Sins of the Grandmother
From today's WSJ.com - Science Journal:
Because a woman's total supply of eggs are developed before her birth and the effect upon that development by her mother's actions and nutritional intake provide one theory for this phenomenon. There is not a transgenerational link for men as men develop sperm throughout their lifetime.
I have told the Progeny to observe what that cute 19-year-old girl's mother looks like at 45. Because, that cute little thing will eventually turn into her mother. Now, there's one more reason to observe the Mom even closer for serious candidates.
"Last month, scientists reported that a child whose grandmother smoked while pregnant with the child's mother may have twice the risk of developing asthma as a child whose grandma didn't flood her fetus with carcinogens. Remarkably, the risk from grandma's smoking was as great as or greater than from mom's. Kids whose mothers smoked while pregnant were 1.5 times as likely to develop childhood asthma as children of nonsmoking moms. Kids whose grandmothers smoked while pregnant with mom were 2.1 times as likely to develop asthma, scientists reported in the journal Chest."
Because a woman's total supply of eggs are developed before her birth and the effect upon that development by her mother's actions and nutritional intake provide one theory for this phenomenon. There is not a transgenerational link for men as men develop sperm throughout their lifetime.
"In people, the type of "nutritional insult" to the fetus doesn't seem to matter. Too few calories, too little protein, too few other nutrients can all lead to diabetes, hypertension and other ills decades later. "That suggests that what links diet to adult diseases is something quite fundamental," says Simon Langley-Evans of the University of Nottingham, England. The key suspects: changes in DNA activity in the fetus or in the balance of hormones reaching it via the placenta.
Alarmingly, the list of what can be passed along to the next generation is growing. If you are undernourished as a first-trimester fetus, you won't pad your hips and thighs with enough fat tissue. If, as a child or adult, you take in more calories than you expend, the extras get stored in and around abdominal organs rather than on the thighs and hips, says Aryeh Stein of Emory University, Atlanta. One result is a body shaped like an apple (which brings a higher risk of heart disease). Another is a higher risk of gestational diabetes, in which blood glucose levels rise during pregnancy and too much glucose reaches the fetus. Babies born to moms with gestational diabetes have a higher risk of Type 2 diabetes."
I have told the Progeny to observe what that cute 19-year-old girl's mother looks like at 45. Because, that cute little thing will eventually turn into her mother. Now, there's one more reason to observe the Mom even closer for serious candidates.
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