(Press-News.org) New Curtin University research has found exposure to outdoor air pollution and extreme temperatures during pregnancy may increase the risk of prolonged pregnancy, offering new insights into the impact of climate change on maternal health.
The study analysed data from nearly 400,000 births in Western Australia and found that higher exposure to fine particulate air pollution (PM2.5) and biothermal stress (a measure that combines air temperature, radiant temperature, relative humidity, wind speed, and human physiology) was associated with pregnancies lasting beyond 41 weeks.
Lead author Dr Sylvester Dodzi Nyadanu from Curtin’s School of Population Health said while climate exposure has long been linked to preterm births, this is the first study to examine its impact on prolonged pregnancies.
“We know that being ‘born too soon’—preterm birth—has well-documented health risks, but little attention has been given to the risks associated with being ‘born too late’,” Dr Nyadanu said.
“Our findings show that exposure to air pollution and biothermal stress during pregnancy increases the likelihood of prolonged pregnancies, particularly among mothers over 35 years old, first-time mothers, those living in urban areas, and those with complicated pregnancies.
“Environmental stressors, including climate-related exposures during pregnancy, have been associated with maternal stress response and subsequent disruptions in endocrine and inflammatory activities, which increase towards the end of pregnancy. This can either shorten gestation, leading to preterm birth, or lengthen gestation, resulting in prolonged pregnancy in some cases.”
Dr Nyadanu said prolonged pregnancy can have serious health implications for both mother and baby, including the need for medical interventions such as labour induction or caesarean sections, increased risk of stillbirth, birth complications, child mortality, early childhood behavioural and emotional problems, and emotional impacts on families.
“With climate change driving more frequent extreme weather events and worsening air quality, it is essential that we recognise the potential impacts on maternal and child health,” Dr Nyadanu said.
“Healthcare providers, policymakers and pregnant women—particularly those in vulnerable groups—must consider climate-related exposures when assessing pregnancy risks and planning interventions.
“This study highlights the need for targeted policies and preventative measures to reduce climate-related health risks, including better air quality regulations and public health initiatives aimed at protecting expectant mothers and children from extreme climatic conditions.”
Published in Urban Climate, the study is titled ‘Maternal climate-related exposures and prolonged pregnancy: Findings from a statewide population-based cohort study in Western Australia’ and can be accessed here.
END
Born too late? Climate change may be delaying births
n/a
2025-02-11
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Truly autonomous AI is on the horizon
2025-02-11
Researchers have developed a new AI algorithm, called Torque Clustering, that is much closer to natural intelligence than current methods. It significantly improves how AI systems learn and uncover patterns in data independently, without human guidance.
Torque Clustering can efficiently and autonomously analyse vast amounts of data in fields such as biology, chemistry, astronomy, psychology, finance and medicine, revealing new insights such as detecting disease patterns, uncovering fraud, or understanding behaviour.
“In nature, animals learn by observing, exploring, and interacting with their ...
California’s marine protected areas boost fish populations across the state
2025-02-11
(Santa Barbara, Calif.) — It’s 1999, the 21st century is on the horizon, and California has big plans for marine conservation. New legislation has presented a mandate to establish an ambitious network of marine protected areas (MPAs) unlike anywhere else in the world. The goal is to craft strategic protections to safeguard the state’s marine life for preservation and economic benefits alike.
Now 25 years later, an international team of researchers, led by scientists at UC Santa Barbara, have evaluated the network’s ...
Poachers’ social media posts reveal alarming extent of illegal wildlife hunting in Lebanon
2025-02-11
Public posts on social media platforms shed light on the extent and nature of prolific illegal wildlife hunting in Lebanon, research in Oryx—The International Journal of Conservation, published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of Fauna & Flora, has found.
The study is the first to use social media as a tool for assessing illegal hunting activities in Lebanon. The country, along with the Mediterranean region more broadly, is a global poaching blackspot, particularly for the illegal killing of protected ...
Examining the potential environmental effects of mining the world’s largest lithium deposit
2025-02-11
DURHAM, N.C. -- The world’s largest known lithium deposit exists within a vast salt pan called the Salar de Uyuni, which stretches for thousands of square miles atop a high, dry Andean plateau in Bolivia. For most of the year, salt crystals encrust the terrain, white as confectioner’s sugar. During the wet season, pooling rainwater mirrors surrounding mountains and sky.
“The Salar is a magical place for travelers from all over the world who come to see the colors, the reflections, in this endless white landscape,” said Avner Vengosh, Nicholas Chair of Environmental Quality at the Duke University ...
Chicken ‘woody breast’ detection improved with advanced machine learning model
2025-02-11
FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. — It’s called “woody breast” and for consumers it can mean a chewier chicken sandwich, but for the industry it can mean up to $200 million annual yield loss.
Work done by the Arkansas Agricultural Experiment Station is not only making woody breast easier to detect in chicken meat but is accurate up to 95 percent of the time.
The development could help improve quality assurance and customer confidence in one of the state’s most economically important agricultural products. What allows ...
Around 1 in 5 UK medical students considers dropping out, study suggests
2025-02-11
Around 1 in 5 UK medical students considers dropping out of medical school, with mental health issues a key contributor to their intention to abandon medicine, suggest the results of an observational study published in the open access journal BMJ Open.
