Scottish Daily Mail

Baby aged 14 weeks who’s as large as a 1-year-old!

- Daily Mail Reporter

THEY say children these days grow up fast, and it seems not-so-little Jack Castle is doing it faster than most.

At just a few months old, he is already the size of a one-year-old – and his parents think he may be Britain’s biggest baby.

When mother Diana Kuznetsova, 29, gave birth in February after three days in labour and two weeks past her due date, her newborn first child weighed in at a huge 11lbs 11oz. And Jack, from Canterbury, carried on making a big impression – rocketing up to 17lbs by the time of his ten-week check-up.

Miss Kuznetsova and partner engineer Ben Castle, 33, found none of the clothes they had bought would fit and 2ft Jack is now wearing clothes meant for a one-year-old.

Care worker Miss Kuznetsova said that she needed regular check-ups during her pregnancy to make sure everything was okay because her bump was growing so rapidly.

She said: ‘After three months my bump was already big, which normally would barely be showing for other women.

‘They couldn’t understand why my baby was growing so big. Everyone thought I was having triplets. Honestly I looked like I was about to burst.

‘Lifting Jack up is like a work-out, he’s huge. We’ve got no idea why Jack’s so massive – he’s not fat or anything, he’s just my big beautiful boy.’

WE TEND to think of chubby babies as cute — those rolls of fat only making them even more cuddly. However, it seems that view may be dangerousl­y outdated. experts are warning that a boom in the number of babies being born obese is creating a catalogue of health problems.

Figures show more than 1,400 newborns have been classified as obese (over 9 lb 15 oz or more) in the UK since 2011.

The average weight for a boy is 7 lb 8 oz and for a girl 7 lb 4 oz — around 2 oz higher than in 1971 — but a number of hospitals are now delivering so-called ‘sumo babies’, weighing 12 lb or more.

In scotland, the rate is also rising, with 6.2 per cent in 2013 born above average weight compared to 5.6 per cent in 2001. In Lanarkshir­e, a baby was born in 2010 weighing 13lb 2 oz.

There were 256 babies born above 9.9lb in Greater Glasgow and Clyde in 2013. Mothers in Fife had 71 babies above this size, and Lanarkshir­e women gave birth to 102.

Last week, Britain’s most senior children’s doctor criticised NHs anti- obesity campaigns as ‘failures’ for focusing on obesity once it is establishe­d and not tackling the cause.

Neena Modi, president of the Royal College of paediatric­s and Child Health, said babies born to very overweight mothers have already begun to accumulate fat around their stomachs in the womb.

There are two reasons why babies are born obese — or to use the medical term, macrosomic. one is their genes: larger adults are more likely to have larger babies. Another is that they get more food in the womb than they need.

AKEY factor in both is obesity i n pregnant women. Five per cent of pregnant women in Britain are now obese, which in pregnancy means a body mass index (BMI) of 35 or more — and the number is rising.

These women are more likely to have obese babies, partly as they tend to eat lots of sugary foods during pregnancy, which are passed onto the baby in the womb and turn to fat.

This can also be a problem among non- obese pregnant women who eat a high- sugar diet. obese women may also pass on genes that programme their babies to handle fat in a way that makes them more likely to be obese.

obese women are more likely to be resistant to insulin (the hormone that mops up sugar in the blood), as fat cells release chemicals that make the body less sensitive to it.

This is a major risk factor for devel o pment of gestationa­l diabetes, whi c h , in turn, increases the chance of having an obese baby.

professor David Haslam, a Gp specialisi­ng in obesity and who is chairman of the National obesity Forum, s ays t he problem of ‘mums who are fat having fat babies’ has now reached ‘ epidemic’ levels.

Carrying a very large baby is more likely to result in a difficult birth, which may injure the mother if she tries to deliver naturally, and often ends up requiring a caesarean.

And if the mother herself is obese, a caesarean is a trickier operation to perform, with an increased chance of complicati­ons such as wound infections, blood clots and blood loss. Indeed, of the 295 maternal deaths reported in the UK between 2003 and 2005, almost one in four of the mothers was obese.

For the baby, being obese at birth means they’re more at risk of their shoulders getting stuck during delivery. This can cause breathing difficulti­es, raising the risk of oxygen starvation. It can also lead to erb’s palsy, permanent arm paralysis.

If they are delivered by caesarean (more likely when a baby is obese), this increases the risk of breathing difficulti­es, as t h ma , allergies and cardiovasc­ular disease in later life. Yet another related problem is that if the mother has a high- sugar diet during pregnancy, this can cause the baby’s blood sugar levels to suddenly drop ( hypoglycem­ia) once they are no longer attached to this food supply through the placenta. Research shows up to three i n every 1,000 babies born develop hypoglycem­ia — which causes brain damage if left untreated — and it is a common cause of admission to a special care baby unit.

There are long-term health consequenc­es of being an obese baby, too. Research shows they are more likely to grow up to be obese children and adults.

professor Cyrus Cooper, director of the Medical Research Council Lifecourse epidemiolo­gy unit at the university of southampto­n, says: ‘If you’re fat as a child, you will have relatively high f at mass in middle age, which will put you at i ncreased risk of type 2 diabetes, high blood pressure, cardiovasc­ular disease and premature death.’

A review of studies in the Internatio­nal Journal of obesity i n 2011 f ound that obese children and teenagers were up to five times more likely to develop diabetes, high blood pressure, heart disease and stroke as adults.

PROFESSOR Cooper adds t hat another concern is bone fractures. ‘ The body has a finite number of stem cells, which can form either fat, bone or muscle cells,’ he says.

‘In fat children, the stem cells are more likely to turn into fat cells, so these children are more likely to suffer bone fractures.’

But research shows the cycle can be broken i f pregnant women are given health advice.

Last year, an Australian study of 2,200 obese pregnant women f ound those given healthy eating advice and who were encouraged to exercise during pregnancy to limit weight gain were 18 per cent less likely to have a heavy baby, compared with t hose who r eceived standard care.

 ??  ?? Big impression: Diana Kuznetsova, 29, with son Jack, who weighed 17lbs at ten weeks
Big impression: Diana Kuznetsova, 29, with son Jack, who weighed 17lbs at ten weeks
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