Daily Mail

E-cigs or nicotine patches in pregnancy ‘raise cot death risk’

- By Colin Fernandez Science Correspond­ent

MOTHERS who vape or wear nicotine patches during pregnancy increase their baby’s risk of cot death, a study suggests.

Cot death, or sudden infant death syndrome, is the unexpected death of an apparently healthy child under the age of 12 months, typically during sleep.

Official NHS guidance warns pregnant women not to smoke cigarettes because it can damage their baby. Those who feel they are unable to stop completely are advised to use nicotine replacemen­t therapy, such as patches or tablets.

But the latest research, published in the Journal of Physiology, found that nicotine in any form may increase the risk of sudden infant death.

In a study on rats, the researcher­s found that exposure to either cigarette smoke or e- cigarettes could impair a baby’s ‘gasp reflex’ – which automatica­lly restarts breathing after a lack of oxygen. Cot death has long been thought to be linked to a failure to gasp.

Smoking during pregnancy is still a major problem and despite decades of warnings, about 10 per cent of pregnant women still do it. It has been linked to miscarriag­e, premature birth, low birth weight and stillbirth.

But the study’s authors state that, with rising numbers of women turning to nicotine patches and e- cigarettes to stop them smoking during pregnancy, there is an urgent need to gauge the impact of the nicotine these contain on a developing baby.

The American researcher­s believe exposure of the mother to nicotine may damage the baby’s central nervous system and impair the gasp reflex, also known as auto resuscitat­ion. When a baby is suffering from a severe lack of oxygen – for instance after getting tangled in bedding, suffering a minor illness or having a blocked airway – the failure to start gasping for air can be fatal.

The authors suggest that using nicotine in forms such as patches or electronic cigarettes is not a safe alternativ­e to cigarettes during pregnancy, because exposure to nicotine by any route may be harmful to aba by’ scardio respirator­y function and increase the risk of sudden death.

The researcher­s, from the Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth, New Hampshire, found the use of nicotine during pregnancy could elicit auto resuscitat­ion defects in developing animals.

They exposed rats to nicotine through maternal blood or milk and then looked at their response to repeated periods of severe low oxygen.

Study author Stella Lee said: ‘Sudden infant death syndrome is such a distressin­g tragedy for families. We still don’t fully understand the causes, but this research is important because it helps mothers reduce the risk.’

Aihua Li, senior author on the project, added: ‘ We will continue to identify the possible predictors of risk and consider how we can treat infants who have a compromise­d auto resuscitat­ion mechanism .’

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