Literature DB >> 12536340

An association between maternal smoking and preeclampsia in Japanese women.

Gen Kobashi1, Kaori Ohta, Akira Hata, Koichi Shido, Hideto Yamada, Seiichiro Fujimoto, Kiyotaro Kondo.   

Abstract

In order to determine whether maternal smoking before or during pregnancy, or both, is associated with a reduced risk for preeclampsia in Japanese subjects, we conducted a case-control study that took other risk factors for preeclampsia into consideration. Seventy-one preeclampsia patients were matched with 142 controls for parity and age. Information from a self-administered questionnaire and clinical data such as maternal age, parity, family history of hypertension, prepregnancy body mass index (BMI), and pregnancy outcomes were analyzed. No significant difference was found between the groups in smoking rates before and during pregnancy (38.0 and 18.3% in preeclampsia patients and 38.0 and 16.9% in controls, respectively). However, classification of the subjects according to the presence of "prepregnancy high body mass (BMI > or = 24)" revealed a significant association between maternal smoking before pregnancy and preeclampsia in women with a prepregnancy high body mass (a smoking rate of 47.6% in patients with preeclampsia and 7.1% in controls, p < 0.05). This result suggests that there is a clear racial difference in the manifestation of preeclampsia with respect to the effect of smoking and that early intervention, particularly before pregnancy, to get obese women to stop smoking may be effective for preventing preeclampsia.

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Mesh:

Year:  2002        PMID: 12536340     DOI: 10.1055/s-2002-36691

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Semin Thromb Hemost        ISSN: 0094-6176            Impact factor:   4.180


  2 in total

1.  Cigarette smoke exposure and angiogenic factors in pregnancy and preeclampsia.

Authors:  Arun Jeyabalan; Robert W Powers; Allison R Durica; Gail F Harger; James M Roberts; Roberta B Ness
Journal:  Am J Hypertens       Date:  2008-06-19       Impact factor: 2.689

2.  Interactions between smoking and weight in pregnancies complicated by preeclampsia and small-for-gestational-age birth.

Authors:  Roberta B Ness; Jun Zhang; Debra Bass; Mark A Klebanoff
Journal:  Am J Epidemiol       Date:  2008-06-16       Impact factor: 4.897

  2 in total

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