| Although
the overall risk of these abnormalities in fingers and toes is relatively
low, just half a pack of cigarettes per day increases the risk to
the baby by 29 percent, compared to non-smokers. Because limbs develop
very early in pregnancy, the effect may occur even before a woman
knows she is pregnant.
"We found that the more a woman smoked,
the higher the risk became that the baby would have these defects,"
said study leader Benjamin Chang, M.D., pediatric plastic and reconstructive
surgeon at The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia. Dr. Chang and
co-author Li-Xing Man, M.Sc., both of Children's Hospital and the
University of Pennsylvania, reviewed the records of more than 6.8
million live births listed in the U.S. Natality database from 2001
and 2002. It was the largest study of its kind, covering 84 percent
of U.S. births.
The researchers divided the study population
into four groups: non-smokers, those who smoked one to ten cigarettes
daily, 11 to 20 cigarettes daily, and 21 or more per day. There
was a statistically significant dose-response effect, with increased
odds of having a newborn with a congenital digital anomaly with
increased maternal cigarette smoking during pregnancy. Women who
smoked up to half a pack a day were 29 percent more likely to have
babies with digital anomalies and women who smoked more than a pack
of cigarettes a day during pregnancy were 78 percent more likely
to have babies with digital anomalies.
Of the total 6.8 million births, the researchers
found 5,171 children born with digital anomalies whose mother smoked
during pregnancy. "Overall, the likelihood of having a digital
anomaly is relatively low, about one in 2,000 to 2,500 live births,
and compared to other public health issues, is a very small problem,"
said Dr. Chang. "Usually surgery can restore full or nearly
full function to children with these anomalies."
Digital anomalies include polydactyly (presence
of more than five fingers or toes on a hand or foot), adactyly (the
absence of fingers or toes) and syndactyly (fused or webbed fingers
or toes).
Limbs begin to develop between four and eight
weeks of gestation and advance from a tiny nub to nearly-fully formed
fingers and toes. Many women only discover they are pregnant during
this period.
Missing digits are twice as likely to occur
in boys and are more common in Caucasians than African Americans;
more than five digits on hands and feet is 10 times more common
in African Americans and only slightly more common in boys. Nevertheless,
the majority of isolated congenital digital anomalies occur spontaneously
without any family history. The increased number of cases involving
these diagnoses in their own practices led researchers to investigate
environmental factors that might be associated with these conditions.
Although the current study does not prove
that prenatal exposure to cigarettes causes digital anomalies, says
Dr. Chang, there is a strong association, the population studied
is very large, and the dose-response effect is significant (higher
exposure is linked to higher risk). "Although the overall risk
of having these defects is rather small, the increase in risk posed
by tobacco exposure has the potential to affect thousands of children,"
he added. "Health professionals should increase their efforts
to remind women of the dangers of smoking."/(ScienceDaily.com)
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