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Jul 05th

Study finds C-section births and childhood obesity correlation

pregnant060810_optBY MIKE OLIVA
NEWJERSEYNEWSROOM.COM

Better known as a C-section, the caesarean birth has already been determined to increase the risk of childhood asthma and allergic rhinitis. Latest evidence may add obesity to the list.

New research suggests that cesarean delivery may double the risk of childhood obesity by age 3.

The study included over 1,200 mothers through the span of 3 years ending in 2002. About 16 percent of children delivered by C-section were obese by age 3, compared to only 7.5 percent of children who were born vaginally, according to researchers led by Dr. Susanna Huh of Children’s Hospital in Boston.

According to the team research, it is believed that a bacterium in the gut that affects the way food is digested is the link. Moreover, the team remains skeptical on the results and cannot say for certain that C-sections will result in childhood obesity; rather it is only a trend.

With childhood obesity and C-section births on the rise, more testing is likely to come.

 

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