This may be of interest to you and your networks.
Birth defects linked to highway smog:
http://www.futurity.org/health-medicine/birth-defects-linked-to-highway-smo…
STANFORD (US) — Women who breathe traffic pollution early in their pregnancy have a higher
risk of having a baby with serious birth defects of the brain and spine, a new study
reports.
The finding comes from a study that examined air quality and birth-defect data for women
living in California’s San Joaquin Valley, one of the smoggiest regions of the country.
“We found an association between specific traffic-related air pollutants and neural tube
defects, which are malformations of the brain and spine,” says lead author Amy Padula, a
postdoctoral scholar in pediatrics at Stanford University School of Medicine.
Straight from the Source
Read the original study
<http://aje.oxfordjournals.org/content/early/2013/03/27/aje.kws367.abstract?sid=b5ed06a5-618d-4bfe-b4b1-8c16770b0fd8>
DOI: 10.1093/aje/kws367
“Birth defects affect one in every 33 babies, and about two-thirds of these defects are
due to unknown causes,” says Gary Shaw, professor of neonatal and developmental medicine.
“When these babies are born, they bring into a family’s life an amazing number of
questions, many of which we can’t answer.”
For the study, published in the American Journal of Epidemiology
<http://aje.oxfordjournals.org/content/early/2013/03/27/aje.kws367.abstract?sid=b5ed06a5-618d-4bfe-b4b1-8c16770b0fd8>
, the scientists studied 806 women who had a pregnancy affected by a birth defect between
1997 and 2006, and 849 women who had healthy babies during the same period.
The study examined two types of neural tube defects: spina bifida, a spinal-column
malformation, and anencephaly, an underdeveloped or absent brain); cleft lip, with or
without cleft palate; cleft palate only; and gastroschisis, in which the infant is born
with some of his or her intestines outside the body.
All women studied resided in an area of California known for poor air quality—the San
Joaquin Valley—during the first eight weeks of their pregnancies, a window of time when
many birth defects develop.
The researchers asked each woman for her home address during this period and scored
subjects’ exposure to air pollutants using data collected by the Environmental Protection
Agency as part of federally mandated air-quality monitoring.
The pollutants assessed included carbon monoxide, nitrogen oxide, nitrogen dioxide,
particulate matter, and ozone, as well as local traffic density.
After controlling for factors such as race/ethnicity, maternal education, and multivitamin
use, women who breathed the highest levels of carbon monoxide were nearly twice as likely
to have a baby with spina bifida or anencephaly as those with the lowest carbon monoxide
exposure.
Nitrogen oxide and nitrogen dioxide exposures were also linked to increased risk for these
defects; women with the highest nitrogen oxide exposure had nearly three times the risk of
having a pregnancy affected by anencephaly than those with the lowest exposure, for
example. Further studies are needed to examine the combined effects of multiple
pollutants.
The quality of earlier research linking air pollution and birth defects has been hampered
by the difficulty of getting reliable data on women’s exposure to pollutants.
The new study is the first to assess women’s pollutant exposures in early pregnancy, when
birth defects are developing, rather than at birth.
Scientists say further studies are needed to confirm the results of the new research and
to examine other pollutants, as well as other types of birth defects.
“If these associations are confirmed, this work offers an avenue for a potential
intervention for reducing birth defects,” Padula says.
“In addition, for our colleagues who are bench scientists, this work gives them an
opportunity to think about what pollution exposures might mean mechanistically,” Shaw
says. “It could give them a better understanding of the details of human development.”
Scientists at the University of California, Berkeley and at Sonoma Technology Inc. in
Sonoma, California, were involved in the work, which was funded by the National Institute
for Environmental Health Science, the Environmental Protection Agency, and the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention.
Source: Stanford University <http://med.stanford.edu/ism/2013/march/pollution.html>