SMOKING WARNING
Secondhand Smoke Harms Underweight Babies
Full-term babies with a
low birth weight (5.5 pounds) have a significantly increased risk of
developing respiratory symptoms such as coughing,
wheezing and pulmonary infections up to age five, and that risk is
even greater if these
children are exposed to
secondhand smoke, says a Dutch study.
The association between
birth weight and respiratory symptoms decreased after age five and was
not significant by age seven.
Researchers analyzed data
on more than 3,600 full-term, low-birth-weight babies. They found that
during the first seven years of life, almost 39 percent of them had at
least one wheezing episode, close to 52 percent had cough at night, and
more than 37 percent had a lower respiratory infection.
"Overall, 70 percent of
the cohort had reported at least one respiratory symptom at some point
in the first seven years of life," Dr. Johan C. de Jongste, a professor
in the department of pediatric respiratory medicine at Erasmus MC/Sophia
Children's Hospital, said in a prepared statement.
"Size and maturity are
major factors in the development of the lung. In children with
diminished prenatal growth, and consequently low birth weight, a
disturbed lung development is associated with a relatively small airway
caliber. This can cause decreased lung function and more respiratory
symptoms later in life," de Jongste said.
He and his colleagues also
found that a full-term, low-birth-weight child had an additional 6
percent increased risk of respiratory symptoms if the child was exposed
to secondhand smoke after birth.
The study is published in
the second issue for May of the American Journal of Respiratory and
Critical Care Medicine.
-- Robert Preidt