Login / Signup

Preterm-born individuals: a vulnerable population at risk of cardiovascular morbidity and mortality during thermal extremes?

Ryan Phillip SixtusClint GrayMary Judith BerryRebecca Maree Dyson
Published in: Experimental physiology (2023)
Preterm-born individuals are a uniquely vulnerable population. Preterm exposure to the extrauterine environment and the (mal)adaptations that occur during the transitional period can result in alterations to their macro- and micro-physiological state. The physiological adaptations that increase survival in the short term may place those born preterm on a trajectory of lifelong dysfunction and later-life decompensation. Cardiovascular compensation in children and adolescents, which masks this trajectory of dysfunction, is overcome under stress, such that the functional cardiovascular capacity is reduced and recovery impaired following physiological stress. This has implications for their response to thermal stress. As the Anthropocene introduces greater changes in our environment, thermal extremes will impact vulnerable populations as yet unidentified in the climate change context. Here, we present the hypothesis that individuals born preterm are a vulnerable population at an increased risk of cardiovascular morbidity and mortality during thermal extremes.
Keyphrases
  • low birth weight
  • gestational age
  • preterm infants
  • preterm birth
  • climate change
  • stress induced
  • high intensity
  • heat stress
  • free survival