An expectant mother who smokes exposes her fetus to relatively
high concentrations of nicotine, which in turn alter receptors
for the brain chemical dopamine essential for brain development,
said doctors from Aarhus University in Copenhagen.
Writing in the journal Pediatrics, the researchers compared
the backgrounds of 170 children diagnosed with hyperactive disorders
against 3,800 children matched by age.
Of those mothers with children born with the disorder, 59 percent
were smokers. The study found expectant mothers who smoked during
pregnancy had a nearly three-fold risk of having a child with
hyperkinetic disorders, which involves excessive muscular activity,
inattention and impulsive behavior including attention deficit-hyperactivity
disorder.
These conditions are the most prevalent mental disorders in
child psychiatry.
Animal studies and studies on first-trimester human pregnancies
have demonstrated the action of nicotine on developing brains,
wrote study author Dr. Karen Linnet.