Smoking in pregnancy harms infant
Smoking during pregnancy can affect the baby's immune system, which may explain why asthma and respiratory problems are so common.
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Smoking during pregnancy can affect the baby's immune system, which may explain why asthma and respiratory problems are more common in children whose mothers smoke.Babies of smokers are more likely to suffer from respiratory infections than children of non-smokers but until now it has not been clear why.The scientists said it may be due to changes to biological receptors in the baby's immune system that are responsible for recognising and fighting infections and bacteria.Researchers from the University of Western Australia in Perth, Australia, compared 60 newborn babies whose mothers had smoked during pregnancy and 62 other infants born to non-smokers or women who had quit. They measured the expression of several signaling compounds in the immune system linked to specific cell receptors known as TLRs in the infants.In the babies of mothers who smoked, they discovered impaired production of two compounds, interleukin-6 and tumour necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-a). The researchers focused on the innate, or congenital, immune system. This provides protection until the baby develops an acquired immune system, which becomes increasingly powerful through contact with new antigens.The findings show that fetal exposure to cigarette smoke is associated with changes that both weaken innate immune defenses and slow the development of the acquired immune system.
European Respiratory Journal,
September 2006
September 2006
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