Long-Term Reprogramming of Cardiovascular Function in Infants of Active Smokers

Author:

Cohen Gary1,Jeffery Heather1,Lagercrantz Hugo1,Katz-Salamon Miriam1

Affiliation:

1. From the Department of Women and Child Health (G.C., H.L., M.K.-S.), Karolinska Institute, Stockholm, Sweden; Department of Neonatal Medicine (G.C., H.J.), Royal Prince Alfred Hospital, Sydney, Australia.

Abstract

Newborn infants of smokers show symptoms of cardiovascular stress hyperreactivity. Persistent hyperreactivity could increase the risk of short- and/or long-term complications, such as hypertension. Here we determined whether incipient dysfunction in a smoker’s infant persists or worsens with age, by comparing cardiovascular reflex function of control and tobacco-exposed infants longitudinally from birth to 1 year. We compared infants born at term to nonsmoking couples (controls; n=19) and mothers who smoked moderately (average consumption=15 cigarettes per day; n=17). All were tested at 1 to 3 weeks, 3 months, and 1 year during sleep. We recorded blood pressure and heart rate noninvasively during passive repositioning (60° head-up tilt). Tilting control infants raised blood pressure slightly above baseline at 1 week (+2%) and much more at 1 year (+10%). This trend was reversed in the tobacco-exposed cohort (+10% at 1 week but only +4% at 1 year). At 3 months and 1 year, the heart rate response of tobacco-exposed infants to tilt was also abnormal (highly exaggerated). Our study reveals that maternal smoking leads to long-lasting “reprogramming” of infant blood pressure control mechanisms. The underlying dysfunction in a smoker’s infant could plausibly be a precursor or early marker of long-term susceptibility to complications, such as raised blood pressure.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Internal Medicine

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