Rising rates of adiposity in the young pose one of the greatest threats to future population burden of cardiovascular disease. Understanding the contribution of genetic and early-life influences to adiposity… Click to show full abstract
Rising rates of adiposity in the young pose one of the greatest threats to future population burden of cardiovascular disease. Understanding the contribution of genetic and early-life influences to adiposity profiles in young adulthood – when the first signs of subclinical cardiovascular disease commonly appear – are vital if effective lifetime prevention strategies are to be developed. This data note documents the extensive range of genotypic and phenotypic data available from a London-based sub-study of the long-running Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children (ALSPAC)—the ‘ALSPAC in London’ Study—in which extensive adipose and cardiovascular phenotyping was carried out in participants recruited based on a genetic predisposition to obesity.
               
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