Postnatal Steroids in Preterm Infants: A Narrative Review Series—Part 2: Cardiovascular Impacts
Phoenix Plessas-Azurduy, Anie Lapointe, Punnanee Wutthigate, Sarah Spénard, Andréanne Villeneuve, Audrey Hébert, Eilon Shany, Justin Richardson, Neta Geva, Wadi Mawad, Tiscar Cavallé-Garrido, Marc Beltempo, Wissam Shalish, Guilherme Sant’Anna, Gabriel Altit

TL;DR
Postnatal steroids in preterm infants can affect heart structure and function, and new tools can help monitor and manage these effects.
Contribution
This review highlights cardiovascular impacts of postnatal steroids and advocates for precision-based monitoring in preterm infants.
Findings
Postnatal steroids can cause myocardial hypertrophy and alter vascular resistance in preterm infants.
Emerging tools like echocardiography and biomarkers can detect early cardiovascular changes.
Precision-based medicine using physiological data may optimize steroid use and reduce harm.
Abstract
What are the main findings? Systemic postnatal corticosteroid use in extremely preterm infants with evolving lung disease can impact cardiovascular structure and function. Current evidence suggests it can lead to reactive myocardial hypertrophy, potentially accelerated closure of the patent ductus arteriosus and alterations in autonomic regulation and vascular resistance.Emerging diagnostic tools provide real-time monitoring capabilities: advanced techniques such as speckle tracking echocardiography, heart rate variability analysis, and biofluid markers (e.g., BNP) can detect subclinical cardiovascular changes and steroid-induced stress. Systemic postnatal corticosteroid use in extremely preterm infants with evolving lung disease can impact cardiovascular structure and function. Current evidence suggests it can lead to reactive myocardial hypertrophy, potentially accelerated closure of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNeonatal Respiratory Health Research · Cardiovascular Conditions and Treatments · Neonatal and fetal brain pathology
