Back to Search
Start Over
Extremely low birth weight influences the relationship between stress and telomere length in adulthood
- Source :
- Journal of developmental origins of health and disease. 12(2)
- Publication Year :
- 2020
-
Abstract
- This study examined the link between two biological markers of stress vulnerability at 22–26 years of age and telomere length at 30–35 among extremely low birth weight (ELBW; 2500 g) control participants. Sixteen ELBW and 22 NBW participants provided baseline afternoon salivary cortisol samples and resting frontal electroencephalogram (EEG) alpha asymmetry data at 22–26 years. Buccal cells were assayed for telomere length at 30–35 years. Analyses controlled for sex, postnatal steroid exposure, childhood socioeconomic status, time of cortisol sample collection, and body mass index at 22–26 years. Salivary cortisol and frontal asymmetry at age 22–26 independently predicted telomere length at age 30–35, such that relatively higher cortisol and greater relative right frontal asymmetry at rest predicted telomere shortening among NBW controls, but not among ELBW survivors. However, similar associations were not noted in ELBW survivors, suggesting that ELBW survivors may have different mechanisms of stress coping as a result of their early-life exposures. These findings offer preliminary evidence in support of the role of stress in the genesis of cellular senescence at least among those born at NBW, but that these links may differ in those born preterm.
- Subjects :
- 0301 basic medicine
Adult
Male
Hydrocortisone
Buccal swab
Stress coping
Medicine (miscellaneous)
Physiology
03 medical and health sciences
Young Adult
0302 clinical medicine
Stress, Physiological
Medicine
Humans
Longitudinal Studies
Saliva
business.industry
Infant, Newborn
Telomere Homeostasis
Telomere
Low birth weight
030104 developmental biology
Frontal asymmetry
Infant, Extremely Low Birth Weight
Stress vulnerability
Female
Sample collection
medicine.symptom
business
Body mass index
030217 neurology & neurosurgery
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 20401752
- Volume :
- 12
- Issue :
- 2
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Journal of developmental origins of health and disease
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....c2f01f3a83d437f7c335ac1b7af73740