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    Prenatal tobacco exposure: Developmental outcomes in the neonatal period

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    Authors
    Espy, Kimberly Andrews
    Fang, Hua
    Johnson, Craig
    Stopp, Christian
    Wiebe, Sandra A.
    Respass, Jennifer
    UMass Chan Affiliations
    Department of Quantitative Health Sciences
    Document Type
    Journal Article
    Publication Date
    2011-01-03
    Keywords
    Smoking
    Pregnancy
    Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects
    Infant, Newborn
    Biostatistics
    Epidemiology
    Health Services Research
    
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    Link to Full Text
    http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/a0020724
    Abstract
    Smoking during pregnancy is a persistent public health problem that has been linked to later adverse outcomes. The neonatal period-the first month of life-carries substantial developmental change in regulatory skills and is the period when tobacco metabolites are cleared physiologically. Studies to date mostly have used cross-sectional designs that limit characterizing potential impacts of prenatal tobacco exposure on the development of key self-regulatory processes and cannot disentangle short-term withdrawal effects from residual exposure-related impacts. In this study, pregnant participants (N = 304) were recruited prospectively during pregnancy, and smoking was measured at multiple time points, with both self-report and biochemical measures. Neonatal attention, irritable reactivity, and stress dysregulation were examined longitudinally at three time points during the first month of life, and physical growth indices were measured at birth. Tobacco-exposed infants showed significantly poorer attention skills after birth, and the magnitude of the difference between exposed and nonexposed groups attenuated across the neonatal period. In contrast, exposure-related differences in irritable reactivity largely were not evident across the 1st month of life, differing marginally at 4 weeks of age only. Third-trimester smoking was associated with pervasive, deleterious, dose-response impacts on physical growth measured at birth, whereas nearly all smoking indicators throughout pregnancy predicted level and growth rates of early attention. The observed neonatal pattern is consistent with the neurobiology of tobacco on the developing nervous system and fits with developmental vulnerabilities observed later in life. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved).
    Source
    Developmental Psychology, Vol 47(1), Jan 2011, 153-169. doi: 10.1037/a0020724. Link to article on publisher's site
    DOI
    10.1037/a0020724
    Permanent Link to this Item
    http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14038/47750
    PubMed ID
    21038943
    Related Resources
    Link to Article in PubMed
    Rights
    Copyright © 2010 American Psychological Association. Used by permission. “This article may not exactly replicate the final version published in the APA journal. It is not the copy of record.” Link to article on publisher's site
    ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
    10.1037/a0020724
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