The same medical technology that has provided the latest souvenir trend of high resolution baby photos for expectant parents has provided new answers to how smoking while pregnant affects unborn fetuses. Researchers used high-resolution 4D ultrasound scans of fetuses and found distinctive differences in the rates of movement of those whose mothers smoked.
The study by researchers from Durham and Lancaster Universities in England was published in the journal Acta Paediatrica. It describes how the revolutionary 4D ultrasound technology helps answer questions on fetal subtle movements that previous methodologies were inadequate to address. 20 pregnant women participated in the study over a three-month period; four were smokers who averaged about 14 cigarettes a day, and 16 were non-smokers. Each woman was scanned four times within the study period.
By assessing the rates of movement captured by these high-resolution images and videos the researchers found differences in the rates of mouth movements. It also measured the amount of times the fetuses hands touched their faces, a fetal subtle movement called self-touch. Fetuses of smoking mothers showed significantly higher rates of mouth movements compared to fetuses of nonsmoking mothers. Stress and depression also affect fetal movements and so the analysis collected data on maternal stress and depression of each mother who participated in the study.
Previous Known Effects of Smoking While Pregnant
Known effects of smoking while pregnant include:- Decreased oxygen affecting neurological development of the fetus.
- Reduced frequency of fetal breathing movements resulting in delayed lung development.
- Increased risk of pregnancy complications
- Tissue damage, particularly in the lung and brain and some studies suggests a link between maternal smoking and cleft lip
- Early delivery of babies. Preterm delivery is a leading cause of death, disability, and disease among newborns.
- One in every five babies born to mothers who smoke during pregnancy has low birth weight. Mothers who are exposed to secondhand smoke while pregnant are more likely to have lower birth weight babies.
- Increased risk of sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS). Babies whose mothers smoke are about three times more likely to die from SIDS.
- Long-term consequences because of altered immune function
- Double or even triple the risk of stillbirth.