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Accelerated Aging and the Life Course of Individuals Born Preterm

A. Bousquet, Keia Sanderson, T. Michael O’Shea, Rebecca C. Fry

Children · 2023 · ▲ 6 citations

Abstract

Individuals born preterm have shorter lifespans and elevated rates of chronic illness that contribute to mortality risk when compared to individuals born at term. Emerging evidence suggests that individuals born preterm or of low birthweight also exhibit physiologic and cellular biomarkers of accelerated aging. It is unclear whether, and to what extent, accelerated aging contributes to a higher risk of chronic illness and mortality among individuals born preterm. Here, we review accelerated aging phenotypes in adults born preterm and biological pathways that appear to contribute to accelerated aging. We highlight biomarkers of accelerated aging and various resiliency factors, including both pharmacologic and non-pharmacologic factors, that might buffer the propensity for accelerated aging among individuals born preterm.

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Provenance

Source
OpenAlex
DOI
10.3390/children10101683
Canonical
link ↗
Fetched
2026-06-29 MST

Cite this

APA
Bousquet, A., Sanderson, K., O’Shea, T.M., &amp; Fry, R.C. (2023). Accelerated Aging and the Life Course of Individuals Born Preterm. <em>Children</em>. https://doi.org/10.3390/children10101683
Vancouver
Bousquet A, Sanderson K, O’Shea TM, Fry RC. Accelerated Aging and the Life Course of Individuals Born Preterm. Children. 2023. doi:10.3390/children10101683.
BibTeX
@article{a2023Accele, title = {Accelerated Aging and the Life Course of Individuals Born Preterm}, author = {A. Bousquet and Keia Sanderson and T. Michael O’Shea and Rebecca C. Fry}, journal = {Children}, year = {2023}, doi = {10.3390/children10101683}, }

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