Carroll Kecia N, Gebretsadik Tebeb, Griffin Marie R, Dupont William D, Mitchel Edward F, Wu Pingsheng, Enriquez Rachel, Hartert Tina V
Department of Pediatrics, Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, Nashville, TN 37232, USA.
Pediatrics. 2007 Jun;119(6):1104-12. doi: 10.1542/peds.2006-2837.
Our goal was to determine whether maternal asthma and maternal smoking during pregnancy are associated with the incidence and severity of clinically significant bronchiolitis in term, otherwise healthy infants without the confounding factors of small lung size or underlying cardiac or pulmonary disease.
We conducted a population-based retrospective cohort study of term, non-low birth weight infants enrolled in the Tennessee Medicaid Program from 1995 to 2003. The cohort of infants was followed through the first year of life to determine the incidence and severity of bronchiolitis as determined by health care visits and prolonged hospitalization.
A total of 101,245 infants were included. Overall, 20% of infants had > or = 1 health care visit for bronchiolitis. Compared with infants with neither factor, the risk of bronchiolitis was increased in infants with maternal smoking only, maternal asthma only, or both. Infants with maternal asthma only or with both maternal smoking and asthma had the highest risks for emergency department visits and hospitalizations. Infants with a mother with asthma had the highest risk of a hospitalization > 3 days, followed by infants with both maternal asthma and smoking, and maternal smoking only.
Maternal asthma and maternal smoking during pregnancy are independently associated with the development of bronchiolitis in term, non-low birth weight infants without preexisting cardiac or pulmonary disease. The risk of bronchiolitis among infants with mothers who both have asthma and smoke during pregnancy is approximately 50% greater than that of infants with neither risk factor. Efforts to decrease the illness associated with these 2 risk factors will lead to decreased morbidity from bronchiolitis, the leading cause of hospitalization for severe lower respiratory tract infections during infancy.
我们的目标是确定孕期母亲哮喘及母亲吸烟是否与足月、健康且无肺发育不良、潜在心脏或肺部疾病等混杂因素的婴儿发生具有临床意义的细支气管炎的发病率及严重程度相关。
我们对1995年至2003年参加田纳西医疗补助计划的足月、非低体重婴儿进行了一项基于人群的回顾性队列研究。对该队列婴儿进行为期一年的随访,以通过医疗就诊及延长住院时间来确定细支气管炎的发病率及严重程度。
共纳入101245名婴儿。总体而言,20%的婴儿因细支气管炎接受过≥1次医疗就诊。与无这两种因素的婴儿相比,仅母亲吸烟、仅母亲患哮喘或两者皆有的婴儿患细支气管炎的风险增加。仅母亲患哮喘或母亲既吸烟又患哮喘的婴儿因急诊就诊和住院的风险最高。母亲患有哮喘的婴儿住院超过3天的风险最高,其次是母亲既患哮喘又吸烟的婴儿,仅母亲吸烟的婴儿。
孕期母亲哮喘及母亲吸烟与足月、无先天性心脏或肺部疾病的非低体重婴儿发生细支气管炎独立相关。母亲在孕期既患哮喘又吸烟的婴儿患细支气管炎的风险比无这两种风险因素的婴儿高约50%。降低与这两种风险因素相关疾病的努力将降低细支气管炎导致的发病率,细支气管炎是婴儿期严重下呼吸道感染住院的主要原因。