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NICOTINE CONSUMPTION BEFORE AND DURING PREGNANCY AFFECTS NOT ONLY NEWBORN SIZE BUT ALSO BIRTH MODUS

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 May 2003

SYLVIA KIRCHENGAST
Affiliation:
Institute for Anthropology, University of Vienna, Austria and University Clinic for Gynecology and Obstetrics, Department for Special Gynecology, Vienna, Austria
BEDA HARTMANN
Affiliation:
Institute for Anthropology, University of Vienna, Austria and University Clinic for Gynecology and Obstetrics, Department for Special Gynecology, Vienna, Austria

Abstract

The associations between cigarette smoking before and during pregnancy and maternal body size (pre-pregnancy weight status, end of pregnancy weight status, weight gain during pregnancy) and newborn size (birth weight, length, head circumference, arcomial circumference), as well as birth modus, were tested in 7803 single full-term births in Vienna. Nicotine consumption before and during pregnancy was found to be associated with smaller and lighter newborns, although maternal weight status and weight gain during pregnancy was signi.cantly higher in smokers. Furthermore, a higher incidence of Caesarean sections was found in smokers. A reduction in the number of daily smoked cigarettes was associated with a lower percentage of low weight newborns (<2500 g).

Type
Regular Articles
Copyright
© 2003 Cambridge University Press

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