The shortage of doctors worldwide is a major cause for concern, say the researchers, with the current shortfall thought to be around 6.5 million.
These shortages not only affect the quality of patient care, but also doctors’ wellbeing as a result of increased workload and chronic stress, which further undermine recruitment and retention, creating a vicious circle, they add.
Given that medical ...
Poor childhood social and cognitive skills combo linked to teens’ poor exam results
2025-02-11
The combination of poorly developed social and cognitive skills during childhood is linked to poor exam results by the age of 16, with those for whom these issues persist throughout their childhood more than 4 times as likely not to pass at least 5 GCSEs, finds research published online in the Archives of Disease in Childhood.
The findings, which are based on a large set of nationally representative data, suggest that childhood cognitive and behavioural issues may be behind 17% of GCSE (General Certificate of Secondary Education) exam fails among 16 year olds, conclude the researchers.
“Years in school matter, not just for exam results, but for skills and capacity development. ...
Position menstrual cups carefully to avoid possible kidney problems, doctors urge
2025-02-11
A poorly positioned menstrual cup to capture monthly blood flow may lead to more serious complications than leakage alone, warn doctors in the journal BMJ Case Reports, after treating a young woman with uterohydronephrosis—a swollen kidney caused by blocked urine flow into the bladder.
The use of menstrual cups as a sustainable alternative to other methods of controlling period blood flow is rising, note the report authors. While reported complications are rare, the evidence suggests that pain, vaginal wounds, allergic reactions, ...
Yale scientists recode the genome for programmable synthetic proteins
2025-02-10
New Haven, Conn. — Synthetic biologists from Yale were able to re-write the genetic code of an organism — a novel genomically recoded organism (GRO) with one stop codon — using a cellular platform that they developed enabling the production of new classes of synthetic proteins. These synthetic proteins, researchers say, offer the promise of innumerable medical and industrial applications that can benefit society and human health.
The creation of the landmark GRO, known as “Ochre” — which fully compresses redundant, or “degenerate” codons, into a single codon — is ...
MiR-128-3p mediates MRP2 internalization in estrogen-induced cholestasis through targeting PDZK1
2025-02-10
https://www.scienceopen.com/hosted-document?doi=10.15212/AMM-2024-0053
Announcing a new publication for Acta Materia Medica journal. Estrogens have been reported to cause dysfunction in biliary transport systems, thereby inducing cholestasis. Multidrug resistance-associated protein 2 (MRP2) is a transporter responsible for independent bile flow. Emerging evidence indicates that PDZ domain containing 1 (PDZK1) regulates localization of MRP2; however, PDZK1’s role and regulatory machinery in MRP2-mediated estrogen-induced cholestasis (EIC) remain unclear.
The authors of this article observed, in a mouse model of EIC, downregulated PDZK1 expression in the liver and enhanced intracellular ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
‘Built for cutting flesh, not resisting acidity’: sharks may be losing deadly teeth to ocean acidification
Study reveals beneficial effects of diet and exercise on alcohol-related adverse liver health
Making the weight in four years
AI review unveils new strategies for fixing missing traffic data in smart cities
Scientists discovered hopfion crystals – which are flying in spacetime
For bees, diet isn’t one-size-fits-all
How a malaria-fighting breakthrough provides lasting protection
Cognitive Behavioural therapy can alter brain structure and boost grey matter volume, study shows
Largest ever study into cannabis use investigates risk of paranoia and poor mental health in the general population
Most US neurologists prescribing MS drugs have received pharma industry cash
A growing baby planet photographed for first time in a ring of darkness
Brain’s immune cells key to wiring the adolescent brain
KAIST develops AI that automatically detects defects in smart factory manufacturing processes even when conditions change
Research alert: Alcohol opens the floodgates for bad bacteria
American Gastroenterological Association, Latica partner to assess living guidelines using real-world evidence
University of Tennessee collaborates on NSF grants to improve outcomes through AI
New technique at HonorHealth Research Institute uses ultrasound to activate drugs targeting pancreatic cancer
Companies 'dumbed down' cryptocurrency disclosures in good markets prior to reporting standardization, Rotman research finds
MSU study: What defines a life well-lived? Obituaries may have the answers.
Wind isn’t the only threat: USF-led scientists urge shift to more informed hurricane scale
Study: Fossils reveal reliable record of marine ecosystem functioning
New Simon Fraser University–University of Exeter partnership fast-tracks path to become a lawyer
Busy bees can build the right hive from tricky foundations
Deep sea worm fights ‘poison with poison’ to survive high arsenic and sulfide levels
New monthly pill shows potential as pre-exposure prophylaxis HIV drug candidate
Estalishing power through divine portrayal and depictions of violence
Planetary scientist decodes clues in Bennu’s surface composition to make sense of far-flung asteroids
For students with severe attention difficulties, changing school shifts is not the solution
Novel virtual care program enhances at-home support for people with heart failure
Giving mRNA vaccines a technological shot in the arm
[Press-News.org] Born too late? Climate change may be delaying birthsn/a