Oxygen therapy in premature low birth weight infants is associated with capillary loss and increases in blood pressure: a pilot study

Low birth weight (LBW) and premature birth are known risk factors for future cardiovascular disease and in particular essential hypertension (EH). Capillary rarefaction (CR) is an established hallmark of EH and is known to occur in individuals with a history of LBW. We previously reported that LBW i...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of human hypertension 2020-04, Vol.34 (4), p.278-285
Hauptverfasser: Raghuraman, Rajendra P., Duffy, Donovan, Carroll, Veronica A., Manyonda, Isaac, Antonios, Tarek F.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Low birth weight (LBW) and premature birth are known risk factors for future cardiovascular disease and in particular essential hypertension (EH). Capillary rarefaction (CR) is an established hallmark of EH and is known to occur in individuals with a history of LBW. We previously reported that LBW infants do not have CR at birth but rather increased capillary density (CD). We hypothesized that LBW infants undergo a process of accelerated CR in early life, triggered in part by oxygen therapy. We studied 26 LBW infants, of whom 10 infants received oxygen therapy, and compared them to 14 normal birth weight (NBW) infants. We measured CD at 1, 5 and 10 days after birth and again after 40 weeks adjusted gestational age equivalent to birth at full term. We confirmed that LBW infants had higher CD at birth compared to NBW infants and found that significant structural CR occurred at term age in LBW infants who had received oxygen therapy (mean difference −22 capillaries/field, p  = 0.007) and in those who did not receive oxygen therapy (mean difference −29 capillaries/field, p  
ISSN:0950-9240
1476-5527
DOI:10.1038/s41371-019-0211-1