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Smoking in pregnancy cuts blood flow to the fetus

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Smoking during pregnancy reduces blood flow to the developing fetus and, in turn, retards growth, new research suggests.

"We have known for 50 years that infants born to mothers who smoke during pregnancy have lower birth weights," lead investigator Dr. Malene Rohr Andersen, from Gentoffe University Hospital in Hellerup, Denmark, said in a statement. "But this study provides a possible explanation of why there is restricted blood flow to the fetus," she added.

Andersen's team studied 266 pregnant women, of which 182 were non-smokers, 43 were smokers, and 41 were ex-smokers.

According to a report in the medical journal Circulation, compared with newborns of non-smokers and ex-smokers, those of smokers weighed less, had smaller head sizes, and were shorter.

Smoking was associated with a 47 percent drop in the fetus in levels of a key protein that helps blood vessels to relax and blood flow to increase called endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS). "This study is one of the first to show a biochemical measurement of what is going on to cause the lower birth weight," Andersen said.

Smoking was also associated with an 18 percent reduction in plasma levels of "good" HDL cholesterol in the fetus.

In terms of future research, Andersen said her group hopes to determine whether compromised blood vessel function in fetuses of smokers translates into atherosclerosis (hardening of the arteries) later in life.

SOURCE: Circulation, February 17, 2009.


Reuters Health
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