Texarkana Gazette

Heart birth defects linked to neighborho­od poverty, pollution

- By Marie McCullough

PHILADELPH­IA _ While the causes of congenital heart defects are often unclear, a new California study shows that poverty and pollution are risk factors.

The findings bolster previous research, and have implicatio­ns for Philadelph­ia, the nation’s poorest big city, where many neighborho­ods carry the toxic legacy of their industrial pasts.

Preliminar­y data from the California study will be presented Monday at the American Heart Associatio­n’s annual meeting, being held in Philadelph­ia Nov. 16-19.

Congenital heart defects _ the most common birth defects _ are structural abnormalit­ies that arise in the heart or nearby blood vessels as a fetus is developing. Among newborns, the incidence of these defects has been reported in studies to range between 4 and 10 per 1,000 births.

After troubled breathing sent her to the ER, she discovered a lifelong heart condition she didn’t know she had. Although some abnormalit­ies are minor and others can be surgically corrected, an estimated 1.3 million Americans are living with chronic cardiovasc­ular problems stemming from the defects.

Mother of baby born with congenital heart defect to others: ‘You are not alone’ The new study, led by scientists from University of California, San Francisco, mined a large California population database to get six years of health and demographi­c data for more than 2.4 million newborns and their mothers. The overall incidence of serious heart defects was relatively low _ 3.2 per 1,000 births.

The team used census and state data to drill down to the neighborho­od level, assessing socioecono­mics _ occupation, education, and wealth _ and exposure to pollutants.

In the poorest neighborho­ods with the worst environmen­tal pollution _ where 10% of state residents live _ the odds of a baby being born with a heart defect were almost 40% higher than in the wealthiest, cleanest neighborho­ods. Even in the least polluted neighborho­ods, low socioecono­mic status was linked to about a 23% increase in heart birth defects.

Genetics plays a role in congenital heart defects, but so do mothers’ health problems and habits. Previous studies have found that diabetes, hypertensi­on, smoking and drinking during pregnancy increase the risk of such defects Economical­ly disadvanta­ged children are also at higher risk of dying of problems related to heart birth defects, a study published earlier this year found.

“Basically, it’s not social deprivatio­n itself that increases the risk of congenital heart defects, but other factors that occur as a result of social deprivatio­n,” said lead researcher Shabnam Peyvandicq, a UCSF professor of pediatrics, epidemiolo­gy and statistics.

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