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Smoking In Pregnancy May Cause
Finger, Toe Defects
New York -
If pregnant smokers need another reason to quit, a new study may have
found it. The habit, researchers say, may raise the risk of having a
baby with extra, missing or webbed fingers and toes.
Using information from a national
database on U.S. births, researchers found that babies born to women
who smoked during pregnancy were 31 percent more likely to have such
birth anomalies as babies of non-smokers. And the more a woman smoked,
the greater the risk.
Li-Xing Man and Dr. Benjamin Chang of
the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia conducted the study,
which is the largest one to date on smoking and birth defects of the
fingers and toes. They report the findings in the medical journal
Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery.
It's estimated that about 1 in 600
infants are born with an extra finger or toe -- an anomaly known as
polydactyly. Webbed fingers or toes, called syndactyly, are less
common, occurring in one in every 2,000 to 2,500 births. Adactyly
refers to the absence of fingers or toes.
While it's well known that prenatal
smoking can have serious consequences such as miscarriage, premature
delivery and low birth weight, studies have yielded conflicting
results on whether smoking can cause birth defects of the fingers and
toes.
Many of those studies, according to
Man and Chang, have been limited by small study populations and
shortcomings in methodology.
So for their study, the researchers
analyzed information from a national database covering nearly all live
births in the U.S. between 2001 and 2002. Of the more than 8.0 million
births, maternal smoking information was available for 6.8 million.
A total of 6,522 infants had
polydactyly, syndactyly or adactyly. Of these infants, 1,121 had other
abnormalities, and were excluded from the analysis. Overall, 5,171
infants were included in the final analysis.
The risk, the researchers found, was
not only greater among babies born to smokers, but it rose as the
number of cigarettes a mother smoked during pregnancy increased.
Babies whose mothers smoked at least
21 cigarettes a day were most at risk, being 78 percent more likely
than infants of non-smokers to have a finger or toe anomaly. But even
relatively light smoking -- 10 or fewer cigarettes a day -- boosted
the risk by 29 percent.
The extent to which smoking raised
the odds of these birth anomalies was surprising, Chang said in a
statement. "Our hope is this study will show expectant mothers another
danger of lighting up," he said.-- Reuters
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