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Mom-To-Be's High Coffee
Intake Linked to Stillbirth
NEW YORK (Reuters
Health) - Pregnant women who drink eight
or more cups of coffee a day may triple their risk for having
a stillborn child, scientists in Denmark announced Friday.
"We found that the risk of stillbirth
increased with the number of cups of coffee per day during pregnancy,"
Dr. Kirsten Wisborg of Aarhus University Hospital in Denmark,
the study's lead author, told Reuters Health.
"Compared with women who did not
drink coffee, women who drank 4-7 cups per day had an 80% increased
risk of stillbirth, and women who drank eight or more cups had
three times the risk," she added.
Studies on pregnant women's caffeine
consumption have had conflicting results, with some finding that
caffeine does hurt the fetus and others finding no effect. Moderate
consumption of caffeine--such as one or two caffeine containing
beverages a day--is generally considered safe.
To investigate, Wisborg's team
evaluated coffee consumption during pregnancy, stillbirth and
infant death among more than 18,000 pregnant women living in Denmark.
Their findings are published in the February 22nd issue of the
British Medical Journal.
According to Wisborg, women who
drink a lot of coffee are also likely to be smokers and to have
a high alcohol intake.
"However, adjusting for these factors
changed the association between coffee and stillbirth only slightly,"
she said.
But after accounting for smoking
habits, the researchers found no association between a woman's
coffee consumption during pregnancy and infant death.
Wisborg noted that past studies
have linked caffeine exposure in pregnancy to an increased risk
of miscarriage and low birth weight.
"How to advise pregnant women or
women planning to become pregnant is a very difficult question
(but) based on our knowledge today it seems reasonable at least
to reduce coffee intake during pregnancy to less than four cups
per day," Wisborg concluded.
SOURCE: British Medical Journal
2003;326:420-422.
Reference
Source 89
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