Albuquerque Journal

Study: Moms’ morning sickness is good for babies

- BY LINDSEY TANNER

CHICAGO — It’s dreaded by moms-to-be, but morning sickness is actually a good sign — for the baby, a government study shows, confirming common pregnancy lore and less rigorous research.

Women with nausea early in pregnancy were half as likely to have miscarriag­es and stillbirth­s as those who sailed through the first few months. Miscarriag­es were also less common in women who had nausea plus vomiting, although the benefit was stronger for those who just had nausea.

Led by researcher­s at the National Institute of Child Health and Human Developmen­t, the study involved almost 800 women who’d had at least one miscarriag­e and then became pregnant again. They were asked to record symptoms in daily diaries for the first eight weeks of pregnancy and in monthly questionna­ires through the end of the first trimester.

Stefanie Hinkle, lead author and a researcher at the national institute, called it the most rigorous study to date on the topic, but also noted that it’s unclear if the results apply to first-time pregnancie­s.

Results were published Monday in JAMA Internal Medicine .

The numbers

There were 188 miscarriag­es and stillbirth­s, affecting almost 1 in 4 pregnancie­s, which is similar to national estimates. More than 90 percent occurred in the first trimester.

Of the nearly 800 women in the study, 443 completed daily diaries and over half of them reported nausea by the eighth week of pregnancy, also similar to national estimates. About one in four had nausea and vomiting. The researcher­s used statistica­l analyses to calculate that nausea alone, or nausea with vomiting, was linked with a 50 percent to 75 percent reduction in the risk of pregnancy loss.

Study strengths

Unlike some previous studies linking morning sickness with fewer miscarriag­es, the new research had data on women even before they became pregnant, so they were able to include miscarriag­es that occurred soon after conception. Some previous studies asked women months later to recall whether they had morning sickness — a weaker method than using daily diaries.

The reasons

Causes of morning sickness are uncertain but have been linked with high hormone levels in pregnancy. How it might reduce chances for miscarriag­es is also uncertain.

The bottom line

Hinkle said the results should reassure women concerned that morning sickness could be harmful. But she said unaffected women shouldn’t be alarmed.

“Every pregnancy is different and just because they don’t have symptoms doesn’t mean they’re going to have a pregnancy loss,” Hinkle said.

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