A birth-to-maturity longitudinal study of heights and weights in two West African (Gambian) villages, 1951-1975.

Records of heights and weights kept for more than 25 years for two neighbouring Gambian villages have been used to describe the pattern of growth. There was no secular trend in height. Children who died during the investigation were smaller and lighter than the survivors, but the interval between the last available dry-season measurement and death was not associated with the degree of deficit in height and weight. The presence of seasonal variation in the rates of growth in height and weight was shown, the lowest rates occurring during late rains (August to November). Height growth curves from the age of 5 to 23-25 years were fitted for 55 boys and 62 girls. The curves indicate that puberty is much delayed in Gambian adolescents in comparison to British and West Bengal data. The mean age at peak height velocity (PHV) was 16.3 and 13.8 years for boys and girls respectively. The corresponding velocities were 6.9 and 6.0 cm/yr. In girls but not in boys there was a significant negative correlation (-0.46) between the age at PHV and PHV itself. There was no significant correlation between the age at PHV and adult height. Comparison with British data suggests that growth patterns in the Gambian villages are characterized by the substantial deficits in both height and weight that develop in early life and which appear to persist without rectification into adulthood.

[1]  I. McGregor,et al.  The Demography of Two West African (Gambian) Villages, 1951–75 , 1981, Journal of Biosocial Science.

[2]  A. Prentice,et al.  FACTORS INFLUENCING LACTATION PERFORMANCE IN RURAL GAMBIAN MOTHERS , 1978, The Lancet.

[3]  D. F. Roberts,et al.  Heritability of stature in a West African population , 1978, Annals of human genetics.

[4]  I. McGregor Topical aspects of the epidemiology of malaria. , 1978, Israel journal of medical sciences.

[5]  J M Tanner,et al.  Standards from birth to maturity for height, weight, height velocity, and weight velocity: British children, 1965. II. , 1966, Archives of disease in childhood.

[6]  I. McGregor,et al.  BODY WEIGHT CHANGES DURING PREGNANCY AND LACTATION IN RURAL AFRICAN (GAMBIAN) WOMEN , 1966, The Journal of obstetrics and gynaecology of the British Commonwealth.

[7]  I. McGregor,et al.  Growth and Mortality in Children in an African Village , 1961, British medical journal.

[8]  W. Billewicz,et al.  Clinical Significance of Weight Trends During Pregnancy , 1957, British medical journal.

[9]  W. Billewicz,et al.  Pubertal changes in boys and girls in Newcastle upon Tyne. , 1981, Annals of human biology.

[10]  J. Tanner,et al.  A longitudinal study of the growth in height of boys and girls of West Bengal (India) aged six months of 20 years. , 1980, Annals of human biology.

[11]  M. Baines,et al.  A new family of mathematical models describing the human growth curve. , 1978, Annals of human biology.

[12]  J. Tanner,et al.  The adolescent growth spurt of boys and girls of the Harpenden growth study. , 1976, Annals of human biology.

[13]  I. McGregor,et al.  The health of young children in a West African (Gambian) village. , 1970, Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene.

[14]  I. McGregor,et al.  The growth of young children in a Gambian village. , 1968, Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene.

[15]  W. Billewicz A note on body weight measurements and seasonal variation. , 1968 .

[16]  I. McGregor,et al.  Haemoglobin concentration and anaemia in young West African (Gambian) children. , 1966, Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene.

[17]  B. Thompson Marriage, childbirth and early childhood in a Gambian village : a socio-medical study , 1965 .