Effects of maternal smoking during pregnancy and a family history of asthma on respiratory function in newborn infants

S.M. Stick, P.R. Burton, L. Gurrin, P.D. Sly, Peter Lesouef

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

395 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Introduction Infants of mothers who smoke have reduced respiratory function and are more likely to develop wheezing, Little evidence is available on the effect of inutero cigarette-smoke exposure as opposed to postnatal exposure to environmental tobacco smoke, We used a previously validated non-invasive method to measure the time to peak tidal expiratory flow (tPTEF) as a proportion of expiratory time (tE) in newborn infants soon after birth to examine the effects of a family history of asthma and in-utero cigarette-smoke exposure on the infants' respiratory function.Methods We collected respiratory-function data from 500 healthy infants of mothers taking part in the Western Australia Pregnancy Cohort Study, During behaviourally defined quiet sleep, measurements were obtained a median of 58 h (range 26-159) after the infants were born, We used uncalibrated inductance plethysmography. The uncalibrated volume signal was differentiated to flow and used to calculate respiratory rate, total inspiratory time, tE, and tPTEF, Mothers answered questionnaires on demographic, medical, and pregnancy characteristics, including smoking history. Serum cotinine measurements were available to validate self-reported smoking history in a subset of mothers (238).Results Data suitable for analysis were obtained from 461 infants. In multivariate regression analysis, lower values of tPTEF/tE were independently associated with respiratory rate (beta coefficient per 10 breaths/min 0.018 [SE 0.005], p10 cigarettes daily; beta coefficient -0.049 [0.022], p
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1060-64
JournalThe Lancet
Volume348
Issue number9034
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1996

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