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Nicotine
May Have Link to SIDS
(HealthScoutNews)
-- Newborn rats exposed to nicotine in the womb have an increased
risk of apnea, a condition where breathing simply stops.
That's the claim of a study presented
April 12 at the Experimental Biology meeting in San Diego.
University of Arizona researchers
exposed developing rat fetuses to nicotine and found that it led
to enhanced function of GABAa receptors, an important component
of brain cells that control breathing rhythm.
This increased function of GABAa
receptors in the baby rats made them more likely to suffer apnea.
The amount of nicotine given to
the pregnant mother rats was calculated to produce nicotine blood
levels equal to those found in a person who smokes two packs of
cigarettes per day. The mother rats were given the nicotine from
the fifth day of pregnancy through to the 21st day, when they
delivered their pups.
The researchers suggest their findings
offer important evidence that exposure to nicotine in the womb
increases the functional capacity or density of GABAa receptors
on neurons that control breathing.
This evidence in newborn rats may
indicate that prenatal nicotine exposure could be a factor in
causing human babies to suffer frequent, longer-lasting and possibly
fatal apnea episodes.
Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS)
cases occur most often in human babies between the ages of two
to four months, while they are sleeping. These deaths are often
attributed to apnea or breathing cessation and the failure of
the baby to resume breathing.
Previous research has found that
babies of mothers who smoke during pregnancy have a five times
greater risk of SIDS.
More information
Here's where you can learn more
about SIDS.
Reference
Source 101
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