One
in every 20 cases of the serious condition of pregnancy, pre-eclampsia,
may be linked to increased levels of the air pollutant ozone during the
first three months, suggests a large study published in the online
journal BMJ Open.
Mothers with asthma may be more vulnerable, the findings indicate.
Pre-eclampsia
is characterised by raised blood pressure and the presence of protein
in the urine during pregnancy. It can cause serious complications, if
left untreated.
The authors base their findings on almost 121,000
singleton births in Greater Stockholm, Sweden, between 1998 and 2006;
national data on the prevalence of asthma among the children’s mothers;
and levels of the air pollutants ozone and vehicle exhaust (nitrogen
oxide) in the Stockholm area.
There’s a growing body of evidence
pointing to a link between air pollution and premature birth, say the
authors, while pregnant women with asthma are more likely to have
pregnancy complications, including underweight babies and pre-eclampsia.
In all, 4.4% of the pregnancies resulted in a premature birth and the prevalence of pre-eclampsia was 2.7%.
There
was no association between exposure to levels of vehicle exhaust and
complications of pregnancy, nor were any associations found for any air
pollutants and babies that were underweight at birth.
But there
did seem to be a link between exposure to ozone levels during the first
three months of pregnancy and the risk of premature birth (delivery
before 37 weeks) and pre-eclampsia, after adjusting for factors likely
to influence the results and seasonal variations in air pollutants,
although not spatial variations in exposure.
Each rose by 4% for every 10 ug/m3 rise in ambient ozone during this period, the analysis indicated.
Mothers
with asthma were 25% more likely to have a child born prematurely and
10% more likely to have pre-eclampsia than mums without this condition.
Asthma
is an inflammatory condition and ozone may therefore have worsened
respiratory symptoms and systemic inflammation, so accounting for the
larger increase in the risk of premature birth among the mums with
asthma, suggest the authors.
But after taking account of the
mother’s age, previous births, educational attainment, ethnicity,
asthma, season and year of conception, the authors calculated that one
in every 20 (5%) cases of pre-eclampsia were linked to ozone levels
during early pregnancy.
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