OBJECTIVE - Low birth weight has been linked to an increased risk of type 2
diabetes and cardiovascular disease in adult life. The fetal insulin hypot
hesis proposed that a genetic predisposition to insulin resistance may also
influence vascular development. Therefore, impaired vascular function may
be an intrinsic abnormality in low-birth weight infants that antedates clin
ical features of the insulin resistance syndrome.
RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS - Two groups of 3-month-old term infants were i
ncluded in the study: 17 infants of lowest quartile birth weight (LQBW) and
21 infants of highest quartile birth weight (HQBW). Three aspects of skin
microvascular function were examined; response to local heating, response t
o acetylcholine iontophoresis, and capillary density.
RESULTS - Median (interquartile ranges) birth weights of the LQBW and HQBW
infants were 3,140 g (2,738-3,254) and 3,920 g (3,750-4,020), respectively.
Skin maximal hyperemic response to local heating was 2.14 V (1.68-2.30) in
the LQBW group vs. 2.44 V (1.96-2.90) in the HQBW group (P = 0.020), and t
he endothelium-dependent vasodilatory response was 1.03 V (0.62-1.32) in th
e LQBW group vs. 0.78 V (0.45-1.32) in the HQBW group (P = 0.297). Capillar
y density in the LQBW and HQBW groups were 46.3 mm(-2) (40.1-53.7) and 44.1
mm(-2) (41.7-56.0), respectively (P = 0.736).
CONCLUSIONS - Skin maximal hyperemic response was lower in LQBW infants, al
though no reduction in capillary density or defect in endothelium-dependent
vasodilatation was observed. Such a lower maximal hyperemic response in ea
rly life in LQBW subjects who are at risk for type 2 diabetes and cardiovas
cular disease supports the hypothesis that impaired microvascular function
is an early antecedent to diabetes in later life.