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Can a low birth weight increase stroke risk even in healthy adults?

Aadya Jha
| TIMESOFINDIA.COM | Last updated on - Apr 26, 2026, 20:13 IST
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Low birth weight and stroke risk


Most people leave their birth weight in the past, tucked away in hospital records or family memory. But over the last two decades, researchers have begun to revisit that number with fresh curiosity. Can something as early as birth weight shape health decades later, even in adults who seem fit and careful?

The answer is not as simple as yes or no. But growing evidence suggests that low birth weight may quietly tilt the odds when it comes to stroke risk.

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The early imprint: How the body “remembers” the womb

“Low birth weight is often seen as a concern limited to infancy, but its effects can extend much further into adult life,” says Dr Murali Chekuri. He explains that when a baby grows in a restricted environment in the womb, the body adapts in ways that may not fully reverse later.

This idea is part of a well-studied concept called the Developmental Origins of Health and Disease. It suggests that early conditions, especially nutrition and oxygen supply in the womb, can “program” how organs and systems function for life.

Dr Chekuri adds, “When a baby experiences restricted growth in the womb, it may lead to subtle, long-term changes in how the body regulates blood pressure, metabolism, and vascular function.”

Over time, these changes can show up as higher tendencies toward hypertension, insulin resistance, or problems in blood vessel function. Each of these is a known contributor to stroke.


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What the research says: Numbers that are hard to ignore

Large population studies have helped clarify this link. One widely cited Swedish study followed nearly 800,000 individuals and found a consistent pattern: lower birth weight was tied to a higher risk of stroke later in life.

Participants with birth weight below the 3.5 kg median had a 21% higher risk of stroke. The increase was slightly higher in men (23%) compared to women (18%). Even more telling, researchers noted a steady relationship, for every standard deviation drop in birth weight, stroke risk rose by 11%.

These findings do not mean that low birth weight causes stroke directly. But they do show a pattern that repeats across populations and decades.

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Why it happens: The body’s silent adjustments

Dr Jacob Chacko offers a simple way to understand this. “One might wonder why a weight recorded on your birth affects now. That is because of developmental programming,” he says.

When growth is restricted before birth, vital organs adapt to survive. These adaptations may include:

Slightly smaller or stiffer blood vessels
Changes in kidney function that affect blood pressure
Altered metabolism that can increase diabetes risk
​

“Low Birth Weight can permanently alter the structure of the heart, liver, and kidneys,” Dr Chacko explains. “Blood vessels may grow to be smaller and less elastic, making them more prone to damage.”

Over years, these subtle differences can add up. They do not always cause disease on their own, but they can make the body less resilient when other risks appear.

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A risk, not a verdict: Why lifestyle still matters

It is important to keep this in perspective. Low birth weight is not destiny.

“Low birth weight doesn’t guarantee future health problems, but it does shift the baseline risk slightly higher,” says Dr Chekuri. Even people who exercise regularly and eat well may carry this underlying risk, but their habits still matter a great deal.

Dr Chacko reinforces this balance. “Low Birth Weight alone is not very significant unless there are associated traditional risk factors.” These include smoking, high blood pressure, diabetes, and high cholesterol.

In simple terms, birth weight may load the gun, but lifestyle often pulls the trigger.

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What can be done: Awareness, not anxiety

So what should someone do with this information?


“Being born at a low weight is not a guarantee of illness, but it is a caution from your body,” says Dr Chacko. The focus should be on early and steady prevention.

That means:

Checking blood pressure from a younger age
Monitoring blood sugar and cholesterol regularly
Staying active most days of the week
Sleeping well and managing stress
​

“Preventive care becomes the key strategy here,” Dr Chekuri notes. The goal is not fear, but foresight.

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Medical experts consulted

This article includes expert inputs shared with TOI Health by:

Dr Murali Chekuri, Consultant - Neurology, Manipal Hospitals Vijayawada.
Dr Jacob Chacko, Senior Consultant - Neurology, Aster Medcity, Kochi.

Inputs were used to explain how low birth weight may increase the risk of stroke later in life, even among otherwise healthy adults, and why early awareness is important.


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Copyright © May 28, 2026, 08.00PM IST Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All rights reserved. For reprint rights: Times Syndication Service