Lambs Provide Clues to Mother-Child Obesity

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(Image credit: Martin Baldwin | Stock Xchng)

Lambs that are born to obese sheep don't experience a peak in a hormone that regulates appetite, according to a new study that could help explain why human children born to obese mothers are at an increased risk for being obese themselves, researchers say.

In lambs born to normal-weight sheep, there was a peak in the hormone leptin, which is produced by fat cells and regulates appetite, during their first six to nine days of life. But the same hormonal peak did not occur in lambs born to the obese ewes, the study said.

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