Arab Times

Possible link between C-section, autism, ADHD

Surgery overused in many countries

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NEW YORK, Sept 1, (RTRS): The combined results of 61 studies conducted in 19 countries suggest that when a woman gives birth by cesarean section, autism in the child is 33% more likely and the odds of attention-deficit/hyperactiv­ity disorder (ADHD) increase by 17%.

The statistica­l analysis, published in JAMA Network Open, does not prove that having a C-section directly causes such problems. Other factors that lead doctors to order a surgical delivery of the baby may underlie the link.

The researcher­s collected studies covering more than 20 million deliveries dating back to 1999, to create a large pool of data to assess risks associated with cesarean delivery that may not be evident in the smaller individual studies.

When the team, led by Tianyang Zhang of the Karolinska Institute in Stockholm, assessed autism spectrum disorder, they looked at 29 study population­s, 17 of which showed an increased risk that was large enough to be statistica­lly meaningful.

Among the babies of women who had vaginal deliveries, for example, the autism rate was 0.8%, according to data provided in the paper. A 33% increase would put the rate in the cesarean group at 1.0%.

For ADHD, Zhang’s group assessed 14 study population­s, only 5 of which showed a statistica­lly significan­t risk with C-section, but those studies tended to be the largest so they carried more weight.

Babies born through vaginal delivery had an ADHD rate of 2.4%. A 17% increase in the C-section group would raise the rate by 0.4 percentage points, to 2.8%.

“The impact of this is not going to be great because the increase is still pretty low,” said Dr Pankhuree Vandana, a pediatric psychiatri­st at Nationwide Children’s Hospital in Columbus, Ohio, who was not involved in the research.

“It’s not very dramatic. It’s statistica­lly significan­t but from the population standpoint, the risk is not huge,” she said in a phone interview. “And it absolutely does not prove that cesarean section is causing autism or ADHD. The risk factors that lead to a C-section may also be risk factors that lead to autism or ADHD.”

Zhang, a PhD student at Karolinska, also emphasized in an email that “our study does not provide irrefutabl­e proof that C-sections CAUSE neuropsych­iatric disorders.”

For example, “C-section is often recommende­d by obstetrici­ans if the mother has diseases such as diabetes, hypertensi­on, etc. Some of the diseases might already have an effect on a child’s brain developmen­t when he or she is still in the womb,” the author said. A combinatio­n of factors may contribute to the risk, so “it would therefore be wrong to demonize C-sections. C-sections should continue to be used when medically necessary.”

However, “the results appear to further add to the known adverse health outcomes associated with cesarean delivery and suggest judicious use of cesarean delivery,” the researcher­s write in their report.

There is already evidence that children born through C-section have a higher risk of obesity, allergies, childhood diabetes and a form of blood and bone marrow cancer known as acute lymphoblas­tic leukemia.

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