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Pregnancy / Obstetrics News

Long-Term Deleterious Effects On Newborns With Prenatal Exposure To Glucocorticoids

Main Category: Pregnancy / Obstetrics
Also Included In: Pediatrics / Children's Health;  Biology / Biochemistry
Article Date: 27 Mar 2007 - 14:00 PST

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Researchers at the University of Edinburgh in the United Kingdom have found that, as for rodents and other nonprimates, prenatal exposure of nonhuman primate African vervet monkeys (Chloroceus aethiops) to glucocorticoids has long-lasting deleterious effects on cardiovascular, metabolic, and neuroendocrine function.

Glucocorticoids are still widely used in obstetric practice. So, Jonathan Seckl and colleagues set out to determine the relevance to human pregnancy of rodent and nonprimate data indicating that prenatal exposure to glucocorticoids (through either the administration of dexamethasone or severe maternal stress) has long-lasting deleterious effects. In the study, which appears online in advance of publication in the April print issue of the Journal of Clinical Investigation, they show that although the birth weight of offspring born to nonhuman primate African vervet monkeys treated with dexamethasone from mid-gestation onward did not differ from that of offspring born to untreated animals, the high levels of prenatal dexamethasone impaired postnatal growth, impaired glucose-insulin homeostasis, increased blood pressure 12 months after birth, and increased the production of cortisol in response to mild stress. These data suggest that both repeated glucocorticoid therapy and severe maternal stress late in gestation are likely to have long-term deleterious effects on developing human fetuses.

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Article adapted by Medical News Today from original press release.
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TITLE: Prenatal dexamethasone exposure induces changes in nonhuman primate offspring cardiometabolic and hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis function

AUTHOR CONTACT:
Jonathan R. Seckl
University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, United Kingdom.

Contact: Karen Honey
Journal of Clinical Investigation




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