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Browsing by Author "Hediger, Mary L."
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Item In utero exposure to cigarette smoking, environmental tobacco smoke and reproductive hormones in US girls approaching puberty(Karger, 2015) Gollenberg, Audra L.; Addo, O. Yaw; Zhang, Zhiwei; Hediger, Mary L.; Himes, John H.; Lee, Peter A.; Department of Pediatrics, IU School of MedicineBACKGROUND/AIMS: Evidence is unclear whether prenatal smoking affects age at menarche and pubertal development, and its impact upon hormones has not been well studied. We aim to identify potential pathways through which prenatal smoking and environmental tobacco smoke (ETS) affect reproductive hormones in girls approaching puberty. METHODS: We examined the association between prenatal smoking, current ETS and luteinizing hormone (LH) and inhibin B (InB) in 6- to 11-year-old girls in the 3rd National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey, 1988-1994. Parents/guardians completed interviewer-assisted questionnaires on health and demographics at the time of physical examination. Residual blood samples were analyzed for reproductive hormones in 2008. RESULTS: Of 660 girls, 19 and 39% were exposed to prenatal smoke and current ETS, respectively. Accounting for multiple pathways in structural equation models, prenatally exposed girls had significantly lower LH (β = -0.205 log-mIU/ml, p < 0.0001) and InB (β = -0.162, log-pg/ml, p < 0.0001). Prenatal smoking also influenced LH positively and InB negatively indirectly through BMI-for-age. ETS was positively associated with LH, but not with InB. CONCLUSION: Exposure to maternal smoking may disrupt reproductive development manifesting in altered hormone levels near puberty.Item Inhibin B and luteinizing hormone levels in girls aged 6-11 years from NHANES III, 1988-1994(Wiley, 2012) Sims, Emily K.; Addo, O. Yaw; Gollenberg, Audra L.; Himes, John H.; Hediger, Mary L.; Lee, Peter A.; Pediatrics, School of MedicineObjective: To evaluate inhibin B and luteinizing hormone (LH) levels in a large, representative cross-sectional sample of US girls and characterize the relationships of these laboratory values with age, clinical signs of puberty and other correlates. Design: Cross-sectional analysis of LH and inhibin B in banked serum from 720 girls aged 6-11 years who participated in the Third National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES III). Measurements: Levels of inhibin B and LH, race, ethnicity and anthropometric measurements were compared for all girls. Visual assessment of pubertal stage was performed on girls aged 8 years and older. A two-part model was used to establish normative data and Tobit regression models were used to evaluate associations with participant characteristics. Receiver operating characteristic (ROC) analysis was performed to identify optimum cut points predictive of puberty onset. Results: Mean hormone levels progressively increased with age. LH levels progressively increased with pubertal stage. Inhibin B levels increased gradually from breast stage I to II, then more sharply to peak at stage III, followed by a plateau at stages IV and V. ROC curves indicated that both hormones were consistent with pubertal onset as indicated by breast stage II. Conclusions: This study characterizes inhibin B and LH values in a large, representative cross-sectional sample of US girls. Inhibin B can be a useful tool in combination with other clinical and biochemical parameters to evaluate gonadal function as a reflection of pubertal progression in girls.