Antenatal corticosteroids are given to pregnant people at risk of preterm birth to reduce newborn morbidity, including respiratory distress syndrome. However, there has been concern surrounding potential adverse effects on subsequent generations. Animal studies have demonstrated endocrine and metabolic changes in those exposed to corticosteroids in utero () and in the second generation ().
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: For women who have received a course of antenatal corticosteroids ≥7 days prior and have ongoing risk of preterm birth within the next 7 days, repeat dose(s) of corticosteroids up to 32 weeks' gestation have been shown to reduce neonatal respiratory distress syndrome and serious health problems in the neonatal period but not other neonatal morbidities such as chronic lung disease, death, severe intraventricular haemorrhage or necrotising enterocolitis. Repeat antenatal corticosteroids were not associated with either benefit or harms in mid-childhood. However, this may have been too early to evaluate potential adverse effects on respiratory and other long-term outcomes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFComputational modeling has well-established utility in the study of cardiovascular hemodynamics, with applications in medical research and, increasingly, in clinical settings to improve the diagnosis and treatment of cardiovascular diseases. Most cardiovascular models developed to date have been of the adult circulatory system; however, the perinatal period is unique as cardiovascular physiology undergoes drastic changes from the fetal circulation, during the birth transition, and into neonatal life. There may also be further complications in this period: for example, preterm birth (defined as birth before completed weeks of gestation) carries risks of short-term cardiovascular instability and is associated with increased lifetime cardiovascular risk.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF