Cardiorespiratory fitness reflects the body’s ability to supply
oxygen to muscles during physical activity. It also affects
metabolic and cardiovascular health, the study authors note in the
Journal of the American Heart Association.
“There is an increasing trend toward earlier deliveries of babies
that can be almost fully attributed to an increase in rates of
induced or caesarian section deliveries after 37 weeks but before 39
completed weeks of gestation, when not medically necessary (i.e.
elective/planned deliveries),” lead author Isabel Ferreira told
Reuters Health by email.
“It is becoming increasingly evident that shorter gestation, even
within the at-term period, may lead to higher rates of adverse
health outcomes, such as respiratory and neurological morbidity and
mortality in neonates and infants,” said Ferreira, a researcher at
The University of Queensland in Brisbane, Australia.
Poor cardiorespiratory fitness is a major determinant of metabolic
and cardiovascular health during youth and later in life, as well as
a strong determinant of individuals’ longevity, Ferreira said.
The researchers looked at data from the Northern Ireland Young
Hearts Project, a study that followed the development of
cardiovascular risk factors through adolescence to young adulthood.
They also had data on the participants’ gestational age at birth and
maternal health and habits.
The study team included 791 participants born within the full-term
range of 37-42 weeks of gestation. Their cardiorespiratory fitness
was determined at ages 12, 15 and 22 years by measuring their
maximal oxygen uptake level after undergoing standardized physical
tests.
Compared to kids born at full-term (39-40 weeks) and late-term
(41-42 weeks), those born early-term (37-38 weeks) were about 57
percent more likely to have poor cardiorespiratory fitness during
adolescence and young adulthood, the study found.
This was true after researchers adjusted for a variety of other
factors that could influence fitness, such as age, weight, diet,
physical activity, smoking behavior, maternal health and smoking and
household income.
In addition, researchers found that each week of increase in
gestational age was associated with a 14 percent reduction in risk
for poor cardiorespiratory fitness.
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The study team notes that early births may interrupt normal
development of the lungs and other organs that would take place in
the final few weeks of pregnancy.
“Of course, not all early term deliveries can be prevented, for
instance, if due to obstetric reasons or if they occur
spontaneously. But those earlier deliveries that are planned without
medical indication could be prevented in view of their potential
lifelong impact on the offspring health,” Ferreira said.
In other words, mothers and healthcare providers should be informed
of the lifelong health risks that early-term deliveries may have on
their offspring, and refrain from these unless there is a medical
indication to anticipate deliveries, she added.
“I think it tells us again that those weeks in utero are active, and
things are happening, but I think that it needs to be validated with
other information,” said Dr. Mary Ann Bauman, a primary care
physician and women’s health advocate in Seattle, who wasn’t
involved in the study.
“It's emerging science we don't know how valid it is. But I think if
women have a choice, they're always anxious to get their last few
weeks of pregnancy over. It's the time when you're feeling large and
uncomfortable etc, there may be some benefit to waiting a bit
longer,” she said.
Bauman added that she doesn’t want to scare women who for whatever
reason need to have a birth induced early. The authors of the study
point out, she added, that exercise can improve cardiorespiratory
fitness.
"The American Heart Association is recommending that we start with
exercise early in life,” Bauman said.
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2kIij09 Journal of the American Heart
Association, online September 27, 2017.
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