Breastfeeding and parents' socioeconomic status buffer dental developmental stress in female infants.

IF 2.1 3区 医学 Q2 EVOLUTIONARY BIOLOGY
Evolution, Medicine, and Public Health Pub Date : 2025-06-13 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.1093/emph/eoaf011
Emily Moes
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Abstract

Background and objectives: Linking adult health to early life is limited by a lack of retrospective biomarkers of stress tied to narrow windows of early development. Teeth serve as ideal data sources to examine early life because their hard tissues endure from infancy through adulthood as permanent records of developmental stress. This study examines if dental fluctuating asymmetry (FA) in permanent molars, a measure of instability and plastic responses to stress, is associated with biocultural factors during development.

Methodology: Data were sourced from dental casts and health history records of 303 child participants of the longitudinal Burlington Growth Study. Dental FA was calculated from the first and second permanent molar intercuspal distances. Biocultural factors of parental, gestational, and childhood characteristics were grouped into latent dimensions using factor analysis of mixed data, then analyzed against FA using logistic regression separated by sex.

Results: Breastfeeding and high and low parental socioeconomic status were associated with lower FA in females. No relationships were found between biocultural factors and FA in males.

Conclusion and implications: The sex-specific results are likely due to differences in the nutritional needs of males and females during the first several postnatal months. Furthermore, dimorphism in energetic investment strategies, where males favor body growth while females favor system development, may be responsible for differences in how periods of physiological stress affect biological systems. These results argue for sex-specific investigations of stress biomarkers to better link early life with adult health.

母乳喂养和父母社会经济地位缓冲女婴牙齿发育压力。
背景和目的:由于缺乏与早期发育狭窄窗口相关的压力的回顾性生物标志物,将成人健康与早期生活联系起来受到限制。牙齿是研究早期生活的理想数据来源,因为它们的硬组织从婴儿期一直持续到成年期,是发育压力的永久记录。本研究探讨恒磨牙的波动不对称(FA)是否与发育过程中的生物培养因素有关,这是一种不稳定性和应力塑性反应的测量方法。方法:数据来源于303名纵向伯灵顿生长研究儿童的牙模和健康史记录。根据第一恒磨牙和第二恒磨牙牙间距离计算牙FA。使用混合数据的因子分析将父母、妊娠和童年特征的生物文化因素分组为潜在维度,然后使用按性别分离的逻辑回归对FA进行分析。结果:母乳喂养和父母社会经济地位高低与女性低FA有关。在男性中,未发现生物培养因素与FA之间的关系。结论和意义:性别差异的结果可能是由于男性和女性在出生后最初几个月的营养需求不同。此外,能量投资策略的二态性,即雄性倾向于身体生长,而雌性倾向于系统发育,可能是生理应激对生物系统影响的不同时期的原因。这些结果表明,对压力生物标志物进行性别特异性研究,可以更好地将早期生活与成年健康联系起来。
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来源期刊
Evolution, Medicine, and Public Health
Evolution, Medicine, and Public Health Environmental Science-Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis
CiteScore
5.40
自引率
2.70%
发文量
37
审稿时长
8 weeks
期刊介绍: About the Journal Founded by Stephen Stearns in 2013, Evolution, Medicine, and Public Health is an open access journal that publishes original, rigorous applications of evolutionary science to issues in medicine and public health. It aims to connect evolutionary biology with the health sciences to produce insights that may reduce suffering and save lives. Because evolutionary biology is a basic science that reaches across many disciplines, this journal is open to contributions on a broad range of topics.
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