Smoking Early in Pregnancy Raises Risk of Heart Defects in Infants

Dentistry Today

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Cigarette smoking by expecting mothers during their first trimester was associated with a 20% to 70% greater likelihood that a baby would be born with certain types of congenital heart defects, according to a study by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Congenital heart defects are the most common type of birth defects, contributing to approximately 30% of infant deaths from birth defects annually. The study found an association between tobacco exposure and certain types of defects such as those that obstruct the flow of blood from the right side of the heart into the lungs (right ventricular outflow tract obstructions) and openings between the upper chambers of the heart (atrial septal defects).
“Women who smoke and are thinking about becoming pregnant need to quit smoking and, if they’re already pregnant, they need to stop,” said CDC Director Thomas R. Frieden, MD, MPH. “Quitting is the single most important thing a woman can do to improve her health as well as the health of her baby.” Based on the findings of this and other studies, eliminating smoking before or very early in pregnancy could prevent as many as 100 cases of right ventricular outflow tract obstructions and 700 cases of atrial septal defects each year in the United States. “Successfully stopping smoking during pregnancy also lowers the chances of pregnancy complications such as preterm delivery and that an infant will have other complications such as low-birthweight,” said Adolfo Correa, MD, PhD, the medical officer in CDC National Center on Birth Defects and Developmental Disabilities. Congenital heart defects are conditions present at birth that decrease the ability of the heart to work well, which can result in an increased likelihood of death or long-term disabilities. They affect nearly 40,000 infants in the United States every year. In 2004, US hospital costs for all congenital heart defects were estimated at approximately $1.4 billion.
The study can be found in the February 28, 2011 issue of the journal Pediatrics.


(Source: CDC, February 28, 2011; also available at the Web site pediatrics.aappublications.org)