环境与职业医学 (Jan 2024)

A systemic review on association between on maternal atmospheric pollution exposure during pregnancy and childhood obesity

  • Lu ZHENG,
  • Borui LIU,
  • Ningyu WAN,
  • Xiaochuan WANG,
  • Zhe YANG,
  • Jiajin HU

DOI
https://doi.org/10.11836/JEOM23218
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 41, no. 1
pp. 70 – 76

Abstract

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BackgroundMaternal atmospheric pollution during pregnancy may alter fetal intrauterine development programming, thereby increasing the risk of childhood obesity in the future.ObjectiveTo investigate the effects of atmospheric pollution exposure during pregnancy on the incidence of childhood obesity in offspring.MethodsEnglish databases (PubMed, Web of Science, and Medline) and Chinese databases (Wanfang Data Knowledge Service Platform, China National Knowledge Infrastructure, and VIP Information Chinese Journal Service Platform) were searched for literature reporting exposure to atmospheric pollution during pregnancy and childhood obesity published from 1 January 2000 to 31 August 2023. The quality of the included literature was evaluated using the quality assessment tools for observational cohort and cross-sectional studies recommended by the US National Institutes of Health.ResultsTwenty-four studies meeting the inclusion criteria were identified and the associated atmospheric pollutants included particulate matter, ozone, nitrogen oxide, carbon oxide, and sulfur oxide. In comparison to the non-exposed group, prenatal exposure to various common atmospheric pollutants were significantly associated with an elevated risk of childhood obesity in offspring.ConclusionMaternal exposure to atmospheric pollution during pregnancy is associated with an elevated risk of childhood obesity in subsequent years. Future studies should pay more attention to the effects of atmospheric pollution on the distribution of children's body fat and metabolic development, and further identify potential mechanisms of atmospheric pollutant exposure leading to childhood obesity.

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