
doi: 10.1159/000047129
pmid: 11509810
With the goal to establish a model that relates birth weight to placenta weight, adjusted for the most documented predictors of birth weight, 300 live newborns were studied, all were products of single gestation. Inclusion criteria were newborns with gestational age of 37 weeks or older according to the date of last menstruation, whose mothers did not have diabetes mellitus, high blood pressure, pre-eclampsia, or eclampsia. The weight of the newborn was identified from the anthropometry data collected by previously trained nursing personnel in each of the participating hospitals. Immediately after delivery, the placenta was weighed. Multiple linear regression was used to see the effect of placenta weight and each variable on birth weight. The mean of birth weight was 3,369 g with a standard deviation (SD) of 445 g. Placenta weight had a mean of 537 g (SD: 96 g). The relation between the weight of the placenta and the birth weight was significant, and we found that for each gram increase in placenta weight, birth weight is increased by 1.98 g (SE = 0.25, p < 0.01) and this relation is not linear, since the quadratic term is significant. Placenta weight has a nonlinear relation to the birth weight and is an important predictor of birth weight. Together with the gestational age and the maternal age and size, it explains 32% of the variability of birth weight. Placenta weight can be a ‘sentinel’ indicator of nutritional and/or environmental problems.
Adult, Male, Rural Population, Urban Population, Placenta, Infant, Newborn, Gestational Age, Organ Size, Body Height, Linear Models, Birth Weight, Humans, Female, Maternal Age
Adult, Male, Rural Population, Urban Population, Placenta, Infant, Newborn, Gestational Age, Organ Size, Body Height, Linear Models, Birth Weight, Humans, Female, Maternal Age
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