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Tall Women Likely to Have Twins
A RESEARCHER
who specializes in multiple-birth pregnancies has confirmed that taller
women are more likely to have twins.
Taller women have more of an insulin-like growth factor that has been linked
to height and to the rate of twins in previous work.
Dr. Gary Steinman, an obstetrician at Long Island Jewish Medical Center,
compared heights of 125 women who had twins and 24 who had triplets to the
average height of U.S. women.
Those who birthed two or more children were on average more than an inch
taller.
The study was published in the September issue of the Journal of
Reproductive Medicine.
Insulin-like growth factor (IGF) is a protein released by the liver in
response to growth hormones. It increases the sensitivity of the ovaries to
follicle stimulating hormone, thereby increasing ovulation.
"Any circumstance that affects the amount of available insulin-like growth
factor so as to modify the sensitivity of the ovary to follicle-stimulating
hormone appears to govern the rate of spontaneous twinning," said Dr.
Steinman.
IGF also stimulates cells in the shaft of long bones to grow. Previous
studies have found shorter people have lower levels of IGF. Other studies
suggest IGF might help embryos survive in the early stages of development.
Countries with taller women have higher rates of twinning, according to a
statement released by Steinman.
In a previous study, Steinman found that women who consume animal products,
specifically dairy, are five times more likely to have twins.
Cows, like humans, produce IGF in response to growth hormone and release it
into the blood, and the IGF makes its way into their milk.●
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