853 men and women had 991 first strokes Cox proportional hazards model showed birth weight inversely associated
with risk of haemorrhagic stroke and little evidence of association
with occlusive stroke. Hazard ratio per 1 kg increase in birth weight
(adjusted for sex and period of birth) was 0.61 (95% confidence
interval 0.45 to 0.83) for haemorrhagic stroke and 0.89 (0.77 to 1.03)
for occlusive stroke. Adjustment for socioeconomic factors at birth and
at the time of the 1960 and 1970 censuses had little effect on
estimates (table). When head circumference and birth length were
adjusted for separately and in combination, the inverse association
between birth weight and haemorrhagic stroke strengthened but
there was little effect on the association of birth weight with
occlusive stroke. Adjustment for gestational age had no substantive
effect on the estimates.
Impaired fetal growth is strongly associated with haemorrhagic
stroke, but not with occlusive stroke. This finding is consistent with
results from a smaller cohort of Finnish men.3 The
strength of the association between impaired fetal growth and
haemorrhagic stroke is appreciably greater than that found with
coronary heart disease in the same Swedish cohort.1 The
associations were not accounted for by socioeconomic confounding
factors, and they were not affected by adjustment for gestational
age.
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Participants, methods, and results
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Participants, methods, and...
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References
haemorrhagic (ICD-8 (international classification of diseases,
8th revision) 430-431; ICD-9 430-432) and occlusive (ICD-8 432-436;
ICD-9 433-436). Each participant was considered at risk from the time
of the 1970 census to date of first stroke, emigration, death, or end
of follow up (31 December 1996).
156 haemorrhagic, 775 occlusive, and 60 ill defined. Death certificates identified 41 (26%)
first haemorrhagic strokes and 17 (2%) occlusive strokes. Of
haemorrhagic strokes, 21 (13%) were subarachnoid and 135 (87%) intracerebral or unspecified intracranial haemorrhages.
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Participants, methods, and...
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The inverse association of size at birth with haemorrhagic stroke in the Finnish cohort was apparent only after adjustment for head circumference, and this was interpreted as showing an association between stroke and in utero "head sparing." We found a pronounced inverse association with birth weight without adjustment for other birth dimensions, and adjustments for both birth length and head circumference strengthened the association with haemorrhagic stroke. These data do not support a special role for birth weight relative to head size, but they suggest that the risk of haemorrhagic stroke is related to impaired growth of soft tissue mass relative to bone growth.4
The established aetiology of stroke differs by subtype, although
hypertension is an important risk factor for occlusive and haemorrhagic
stroke. Raised blood pressure is also associated with impaired fetal
growth.5 However, whether the difference between stroke
subtypes in the strength of the association of stroke with birth weight
is mediated by blood pressure has yet to be established.
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Acknowledgments |
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We thank Rawya Mohsen for managing the study database.
Contributors: EH and DL wrote the paper. EH carried out the analyses. MGK acted as the statistical expert in the study, and HL contributed with his knowledge of the cohort and stroke. DL had the original study idea and will act as the guarantor of the paper.
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Footnotes |
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Funding: The Uppsala birth cohort study was established using grants from the UK Medical Research Council and the Swedish Council for Social Research. No funding was received towards the study.
Competing interests: None declared.
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References |
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| 1. |
Leon DA, Lithell HO, Vågerö D, Koupilová I, Mohsen R, Berglund L, et al.
Reduced fetal growth rate and increased risk of death from ischaemic heart disease: cohort study of 15 000 Swedish men and women born 1915-29.
BMJ
1998;
317:
241-245 |
| 2. | National Board of Health and Welfare, Sweden. Hospital discharge register. http://www.sos.se/epc/par/pareng.htm (accessed 20 July 2001). |
| 3. |
Eriksson JG, Forsen T, Tuomilehto J, Osmond C, Barker DJ.
Early growth, adult income, and risk of stroke.
Stroke
2000;
31:
869-874 |
| 4. |
Leon DA, Johansson M, Rasmussen F.
Gestational age and growth rate of foetal mass are inversely associated with systolic blood pressure in young adults: an epidemiologic study of 165,136 Swedish 18-year old men.
Am J Epidemiol
2000;
152:
597-604 |
| 5. | Huxley RR, Shiell AW, Law CM. The role of size at birth and postnatal catch-up growth in determining systolic blood pressure: a systematic review of the literature. J Hypertens 2000; 18: 815-831[CrossRef][Medline]. |
(Accepted 10 July 2001)
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