| Literature DB >> 22754469 |
Awny Naim1, Hedaya Al Dalies2, Mohammed El Balawi2, Eman Salem2, Kholud Al Meziny2, Raneem Al Shawwa3, Roberto Minutolo4, Paola Manduca2,5.
Abstract
This is the first report of registration at birth, and of incidence of major structural birth defects (BD) obtained in Gaza at Al Shifa Hospital, where 28% of total births in Gaza Strip occur. Doctors registered 4,027 deliveries, with a protocol comprehensive of clinical, demographic, kin and environmental questions. Prevalence of BD is 14/1,000, without association with intermarriage or gender of the child. Prevalence of late miscarriages and still births are respectively 23.3/1,000 and 7.4/1,000, and of premature births 19.6/1,000. Couples with a BD child have about 10 times higher frequency of recurrence of a BD in their progeny than those with normal children, but none of their 694 siblings and only 10/1,000 of their 1,423 progeny had BD, similar to the frequency in general population. These data suggest occurrence of novel genetic and epigenetic events in determination of BD. Children with BD were born with higher frequency (p < 0 001) in families where one or both parents were under "white phosphorus" attack, that in the general population. Bombing of the family home and removal of the rubble were also frequently reported by couples with BD occurrence. These data suggests a causative/favoring role of acute exposure of parents to the weapons-associated contaminants, and/or of their chronic exposure from their persistence in the environment on the embryonic development of their children.Entities:
Keywords: environmental teratogens; exposure to war related events; familiarity of birth defects; major structural birth defects; registration at birth
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22754469 PMCID: PMC3386584 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph9051732
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 4.614
Summary of the question asked during registration of the births in delivery room. * confirmation of the diagnosis was received by the Doctors in the Intensive Care Unit. (A) Section for all deliveries; (B) Section for deliveries with BD, premature and still births, and late miscarriages.
| ( | ( |
| Name of parents | Anamnesis of mother and father |
| Family residence | Number of brothers and sisters of mother and father and their health status |
| Child sex | Number of children of brothers and sister of mother and father and their health status |
| Children date of birth | Type of dwelling |
| Weeks at delivery | Water access |
| Modality of delivery | Bombing on residence, in presence or when absent |
| Child weight | Bombing in adjacent housing |
| Child health conditions | Attacks to residence by white phosphorus, in presence or when absent |
| Clinical observations | Wounds, burns, injuries reported, which injuries |
| Child diagnosis | Care of other family members who received injury and which kind of injury |
| Congenital major structural birth defect from a list of major ones * | Clean up bombed, attacked residence |
| Consent of parents to use professionally the information | Use of recovery materials from debris to rebuild housing |
| Occupation of parents | Personally worked or familiar at home worked in recycling materials form rubble |
| List of other children of the couple and note on their health status: if alive, dead (and cause of death), previous miscarriages (numbers, time, the week they occurred and if the fetus had BD) | Children of the family play in bombed/attacked grounds |
| Direct exposure to WP and WP attacks on their residence in their absence | Health problems during attacks 2006 and 2008/09, description |
| Information if cases of BD occurred among the neighbors |
Prevalence of reproductive problems, sex ratio of newborns and parent’s intermarriage.
| New born | Normal | Birth defect | Miscarriage | Premature | Still Born | Previous BD |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total numbers | 3,811 | 55 | 94 | 77 * | 30 | 82 |
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| Sex ratio M/F | 1 b | 0.94 | 1.1 | 0.67 | 0.88 | 0.95 |
| % Parents first cousins | 27 b | 29 | 36,1 | 13,3 | 30 | 39 |
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Prevalence/1,000 for normal children, birth defects and premature births is calculated on live births (3,919), that for late miscarriages and still born is on total deliveries (4,027). a Frequency/1,000 of previous birth defects (BD) is on live births. All numbers refer to the births registered over a five month period, with the exception of premature, where * is the value estimated from the actual numbers of premature registered over 3 months, while previously these were registered, according if normal or BD, in the respective lists; b The value of reference for sex ratio and parent first cousins couples with a normal newborn are calculated on 200 registered files, chosen randomly out of the total. p refers to the significance of the difference in familiarity of parents, compared to the parents of normal children.
List of the BD registered at birth. BD classification-Eurocat/ICD10.
