BackgroundPreterm birth has been associated with increased risk of cardiovascular morbidity in adult life. We evaluated whether preterm birth is associated with deviating cardiac structure and function before school start.Methods and ResultsIn total, 176 children aged 6 years and born extremely preterm (EXPT; gestational age of 22–26 weeks) and 134 children born at term (control [CTRL]) were studied. We used echocardiography to assess left heart dimensions, geometry, and functions. Recording and off‐line analyses of echocardiographic images were performed by operators blinded to group belonging. Body size, blood pressure, and heart rate were also measured. Rates of family history of cardiovascular disease and sex distribution were similar in the EXPT and CTRL groups. Heart rate and systolic blood pressure did not differ, whereas diastolic blood pressure was slightly higher in EXPT than CTRL participants. After adjusting for body surface area, left ventricular length, width, and aortic valve annulus diameter were 3% to 5% smaller in EXPT than CTRL participants. Left ventricular longitudinal shortening and systolic tissue velocity were 7% to 11% lower, and transversal shortening fraction was 6% higher in EXPT than CTRL participants. The EXPT group also exhibited lower atrial emptying velocities than the CTRL group. Sex, fetal growth restriction, or a patent ductus arteriosus in the neonatal period did not contribute to cardiac dimensions or performance.ConclusionsSix‐year‐old children born extremely preterm exhibit a unique cardiac phenotype characterized by smaller left ventricles with altered systolic and diastolic functions than same‐aged children born at term.
BackgroundAdverse developmental programming by early-life exposures might account for higher blood pressure (BP) in children born extremely preterm. We assessed associations between nutrition, growth and hyperglycemia early in infancy, and BP at 6.5 years of age in children born extremely preterm.MethodsData regarding perinatal exposures including nutrition, growth and glycemia status were collected from the Extremely Preterm Infants in Sweden Study (EXPRESS), a population-based cohort including infants born <27 gestational weeks during 2004–2007. BP measurements were performed at 6.5 years of age in a sub-cohort of 171 children (35% of the surviving children).ResultsHigher mean daily protein intake (+1 g/kg/day) during postnatal weeks 1–8 was associated with 0.40 (±0.18) SD higher diastolic BP. Higher mean daily carbohydrate intake (+1 g/kg/day) during the same period was associated with 0.18 (±0.05) and 0.14 (±0.04) SD higher systolic and diastolic BP, respectively. No associations were found between infant growth (weight, length) and later BP. Hyperglycemia and its duration during postnatal weeks 1–4 were associated primarily with higher diastolic BP z-scores.ConclusionsThese findings emphasize the importance of modifiable early-life exposures, such as nutrition and hyperglycemia, in determining long-term outcomes in children born extremely preterm.
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