Fr. 130.00

Developmental Origins of Health and Disease

English · Hardback

Shipping usually within 3 to 5 weeks

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"Clinicians working in maternal-fetal medicine and a range of internal medicine specialties. Basic scientists working in the fields of physiology, nutrition, endocrinology and metabolism, developmental biology, molecular biology and epigenetics, human biology and anthropology, evolutionary developmental biology. Nutritionists, epidemiologists, social scientists, economists, public health specialists and policy makers"--

List of contents










Section I. Overview: 1. Overview and introduction to the 2nd edition of the developmental origins of health and disease (DOHaD) Lucilla Poston, Keith M. Godfrey, Sir Peter D. Gluckman and Mark A. Hanson; Section II. Exposures driving long-term DOHaD effects: 2. The evolutionary basis of DOHaD Felicia M Low, Peter D Gluckman and Mark A Hanson; 3. Timing: Critical DOHaD windows with lifelong effects Keith M. Godfrey, Tom Fleming, Mary Barker, Judith Stephenson, Mark Vickers, Frank Bloomfield and Rachael Taylor; 4. Long-term effects of food insecurity and undernutrition in early life Sophie E. Moore; 5. Short and long-term effects of maternal obesity and dysglycaemia for women and their children Jodie M. Dodd, Amanda J Poprzeczny, Andrea R. Duessen and Jennie Louise; 6. Long-term DOHaD effects of prenatal maternal stress and mental health Matthias Schwab and Florian Rakers; 7. Environmental exposures in early life: effects of air pollution, chemicals and climate change on human health and wellbeing Kirsten R. Poore, Marie Pedersen and Sibylle Ermler; 8. Developmental programming and the microbiome: How the maternal environment and early life shapes the infant gut microbiome pathway(s) and risk of disease Kameron Y. Sugino and Jacob E. Friedman; 9. Exposures driving long-term effects of DOHaD effects: Influence of assisted reproductive technologies Daniel R. Brison, John C. M. Dumoulin, Hannah L. Morgan, Tessa J. Roseboom and Adam J. Watkins; Section III. Outcomes: 10. Cardiometabolic and renal DOHaD outcomes in offspring of complicated pregnancy Dino A. Giussani, Rebecca M. Reynolds, Paul Leeson, Karen M. Moritz, John F. Bertram and Susan E. Ozanne; 11. Development origins of chronic respiratory diseases Liesbeth Duijts, Annemiek Mian, Tarik Karramass and Vincent W. V. Jaddoe; 12. Early life adversity and female reproductive outcomes: How growth, diet and nutrition impact reproductive function and accelerated reproductive ageing Patrycja A. Jazwiec and Deborah M. Sloboda; 13. Developmental programming of ageing induced by poor maternal nutrition; evidence from rodent studies Elena Zambrano and Peter W. Nathanielsz; Section IV. Mechanisms: 14. Visualizing structural underpinnings of DOHaD Kent L. Thornburg, John Bertram, Jacob E. Friedman, David Hill, Kevin Kolahi and Christopher Kroenke; 15. Molecular and epigenetic mechanisms of DOHaD Richard Saffery, Amanda Vlahos and Toby Mansell; 16. The role of the placenta in DOHaD Rohan M. Lewis and Amanda N. Sferruzzi-Perri; Section V. Interventions: 17. Interventions to prevent DOHaD effects in pregnancy Lucilla Poston; 18. Interventions to prevent DOHaD effects in infancy and early childhood Bart¿omiej Mateusz Zalewski, Bernadeta Patro-Gö¿b, Barbara Böek, M. Köodziej, Kathryn V. Dalrymple, Lucilla Poston and Hania Szajewska; Section VI. Public health and policy implications of interventions; 19. Education and science communication: Translation of DOHaD evidence for health benefit Jacquie L. Bay and Suzanne Trask; 20. DOHaD - engaging with new global issues to inform policy Peter D. Gluckman and Mark A. Hanson.

About the author

Lucilla Poston is Tommy's Charity Professor of Maternal and Fetal Health in the Department of Women and Children's Health and Head of the School of Life Course and Population Sciences at King's College London, UK.Keith M. Godfrey is Nutrition, Lifestyle and Metabolism Theme Lead in the National Institute for Health and Care Research Southampton Biomedical Research Centre. He is Professor of Epidemiology & Human Development at the University of Southampton and Director of the Centre for Developmental Origins of Health & Disease, UK.Peter D. Gluckman holds a Distinguished University Professorship at the Liggins Institute of the University of Auckland, Australia.Mark A. Hanson is Emeritus Professor of Human Development and Health and British Heart Foundation Professor at The University of Southampton, UK.

Summary

Fully revised new edition highlighting the scientific and clinical advances in the field of developmental origins of health and disease. Explores new understanding of mechanisms such as epigenetics and the role of environmental influences on the fetus. Interventions throughout the lifespan and implications for public health are also covered.

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