Impact of maternal obesity on neonatal heart rate and cardiac size

Author:

Groves Alan MORCID,Price Anthony N,Russell-Webster Tamarind,Jhaveri Simone,Yang Yang,Battersby Ellie E,Shahid Shiffa,Costa Vieira Matais,Hughes Emer,Miller Faith,Briley Annette L,Singh Claire,Seed Paul TORCID,Chowienczyk Phillip J,Stern Kenan W D,Cohen Jennifer,Pasupathy Dharmintra,Edwards A DavidORCID,Poston Lucilla,Taylor Paul D

Abstract

BackgroundMaternal obesity may increase offspring risk of cardiovascular disease. We assessed the impact of maternal obesity on cardiac structure and function in newborns as a marker of fetal cardiac growth.MethodsNeonates born to mothers of healthy weight (body mass index (BMI) 20–25 kg/m2, n=56) and to mothers who were obese (BMI ≥30 kg/m2, n=31) underwent 25-minute continuous ECG recording and non-sedated, free-breathing cardiac MRI within 72 hours of birth.ResultsMean (SD) heart rate during sleep was higher in infants born to mothers who were versus were not obese (123 (12.6) vs 114 (9.8) beats/min, p=0.002). Heart rate variability during sleep was lower in infants born to mothers who were versus were not obese (SD of normal-to-normal R-R interval 34.6 (16.8) vs 43.9 (16.5) ms, p=0.05). Similar heart rate changes were seen during wakefulness. Left ventricular end-diastolic volume (2.35 (0.14) vs 2.54 (0.29) mL/kg, p=0.03) and stroke volume (1.50 (0.09) vs 1.60 (0.14), p=0.04) were decreased in infants born to mothers who were versus were not obese. There were no differences in left ventricular end-systolic volume, ejection fraction, output or myocardial mass between the groups.ConclusionMaternal obesity was associated with increased heart rate, decreased heart rate variability and decreased left ventricular volumes in newborns. If persistent, these changes may provide a causal mechanism for the increased cardiovascular risk in adult offspring of mothers with obesity. In turn, modifying antenatal and perinatal maternal health may have the potential to optimise long-term cardiovascular health in offspring.

Funder

Biomedical Research Centre, Guy’s and St Thomas’ NHS Foundation Trust

British Heart Foundation

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

Obstetrics and Gynecology,General Medicine,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health

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