| Q0 Ancephaly + multiple malformation | |
| Q20 CHD | Q74. Q74.2 congenital malformations of lower limbs |
| Q02 Microcephal + IUGR | Q39.0 aresia of oesophagus without fistula |
| Q75.9 Congenital malformation of skull and face bones + distended abdomen | Q39.0 aresia of oesophagus without fistula, premature |
| Q41.2 Small bowel volvulus + Menconium cyst | Q0.00 Anencephaly |
| Q87.0 CL, abnormal ear & mouth shape, deformity in toes | Q05 Spina bifida |
| Q89.7 and vaginal anomalies, abdominal distension, hydrops fetalis | Q30.0 Choanal atresia |
| Q98.7 multiple | Q03 hydrocephalus |
| Q79.5 Congenital malformation abdomen + lung hyperplasia | Q75.9 Facial bones anomaly |
| Q74.9 Unspecified congenital malformation of limbs | Q37 Ccenter palate with ccenter lip + multiple |
| Q60.6 Potter syndrome and renal agenesis, premature | Q25 Transposition of the great arteries |
| Q03 Hydrocephalus | Q62 Hydronephrosis |
| Q01.2 Occipital encephalocele | Q75.9 Facial bones anomaly |
| Q60.6 Potter’s syndrome + hypoplastic lungs | Q37 Ccenter palate with ccenter lip |
| Q75.9 Congenital malformation of skull and face bones, +ascite+IUFD | Q37 Ccenter palate with ccenter lip, premature |
| Q61.3 Polycystic kidney, unspecified | Q98.7 multiple, IUFD |
| Q0.00 Anencephaly-IUFD | Q03.9 Congenital hydrocephalus, unspecified + brain atrophy, premature |
| Q61.3 Polycystic kidney, unspecified | Q25 Transposition of the great arteries, TGA |
| Q01 Encephalocele | Q98.7 multiple |
| Q61.3 Polycystic kidney, unspecifiedHydrops fetalis not Rh | Q61.3 Polycystic kidney, unspecified + Intestinal obstruction |
| Q91.3 Edward syndrome | Q98.7 multiple, Premature |
| Q37 Ccenter palate with ccenter lip | Q98.7 multiple, Premature |
| Q87.8 Cystic Hygroma | Q61.3 Polycystic kidney, unspecified + mass in abdomen + asphyxia, dead |
| Q37 Ccenter palate with ccenter lip | Q74.2 congenital malformations of lower limbs |
| Q98.7 multiple+SB | Q74.2 congenital malformations of lower limbs + Abdominal wall |
| Q79.0 diaphragmatic hernia+Abdominal wall defect | Q37 Ccenter palate with ccenter lip + multiple |
| Q05 Spina bifida | Q05 Spina bifida |
| Q61.9 Congenital single renal cyst |
Figure 1Type of Birth defects. The relative presence among BD (top panel) and PBD (bottom panel) is expressed in percentage of the type of defect: GI gastrointestinal, CHD congenital heart disease, ABD Abodminal wall defect, CDH Congenital displasia of hip, O Others undescribed, OSTEP osteopetrosis.
Trend in the repetition in time of negative events during the reproductive life of the couple. Frequency of previous late micarriages, and previous BD in couples with a new born child. a % of couples with more than 1 BD child before the normal newborn child. These data represent a trend, are dependent from length and productivity of repoructive life of the families, and thus have to be taken not as absolute frequencies, nor as prevalence.
| Previous late miscarriages (%) | Previoud BD (%) | |
|---|---|---|
| Normal | na | 1.9 |
| Birth Defect | 18.0 | 20.0 |
| Miscarriage | 42.3 | 3.2 |
| Premature birth | 10.6 | 4.2 |
| Stillborn | 9.0 | 3.3 |
| Normal in family with previous BD | 10.9 | 0.2 a |
Listing of couples with BD and PBD and/or BD in relatives. N, none; na. not available. Parent relation: 1-first cousins, 2-extended family, 3-unrelated.
| BD in newborn | Parents relation | Previous BD/year | N sister children BD | N brother children BD | N sisters children BD | N brothers children BD |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Q20 | na | 1child-Q20 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Q02 | 1 | 1child Q20, 1y | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Q41.2 | 3 | 1 child Q02; 1child Q04.3 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Q03 | 3 | 1 child Q61.3 | na | na | na | na |
| Q00.0 | 1 | 1 child Q20, CHD, IUGF; 1 child Q04.3 | 0 | 0 | 0 | |
| Q03 | 3 | 3 children Q03/18,11,10 y | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Q75.9 | 1 | 2 children Q04.9/3,1y | 0 | 0 | 0 | |
| Q75.9 | 2 | 1 child Q03 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Q03.9 | 3 | # Q03/18 to 10y | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Q05 | Na | N | 1child Q04.3 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Q39.0 | 3 | N | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1child Q03, 2 children dumbness |
| Q61.3 | 3 | N | 0 | 0 | 0 | |
| Q87.0 | 1 | N | 0 | 0 | 0 | Q37 |
| Q75.9 | 1 | N | 0 | 0 | 1, Q01.9 | 0 |
| Q37 | 1 | Y, 2 children multiple /7,8 y | 1 child Q04.3 | 0 | 0 | 1 child Q04.3 |
| Q39.0 | 2 | N | 4 children Q00.0 | 0 | 0 | 1 child Q04.3 |
Figure 2Distribution of the residence of the couples of newborn with Birth Defect (BD), and of late Miscarriages (M), Still Born (SB) and Previous Birth Defects (PBD).
Exposure to WP and bombing *.
| Exposure | None | only WP ** | only Bombed | WP and Bombed | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total | Number | Prevalence | Number | Prevalence | Number | Prevalence | Number | Prevalence | |
| Normal | 2,933 | 2,884 | 98.3 (97.9–98.8) | 49 | 1.7 (1.2–2.1) | N/A | N/A | ||
| BD | 44 | 19 | 43.1 (28.5–57.8) | 12 | 27.2 (14.1–40.4) | 9 | 20.4 (8.5–32.4) | 8 | 18.2 (6.8–29.6) |
| Overall | 2977 | 2,903 | 97.5 (97.0–98.1) | 61 | 2.0 (1.5–2.6) | ||||
Reported exposure to WP during operation Cast lead was registered for 3 months for all the mothers in the delivery room. For families of BD children it was registered exposure to WP and to bombing during the five months. N/A not available * Incidence are expressed as percent of respective total and 95% Confidence Intervals ** The difference between exposure for parents of BD children vs. those of normal children is highly significant, p < 0.001.
Figure 3Mapping of the exposure to weaponry.