Literature DB >> 19090324

The influence of in utero exposure to smoking on sleep patterns in preterm neonates.

Erwan Stéphan-Blanchard1, Frédéric Telliez, Andre Léké, Djamal Djeddi, Véronique Bach, Jean-Pierre Libert, Karen Chardon.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: In utero exposure to smoking is known to adversely affect brain regions involved in behavioral state organization and could therefore interact with the neurophysiological development of neonates. STUDY
OBJECTIVES: The present study investigated the effects of prenatal smoking exposure on sleep patterns in the preterm neonate.
DESIGN: Overnight sleep patterns were polysomnographically assessed at thermoneutrality. Sleep continuity and structure were scored for the respective frequencies, durations and percentages of active, quiet, and indeterminate sleep and wakefulness after sleep onset. The number and duration of body movements were also analyzed.
SETTING: The neonatal intensive care unit at Amiens University Medical Center (France). PARTICIPANTS: Healthy preterm neonates (postconceptional age: 33.9 +/- 6.0 weeks) were enrolled according to whether their mothers had not smoked at all during pregnancy (control group, n=19), smoked less during pregnancy (low-smoking group, Slow, n=10), or smoked more (heavy-smoking group, Sheavy n=10) than 10 cigarettes per day throughout pregnancy. MEASUREMENTS AND
RESULTS: Neonates born to heavy-smoking mothers had a significantly lower mean birth weight than controls (-21%) and displayed disrupted sleep structure and continuity: they slept less overall (with a higher proportion of active sleep and a lower proportion of quiet sleep) and had more wakefulness after sleep onset. Compared with controls, neonates from both smoking groups displayed more body movements and, as a result, more disturbed sleep.
CONCLUSIONS: High prenatal smoking exposure modifies sleep patterns in preterm neonates by disrupting sleep organization and increasing nocturnal body movements. These findings raise the question of the repercussions of these sleep disturbances (at what is a critical stage in brain development) on the child's physiological and neurobehavioral outcomes.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 19090324      PMCID: PMC2603491          DOI: 10.1093/sleep/31.12.1683

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Sleep        ISSN: 0161-8105            Impact factor:   5.849


  40 in total

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