Roken
tijdens de zwangerschap verhoogt de kans op koliek bij de baby.*
Moeders
die tijdens de zwangerschap roken hebben twee keer zoveel kans een baby te
krijgen die zal lijden aan koliek dan zij die niet roken. Ook mee-roken verhoogt
de kans volgens een wetenschappelijke studie. Roken is voor iedereen al slecht
en veroorzaakt allerlei gezondsheidsproblemen zeker ook voor de nog ongeboren
baby. Het advies is dus NIET roken.
New Moms Who Smoke Have Colicky Babies
Tobacco toxins may affect a key digestive protein,
study finds
(HealthDayNews) --
Smoking parents worn out by a colicky baby might want to try kicking the tobacco
habit, a new study suggests.
"Mothers who
smoke during pregnancy are twice as likely to have toddlers and
infants who are colicky as women who do not smoke during pregnancy,"
concluded researcher Edmond Shenassa, an epidemiologist at Brown University
Medical School.
Smoking by either
parent around a newborn, as well as exposure to secondhand smoke by the mother
outside the home, might also increase colic risks, he said.
According to Shenassa,
anywhere from 5 percent to 28 percent of newborns are affected by colic, a
discomforting gastrointestinal condition that usually appears between six to
nine weeks of age.
The origins of colic
remain unclear and, aside from attempting to soothe the baby, little can be done
to treat its symptoms.
In their study,
published in the October issue of Pediatrics, Shenassa and co-researcher
Mary-Jean Brown reviewed findings from six major studies, comparing rates of
colic in babies born to smoking or nonsmoking mothers.
There's already lots
of evidence to suggest that "maternal smoking translates to environmental
tobacco smoke for the baby," Shenassa pointed out. Environment, in this
case, means both fetal exposure if the mother smokes during her pregnancy, or
exposure through contaminated air or breast milk if she smokes after
delivery.
Now, based on their
review, the high rates of colic observed in babies born to smoking mothers
suggest "a clear link between maternal smoking and colic," Shenassa
said.
Although the
researchers can't prove any specific mechanism of action linking environmental
smoke and colic at this time, they say evidence is mounting that exposure to
tobacco toxins increases infant levels of a gastrointestinal protein
called motilin.
"Motilin promotes
motility -- the movement of the gut muscle that pushes food through the gut from
one end to the other," Shenassa explained. Too much motilin can upset the
delicate newborn digestive tract, resulting in colicky symptoms.
And mothers-to-be
aren't the only ones who need to quit smoking once they know a baby is on the
way.
"Dads who smoke
would also affect the environment," Shenassa said. In fact, anyone who
smokes around a newborn or new mother could potentially have an effect on a
baby's digestive health.
"For example, a
mother could be exposed at work to secondhand smoke, then travel home," he
said. Metabolites from that secondhand smoke can collect in a mother's breast
milk and be transferred to her baby.
Experts estimate that
about half of the 25 percent of American women who smoke continue to do so
throughout their pregnancy, meaning that 12 percent of all babies born in the
United States are exposed to tobacco toxins in utero.
For decades, experts
at the American Lung Association (ALA) have been urging pregnant women not to
smoke. Exposure to tobacco toxins during gestation or infancy has long been
linked to increased rates of low birth weight, as well as asthma
and other respiratory problems in young children.
Based on these latest
findings, "we can now say that maternal smoking is related to a higher incidence of infantile colic," too, said ALA scientific
consultant Dr. Norman H. Edelman.
The take-home message for new parents is easy, according to Shenassa: "Don't smoke. There are a lot of good reasons not to smoke. This is yet another one." (okt. 2004)