Implications of leg length for metabolic health and fitness

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Abstract

Background and objectives: Several studies have linked longer legs with favorable adult metabolic health outcomes and greater offspring birth weight. A recent Mendelian randomization study suggested a causal link between height and cardiometabolic risk; however, the underlying reasons remain poorly understood. Methodology: Using a cross-sectional design, we tested in a convenience sample of 70 healthy young women whether birth weight and tibia length as markers of early-life conditions associated more strongly with metabolically beneficial traits like organ size and skeletal muscle mass (SMM) than a statistically derived height-residual variable indexing later, more canalized growth. Results: Consistent with the 'developmental origins of health and disease' hypothesis, we found relatively strong associations of tibia length - but not birth weight - with adult organ size, brain size, SMM and resting energy expenditure measured by magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry and indirect calorimetry, respectively. Conclusions and implications: Building on prior work, these results suggest that leg length is a sensitive marker of traits directly impacting metabolic and reproductive health. Alongside findings in the same sample relating tibia length and height-residual to MRI-measured pelvic dimensions, we suggest there may exist a degree of coordination in the development of long bone, lean mass and pelvic traits, possibly centered on early, pre-pubertal growth periods. Such phenotypic coordination has important implications for fitness, serving to benefit both adult health and the health of offspring in subsequent generations.

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Shirley, M. K., Arthurs, O. J., Seunarine, K. K., Cole, T. J., Eaton, S., Williams, J. E., … Wells, J. C. K. (2022). Implications of leg length for metabolic health and fitness. Evolution, Medicine and Public Health, 10(1), 316–324. https://doi.org/10.1093/emph/eoac023

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