| Literature DB >> 34065326 |
Mikael O Ekblad1, Julie Blanc2,3, Ivan Berlin4,5.
Abstract
Smoking increases the risk of negative pregnancy and perinatal outcomes and may have negative effects on a child's short and long-term health [...].Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34065326 PMCID: PMC8161150 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph18105465
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Main findings of the articles published in this Special Issue.
| Authors | Main Focus | Main Findings |
|---|---|---|
| Original articles | ||
| Ghimire et al. [ | Timing of smoking exposure on low birth weight | Women who quit smoking during the second half of pregnancy had 44% lower odds of having a baby with a low birth weight compared to those who smoked throughout pregnancy. |
| Rumrich et al. [ | Transgenerational effect of smoking on the newborns birth characteristics | Smoking during pregnancy by both grandmother and mother results in higher odds of the newborns having lower body size and proportionality. Grandmaternal smoking during pregnancy adds an excess risk to maternal smoking during pregnancy for negative birth outcomes. |
| Ekblad et al. [ | Maternal smoking and externalizing symptoms in a sibling design | Maternal smoking is associated with differentiation of symptoms toward externalizing symptoms rather than internalizing symptoms in a sibling design study that further controlled for genetic and familial factors. The findings support a potentially causal relationship between smoking during pregnancy and externalizing behavior. |
| Reviews | ||
| Nakamura et al. [ | Maternal smoking and epigenetic alterations | The review describes the epigenetic regulation mechanisms and reviews the epigenetic marks in different tissues in association with maternal smoking during pregnancy as well as the multiple technical and methodological challenges regarding epigenetic data analyses. |
| Blanc et al. [ | Nicotine replacement therapies’ (NRT) used during pregnancy and the child’s health | Only a very limited number of papers have studied the safety and efficacy of NRT use during pregnancy on the child postnatal health. The paucity of existing data does not allow to draw conclusions. Further studies with adequate control groups should assess the use of NRT during pregnancy on their postnatal effects on the child health. |