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Yet when the birth records of these subjects were traced,
birth weight correlated very closely with both measures of vascular physiology, and the
relationships were strongly dependent on the intermediate phenotype of a high waist-to-hip
ratio, in other words central obesity. These observations might suggest that capillary
rarefaction, consequent upon intrauterine growth retardation, may have a part to play in
linking insulin resistance and hypertension. It might be interesting to speculate that
parallel renal vascular abnormalities could underlie a non modulating phenotype. The role
of central obesity as a mediator of the effect of low birth weight is also worth
exploring. |