Hospital Clínico Universitario Lozano Blesa, Zaragoza, Spain.
Early Hum Dev. 2012 Mar;88(3):141-5. doi: 10.1016/j.earlhumdev.2011.07.015. Epub 2011 Aug 6.
Maternal smoking during pregnancy is associated with a reduction in birth size but very few studies have collated changes in neonatal anthropometry. Our aims were both to assess body composition differences by anthropometry between new-borns from smoking mothers and those from non-smoking mothers, and to show whether these differences affect proportional body mass distribution.
Caucasian mothers and their full term singleton new-borns (N=1216) were selected during 2009. A structured questionnaire was completed regarding obstetric and demographic data, as well as tobacco consumption. Women were categorized, according to their smoking habits, into a non-smoking group (never smoked or stopped smoking prior to pregnancy) and a smoking group (smoked throughout pregnancy).
22.1% of mothers smoked during pregnancy (median: 6 cigarettes/day, range: l-40). Smoking mothers were significantly younger than non-smoking mothers but there were no differences regarding other aspects which could affect infant weight. Infants from non-smoking mothers were heavier, longer, and body circumferences were all larger than those from smoking mothers (p<0.001), but the Ponderal Index showed no statistical differences. Skinfold thicknesses were significantly lower in new-borns from smoking mothers but these differences were less evident than those from body size. Subcutaneous fat distribution did not show statistical differences between the two groups. After gestational age, to smoke during gestation is the second main determinant of birth weight.
Smoking during pregnancy involves a generalized reduction of most axiological parameters as a result of proportionate fetal growth impairment. In those infants born from mothers who smoked during gestation, neonatal lean body mass appears to be more affected than body fat, and distribution of subcutaneous fat is not different.
孕妇吸烟与出生体重降低有关,但很少有研究综合了新生儿人体测量学的变化。我们的目的是评估吸烟母亲和非吸烟母亲所生新生儿的人体成分差异,并表明这些差异是否影响比例体重分布。
2009 年选择了白人母亲及其足月单胎新生儿(N=1216)。完成了一份关于产科和人口统计学数据以及烟草消费的结构化问卷。根据吸烟习惯,将女性分为非吸烟组(从未吸烟或在怀孕前戒烟)和吸烟组(整个怀孕期间吸烟)。
22.1%的母亲在怀孕期间吸烟(中位数:6 支/天,范围:1-40)。吸烟母亲比非吸烟母亲明显年轻,但在其他可能影响婴儿体重的方面没有差异。非吸烟母亲的婴儿体重、身长和体围均大于吸烟母亲(p<0.001),但体质指数无统计学差异。吸烟母亲新生儿的皮褶厚度明显较低,但与体型相比,这些差异不太明显。两组之间的皮下脂肪分布没有统计学差异。在胎龄之后,孕期吸烟是出生体重的第二个主要决定因素。
孕期吸烟会导致大多数价值参数普遍减少,这是由于胎儿生长受损导致的。在那些母亲在孕期吸烟的新生儿中,与体脂相比,新生儿瘦体重似乎受到的影响更大,而皮下脂肪分布则没有差异。