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Featured researches published by Anita Szwed.


Homo-journal of Comparative Human Biology | 2008

Body mass index, waist to hip ratio and waist/height in adult Polish women in relation to their education, place of residence, smoking and alcohol consumption.

Magdalena Skrzypczak; Anita Szwed; Romana Pawlińska-Chmara; Violetta Skrzypulec

Obesity is a complex, multifactorial disorder that develops from genotype and environmental interactions. The aim of this study is to describe the variability of body mass index (BMI), waist to hip ratio (WHR) and waist to height (W/Ht) in adult Polish women, and to determine relationships between these variables and factors such as education, place of residence, smoking and alcohol drinking. The tested group consisted of 10,254 women aged 25-95 years, who voluntarily filled in questionnaires and participated in anthropometric measurements (body height and mass, waist and hip circumferences). The BMI, WHR and W/Ht values were calculated based on these measurements. The participants were differentiated in terms of education, residence and lifestyle (smoking, alcohol drinking). Chi-squared test, product-moment correlations, ANOVA, multiple correspondence analysis (MCA) and logistic regression with backward elimination were used to evaluate associations between social and lifestyle factors and BMI, WHR and W/Ht. The results confirm (1) the relationship between low social status and the risk of overweight and obesity as observed in developed countries; (2) higher susceptibility to environmental factors such as education, place of residence, smoking and alcohol drinking in younger (premenopausal) women; (3) the usefulness of simple and practical anthropometric indicators such as WHR and W/Ht for the identification of the higher risk of future metabolic diseases in obese people and those with a normal body mass.


Journal of Child and Adolescent Psychopharmacology | 2015

Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder is Related to Decreased Weight in the Preschool Period and to Increased Rate of Overweight in School-Age Boys

Tomasz Hanć; Agnieszka Slopien; Tomasz Wolańczyk; Anita Szwed; Zbigniew Czapla; Magdalena Durda; Monika Dmitrzak-Weglarz; Joanna Ratajczak

OBJECTIVE Previous studies have associated attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) with growth deviations and obesity. However, available data regarding the growth of children with ADHD in their early childhood are insufficient. Therefore, we aimed to examine whether there are differences in body size between preschool boys with and without ADHD. METHODS The study used cross-sectional and retrospective longitudinal data concerning 112 boys with ADHD and a community-based sample of 308 boys without ADHD. The groups were homogeneous in terms of socioeconomic status, place of residence, term of birth, and birth weight. The average age of diagnosis was 8.3 years, and none of boys had been treated with stimulants before they were 7 years of age. Comparisons were made at the ages of 2, 4, and 6 years, for World Health Organization (WHO)-norm-standardized height, weight, body mass index (BMI), prevalence of underweight, overweight, and obesity. Separate analysis were made for the cross-sectional measurements of current body size. RESULTS Boys with ADHD at the age of 2 had significantly lower z scores for weight (t=-1.98, p=0.04) and BMI (t=-2.09, p=0.04), and at the age of 4 for weight (t=-2.05, p=0.04) than the boys from the control group. A significantly lower percentage of overweight/obesity was observed in boys with ADHD at the age of 2 in comparison with the control group. At the age of 6, boys with ADHD were underweight more often. Cross-sectional analysis of current body size showed that boys with ADHD had lower z scores for height (t=-3.08, p=0.002) and higher z scores (t=3.13, p=0.002) for BMI. Overweight was more frequent in this group. CONCLUSIONS Preschool boys with ADHD (age of 2-6 years) have a tendency toward lower body weight than their peers. But in subsequent phases of development, they are shorter and more frequently overweight than boys without ADHD, when place of residence, socioeconomic status, term of birth, birth weight, comorbid conditions, and treatment are controlled.


Homo-journal of Comparative Human Biology | 2012

Biological maturity at birth, the course of the subsequent ontogenetic stages and age at menarche

Anita Szwed; M. Kosińska

The main aim of the study was to assess the influence of biological maturity at birth on growth processes in the subsequent years and during puberty in girls. The material of this study comes from the outpatient clinic cards and cross-sectional research on girls from the province of Wielkopolska in Poland. It includes data of 527 girls. The influence of perinatal maturity on body weight in the later stages of ontogeny was determined with the use of the Kruskal-Wallis test and the Mann-Whitney U test. In order to determine the relationship between perinatal maturity and age at menarche, the survival analysis module was used. The results show a diverse influence of perinatal maturity on the values of body weight achieved in later years of life. The indicated predictive factors included both birth weight and gestational age. In the examined girls menarche occurred between the 10th year and the 17th year of life (X¯=12.87, s=1.26; Me=13 years). The comparison showed a significant variation in age at menarche depending on the length of pregnancy (log-rank χ(2)(2)=27.068, p<0.0001) and birth weight (log-rank χ(2)(2)=23.241, p<0.0001). There was no variation in maturation of the examined girls conditioned by the occurrence of intra-uterine growth retardation (log-rank χ(2)(2)=2.046, p>0.05). Remote prognoses as to the postnatal development of preterm-born children and/or children with low birth weight indicate adverse influence of these variables on age at menarche. Perinatal biological maturity of a newborn conditions the course of postnatal development.


