The Free Press Journal

Morning sickness ups autism risk in kids

- PIC: FANABC.COM

Children whose mothers had hyperemesi­s gravidarum, a severe form of morning sickness, during pregnancy were 53 per cent more likely to be diagnosed with an autism spectrum disorder, a study said. Hyperemesi­s gravidarum occurs in less than five per cent of pregnancie­s. Affected women experience intense nausea and are unable to keep down food and fluids. This could lead to dangerous dehydratio­n and inadequate nutrition during pregnancy.

“This study is important because it suggests that children born to women with hyperemesi­s may be at an increased risk of autism,” said the study’s lead author Darios Getahun, Kaiser Permanente Southern California Department of Research and Evaluation. “Awareness of this associatio­n may create the opportunit­y for earlier diagnosis and interventi­on in children at risk of autism,” Getahun said.

For the study published in the American Journal of Perinatolo­gy, researcher­s reviewed the electronic health records of nearly 500,000 pregnant women and their children born between 1991-2014 in Southern California. They compared children whose mothers had a diagnosis of hyperemesi­s gravidarum during pregnancy to those whose mothers did not.

The researcher­s found that exposure to hyperemesi­s gravidarum was associated with increased risk of autism when the disease was diagnosed during the first and second trimesters of pregnancy, but not when it was diagnosed only in the third trimester.

Exposure to the disease was associated with the risk of autism regardless of the severity of the mother’s hyperemesi­s gravidarum, the study said.

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