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Excerpts from: Nicotine hits newborns hard
By BBC [06/02/03]
Source: Pediatrics
Even casual smoking during pregnancy produces behavioural changes in newborn
babies similar to those induced by illegal drugs, research has found.
Scientists found that women who smoked just six to seven cigarettes per day
gave birth to babies who more jittery, more excitable, stiffer and more difficult
to console than newborns of non-smokers.
And the higher the dose of nicotine measured in a mother, the greater the signs of stress in her new baby.
The behavioural changes were similar to those found in newborns of women who use crack cocaine or heroin while pregnant - and were strong enough to suggest that babies go through a "nicotine withdrawal" response.
Researcher Karen Law, from Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island, said: "We have a legal drug in nicotine that may have the same toxic effect as illegal drugs. . .
The research is published in the journal Pediatrics.
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