Journal of Attention Disorders | 2018

Perinatal Risk Factors and ADHD in Children and Adolescents: A Hierarchical Structure of Disorder Predictors.

Tomasz Hanć; Anita Szwed; Agnieszka Slopien; Tomasz Wolańczyk; Monika Dmitrzak-Weglarz; Joanna Ratajczak

Objective: The aim of the study was to hierarchically assess the predictive power of low and high birth weight, pre-term and post-term birth, and low Apgar score as the risk factors for ADHD. Method: The data of 132 boys diagnosed with ADHD and 146 boys from control group, aged 6 to 18 years, have been analyzed. The boys were categorized according to term of birth, birth weight, and Apgar score. CART method (Classification and Regression Trees) was used for assessment of the relationship between perinatal factors and the risk of ADHD. Results: Low Apgar score (21.97% vs. 13.01%) and post-term birth (12.12% vs. 0.68%) were more frequent in the sample than in the control group. CART method additionally indicated low birth weight as associated with the risk of ADHD. Among analyzed risk factors, Apgar score had the highest predictive value. Conclusion: The decreased Apgar score is the most important perinatal risk factor of ADHD. Research results also indicated a high significance of post-term birth in predicting the disorder.


Early Human Development | 2017

Digit ratio (2D:4D) and month of birth: A link to the solstitial-melatonin-testosterone effect.

Anita Szwed; Magdalena Kosińska; John T. Manning

BACKGROUND Digit ratio (2D:4D) is a sexually dimorphic trait and its determination in utero is influenced by testosterone. The solstitial-melatonin-testosterone hypothesis posits that melatonin inhibits the production of foetal testosterone and melatonin levels are at their lowest in months when light levels are high. AIMS We test the relationship between 2D:4D, month-of-birth and light levels. STUDY DESIGN We recruited participants whose year of birth was spread across the 20th Century. SUBJECTS 323 Polish men and women. OUTCOME MEASURES Finger lengths, month-of-birth, mean daylight hours per month in and around Poznan, Poland. RESULTS Our sample was born between 1907 and 1997. In comparison to late-Spring births, late-Autumn births had low right-left 2D:4D (high prenatal testosterone). Regarding light levels, there were significant relationships between low right 2D:4D and right-left 2D:4D (high prenatal testosterone) and long days at the end of the 1st trimester. These relationships were strongest for participants born in the first half of the 20th Century. CONCLUSIONS Participants born in the late-Autumn and who experienced long days in the 2nd and 3rd prenatal months had low 2D:4D. The effects were strongest for early 20th Century births where photoperiods would be less disrupted by artificial light.


Annals of Human Biology | 2006

The second to fourth digit ratio and asymmetry

John T. Manning; Bernhard Fink; Nick Neave; Anita Szwed


European Child & Adolescent Psychiatry | 2015

ADHD and overweight in boys: cross-sectional study with birth weight as a controlled factor

Tomasz Hanć; Agnieszka Slopien; Tomasz Wolańczyk; Monika Dmitrzak-Weglarz; Anita Szwed; Zbigniew Czapla; Magdalena Durda; Joanna Ratajczak; Joachim Cieślik


Anthropologischer Anzeiger | 2013

Influence of socioeconomic factors on age at menarche of Polish girls.

Anita Szwed; Aleksandra John; Zbigniew Czapla; Magdalena Kosińska


Archive | 2005

Assessment of the biological condition and nutritional status of adult patients with cystic fibrosis

Anita Szwed; Joanna Goździk; Karol Karbowy


Anthropological Review | 2007

Assessment of the BMI, WHR and W/Ht in pre- and postmenopausal women

Magdalena Skrzypczak; Anita Szwed; Romana Pawlińska-Chmara; Violetta Skrzypulec

Collaboration


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Tomasz Hanć

Adam Mickiewicz University in Poznań

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Zbigniew Czapla

Adam Mickiewicz University in Poznań

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Joanna Ratajczak

Adam Mickiewicz University in Poznań

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Magdalena Durda

Adam Mickiewicz University in Poznań

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Maria Kaczmarek

Adam Mickiewicz University in Poznań

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Agnieszka Slopien

Poznan University of Medical Sciences

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Magdalena Kosińska

Adam Mickiewicz University in Poznań

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Monika Dmitrzak-Weglarz

Poznan University of Medical Sciences

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Tomasz Wolańczyk

Medical University of Warsaw

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Joachim Cieślik

Adam Mickiewicz University in Poznań

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