- Major Women’s Health Study Supports Hormone Replacement Therapy in Early Menopause
- Organic Walnuts Tied to Serious E. Coli Illnesses
- More Than Half of Cats on Farm Where Bird Flu Infected Cows Died After Drinking Milk
- Biden Administration Could Reclassify Marijuana as Less Risky Drug
- Americans of Pacific Island Ethnicity Have Up to Triple the Rate of Cancer Deaths
- How Anger Could Raise Your Heart Risks
- EPA Clamps Down on Deadly Toxin Found in Paint Strippers
- Popular Teens (Especially Girls) May Get Less Sleep
- Years Prior to Menopause Are Danger Zone for Depression
- School Entry Rules Boost Kids’ HPV Vaccination Rates
1 in 5 Preemies With Lung Disease Exposed to Secondhand Smoke
High levels of nicotine were found in the hair of many children with premature birth-related lung disease whose parents claimed not to smoke, a new study finds.
The lung disease bronchopulmonary dysplasia often occurs in children who were born prematurely. Not surprisingly, exposure to tobacco smoke can be harmful for children with this condition, according to the researchers.
In this study, Johns Hopkins Children’s Center researchers analyzed nicotine levels in hair samples from 117 children younger than 3. All of the children had been seen at the bronchopulmonary dysplasia clinic between January 2012 and January 2014.
During those visits, parents provided information about the children’s exposure to tobacco smoke at home.
The researchers found that about 20 percent of the children were exposed to tobacco smoke at home. However, 22 percent of the babies who lived in what their parents said were nonsmoking homes had hair nicotine levels similar to children who lived in homes with smoking.
This means that parents provided inaccurate information about smoking in the home or the children were exposed to tobacco smoke somewhere else, according to the study published recently in the journal Pediatrics.
Many of the children live in multi-unit housing where smoking is permitted and may be exposed to tobacco smoke that way, the researchers suggested.
“We found that more than one-fifth of children whose caregivers report nonsmoking households have significant exposure,” Dr. Sharon McGrath-Morrow, a lung specialist and professor of pediatrics, said in a Hopkins news release.
The researchers also found the effects of tobacco smoke exposure were more significant for the children who needed either supplemental oxygen or mechanical ventilation to breathe. They saw a six- to seven-fold higher risk of hospitalizations and activity limitations when these youngsters showed signs of exposure to smoke.
“Tobacco smoke is a modifiable exposure,” McGrath-Morrow said. “If we could prevent [smoke exposure] in these children, they’d likely have better outcomes.”
She added that she hoped that the study might lead to better ways to protect these vulnerable children.
More information
The U.S. National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute has more about bronchopulmonary dysplasia.
Source: HealthDay
Copyright © 2024 HealthDay. All rights reserved.