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Smoking While Pregnant Lowers Child's 'Good' Cholesterol

Smoking Cholesterol

First Posted: 06/23/11 08:43 AM ET Updated: 08/23/11 06:12 AM ET

Mothers who smoke while pregnant are causing changes to their unborn babies that can lead them to have less of a type of cholesterol known to protect against heart disease, scientists said on Tuesday.

In a study in the European Heart Journal, Australian researchers found that by the age of eight, children born to mothers who smoked in pregnancy had lower levels of HDL cholesterol, at around 1.3 millimoles per liter (mmol/L), than those born to mothers who hadn't smoked, with about 1.5 mmol/L.

High-density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol is often referred to as "good" cholesterol and is known to play an important role in protecting against atherosclerosis, where fatty materials collect along the walls of arteries, thickening and eventually blocking them, leading to heart problems and heart attacks.

"Our results suggest that maternal smoking 'imprints' an unhealthy set of characteristics on children while they are developing in the womb, which may well predispose them to later heart attack and stroke," said David Celermajer, a professor of cardiology at the University of Sydney.

"This imprinting seems to last for at least eight years and probably a lot longer," he said, adding that the heart disease risk for smokers' children could be 10 to 15 percent higher.

Smoking during and after pregnancy is already known to be linked to a wide range of childhood health problems, including behavioral and neurocognitive problems and sudden infant death.

Yet the prevalence of smoking while pregnant is still high, at around 15 percent in many Western countries, the researchers said. And until now scientists were not clear how prenatal exposure to cigarette smoke might affect future heart risks.

Celermajer's team analyzed data from 405 healthy eight year olds, born between 1997 and 1999, who had been enrolled before birth into a randomized controlled trial that was investigating asthma and allergic diseases.

The researchers collected data before and after the children were born, including information on mothers' smoking habits before and after pregnancy, exposure to passive smoke, and data on height, weight, waist measurement and blood pressure.

They used ultrasound scans to measure the arterial wall thickness and, in 328 children who agreed, they took blood to measure lipoprotein levels.

Although there was no effect on the thickness of the children's arterial walls, Celermajer's team found there was an effect on levels of HDL cholesterol.

He suggested that lower HDL levels at this age might have a serious health impact in later life, since the children will probably continue to have low levels as they grow up.

"Cholesterol levels tend to track from childhood to adulthood, and studies have shown that for every 0.025mmol/L increase in HDL levels, there is an approximately 2.0 to 3.0 percent reduction in the risk of coronary heart disease," he said in a statement about his research.

"If we extrapolate this, we can suggest that the difference between children of smoking mothers versus non-smoking mothers might result in a 10 to 15 percent higher risk."

Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions.

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Mothers who smoke while pregnant are causing changes to their unborn babies that can lead them to have less of a type of cholesterol known to protect against heart disease, scientists said on Tues...
Mothers who smoke while pregnant are causing changes to their unborn babies that can lead them to have less of a type of cholesterol known to protect against heart disease, scientists said on Tues...
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10:02 AM on 08/17/2011
Wow, this is news. Never knew smoking is that bad on unborn children when it comes to cholesterol. Women should be careful when pregnant as aside from lowering HDL, smoking brings about stunted growth and other conditions.
I'm a cholesterol researcher, please find me at http://tipsforlowercholesterol.com/diets-to-lower-cholesterol.html
VJ Sleight MA TTS
Tobacco Treatment Specialist
04:58 PM on 06/25/2011
Years ago I saw a video of an ultrasound of a pregnant women, where you could see the heartbeat of the unborn child and see the lungs expand and contract. Then the woman smoked a cigarette--the heart stopped beating, and the lungs stopped expanding. With each puff of a cigarette, the unborn child is being strangled and deprived of oxygen. Smoking during pregnancy is not just a personal choice but will affect that child for the rest of his/her life.
www.StopSmokingStayQuit.blogspot.com
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Iatros78
Science is the consensus of expert opinion
05:13 PM on 06/24/2011
Where are all the smokers telling these do-gooder scientists to mind their own business? Nothing says "American freedom" like a pregnant woman smoking a Marlboro. Anyway, all smokers from ages 8 to 80 already know the risks of smoking- if women want their kids born with underdeveloped lungs, low birthweight, and prone to disease, well that's their Constitutional right!