Smoking moms may boost babies' colic risk
CHICAGO, Illinois (AP) -- Mothers who smoke during or after
pregnancy increase their babies' risk of developing colic,
those vexing, inconsolable crying spells that affect up to
20 percent of U.S. babies in their first few months of life,
researchers say.
The culprit, based on studies in adults, is likely nicotine,
which increases blood levels of a gut protein involved in
digestion, said Brown University epidemiologist Edmond
Shenassa. That may result in painful cramping that makes
babies cry, he said.
Shenassa and Harvard University researcher Mary-Jean Brown
reviewed several studies, including six that involved more
than 12,000 babies.
The data suggest that compared with nonsmokers, mothers who
smoke during pregnancy face about double the risk of having
infants with colic, Shenassa said.
Secondhand smoke -- from parents and others who light up
around the baby -- also appears to increase the risk for
colic, but Shenassa said more research is needed to sort out
how much those factors increase the risk.
Smoking by mothers already has been linked with an increased
risk for low birth weight, sudden infant death syndrome and
respiratory problems in infants.
"If, as we suspect, exposure to cigarette smoke increases
the risk of colic, then this would provide additional
incentives to parents to abstain from smoking," the
researchers said.
The report appears in the October edition of Pediatrics,
published Monday.
Classic colic -- crying spells occurring at least three
hours daily, at least three times weekly, for at least three
weeks -- tends to peak at two months and gradually disappear
by about three or four months of age.
Other research has suggested that some cases may be caused
by an inability to properly digest milk proteins or
fruit-juice sugars, though some scientists believe colic is
normal behavior for some babies that may be exacerbated but
not caused by outside influences.
Shenassa said evidence of nicotine increasing levels of the
protein motilin, which is involved in controlling intestinal
activity, comes from studies of adult smokers.
Dr. Ronald Barr, a University of British Columbia pediatrics
professor who was not involved in the research, called the
paper "a very nice review of the literature" and said it
provides sound reasons "to suggest that smoking might be
contributory."
But Barr noted that some of the reviewed data showed that a
sizable number of babies born to nonsmokers had colic, and
he argued that smoking would not cause colic in infants who
aren't already predisposed.
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