Everything for People Concerned About Smoking & Nonsmokers' Rights
FIRST on the Internet for Smoking News and Documents
Action on Smoking and Health
A National Legal-Action Antismoking Organization
Entirely Supported by Tax-Deductible Contributions
 
 
 Home  Search  About ASH  Why Join  Comment  Email page

New Evidence that Air Pollution and Secondhand Smoke Combine to Damage Lung Health in Babies [10/14-2]

Excerpts from: Air Pollution, Secondhand Smoke Pose Risks for Children

By Randy Dotinga Health Day [10/13/04]

New research suggests that exposure to air pollution before birth and tobacco smoke after birth combine to damage the lung health of babies.

"Pollutants in our cities can affect children very early, prenatally and at age 1 or age 2, even before a child has asthma," said Dr. Rachel L. Miller, director of the Asthma Project at the Columbia Center for Children's Environmental Health in New York City. She is lead author of the study, which appears in the October issue of CHEST.

As part of their research for a series of studies, Miller and her colleagues gave air monitors -- about the size of backpacks -- to 303 pregnant Dominican and black women in New York City. All the women were nonsmokers. The machines analyzed how much they were exposed to pollutants called polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, which come from a variety of sources, including automobile exhaust, home heating systems and tobacco.

After the women's babies were born, the researchers asked the mothers about their children's health and their exposure to secondhand smoke.

At 1 year of age, the children of women exposed to high levels of the pollutants before birth and to tobacco smoke after birth were more likely to have developed coughs and wheezing. It's not clear how much more likely the exposed children were to develop the respiratory problems; Miller said the study wasn't designed to answer that question.

The researchers did find, however, that the combination of pollutants and tobacco smoke appeared to lead to more coughing and wheezing in boys, perhaps because they tend to have smaller airways.

At age 2, the children with the highest levels of exposure to the pollutants and tobacco smoke were more likely to have difficulty breathing and early symptoms of asthma.

The researchers don't know if the asthma symptoms will be permanent. "It's very difficult to diagnose asthma in a child until about age 5 or so," Miller said.

She said the researchers don't know why the pollutants and smoke might lead to respiratory problems, but it's possible they could stimulate the developing immune system. Asthma occurs when the body's immune system becomes overactive.

The exposure may even alter the DNA of children, Miller said. "How that translates to symptoms later on, nobody knows."




footer
 Home Web Page  Search This Site  Learn About ASH  Why Join ASH  Comment on This  Email This Page

Raising Smoking in a Custody Dispute
Smoking in Condos and
Apartments 

File Complaints Against Smoking
Toxins in Tobacco Smoke
Dangers of Secondhand Smoke
Govt. Rpt. on Secondhand Smoke
Tobacco Class-Action Law Suits 
Sue-Big-Tobacco List of Lawyers
Tobacco Settlement, Multistate
ASH's New  International Site
Smoking Facts & Statistics
Children and Smoking


Presented as a public service by Action on Smoking and Health (ASH),
2013 H Street, N.W., Wash., DC 20006, USA, (202) 659-4310.
ASH is a 36-year-old national legal-action antismoking and nonsmokers' rights organization which is entirely supported by tax-deductible contributions.
  Please credit ASH, and include ASH's web address: http://ash.org