Showing posts with label Pregnancy Guide.. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pregnancy Guide.. Show all posts

Smoking during Pregnancy and its Effects on the Baby


Smoking during Pregnancy and its Effects on the Baby

Cigarette smoking during pregnancy is not only poses health risks to the mother, but also presents serious problems for her unborn baby.

Smoking during pregnancy causes about 5-6% of prenatal deaths, 17-26% of low –birth-weight births, and 7-10% of preterm deliveries and it increases the risk of miscarriage and fetal growth retardation.

Dangerous effects of smoking during pregnancy


You may have a look into the effects of smoking during pregnancy. Nicotine and carbon monoxide are poisonous ingredients of cigarette that can cause a lot of harm inside the body.

Carbon Monoxide and Nicotine


Smoking leads to increase in the levels of carbon monoxide and nicotine in the mother’s bloodstream during pregnancy. Carbon monoxide and nicotine terrifying effects on the mother’s body, as the blood vessels are constricted and limited, showing an effect on the supply of oxygen and nutrients.
The growth of the baby is hampered as the baby is denied its full share of nutrients and oxygen. The whole situation is like to you are being hungry and being offered an insufficient amount of food with poisonous substances. When you smoke, this is what exactly your baby is going to experience.

Premature babies

One of the dangerous effects of smoking during pregnancy is that babies are likely to be born premature and is they are born in correct time the baby may be underweight and small. Such babies need special care under medical supervision, which extends their stay in hospital.

Other Dangerous Effects of Smoking during Pregnancy


Smoking during pregnancy leads to denial proper oxygen supply to baby, which in turn may lead to miscarriages or fetal brain damage. According to certain studies smoking during pregnancy may even lead to student infant death syndrome.
Another effect of smoking during pregnancy is found on the blood pressure of the developing baby. This adversely affects its development and the child’s learning ability, like attention deficit disorder retarded mental growth. When young the child may also develop respiratory problems like asthma.

Effects of smoking after pregnancy

Once your baby is born, still there is need to protect the child from smoking. Smoking leads to reduction in milk supply, and can hinder breastfeeding. Moreover, the baby gets a fair dose of nicotine through breast milk.
        This can cause diseases in the form of nausea, colic, diarrhea, etc. Second hand smoke is not good for the bay, since it affects the lungs through the nicotine it inhale. You would not like your baby to develop breathing disorders.

Weight and Size

On average, a pack-a-day habit during pregnancy will shave about a half-pound from a baby’s birth weight. Smoking two packs a day throughout your pregnancy could make your baby a full pound or more lighter. While some women may welcome the prospect of delivering a smaller baby, stunting a baby’s growth in the womb can have negative consequences that last a lifetime.

Body and Lungs

Undersize babies tend to have under developed bodies. Their lungs may not be ready to work on their own, which means they may spend their first days or weeks attached to a respirator. After they are breathing on their own, these babies may have continuing breathing problems- because of delayed lung development or other adverse effects of nicotine. Children whose mothers smoked during pregnancy are especially vulnerable to asthma, and have double or even triple the risk of sudden infant death syndrome.

 

Brain Function

Smoking during pregnancy can have life-long effects on your baby’s brain. Children of pregnant smokers are especially likely to have learning disorders, behavioral problems, and relatively low IQs. Recent animal studies suggest that nicotine in the womb can program a baby’s brain for a future addiction. By the time that baby becomes a teenager; just a few cigarettes could be enough to get him booked.

Pergnancy in Drugs.


Drugs in Pregnancy



Teratogenesis and other adverse effects of drugs during Pregnancy.


Teratogenesis means the production monsters or misshapen organisms. Also to include the generation of functional abnormalities in the baby. The effect of a noxious agent reaching the fetus early in pregnancy, whilst the organ systems are forming, is likely to be the cause of anatomical malformation. Later in pregnancy, when the basic structures are fully developed, it is function that is at risk.

                Only 2-3% of pregnancies that survive the first trimester result in a grossly abnormal fetus, though minor malformations are recognizable in at least another 5%. The proportion of these abnormalities to which drugs have contributed in any way is probably small, less than 1 in 20. It follows that only a small, number of newborn babies have been seriously affected by drugs given in pregnancy, since it is in general avoidable.

Causation
Very few drugs that have been used therapeutically cause congenital abnormalities in the sense that a high proportion of fetuses will be affected if the drug is given to a pregnant woman – thalidomide and methotrexate are the only well-known examples.
                With most therapeutic agents where it is accepted there is some hazard to the fetus, the magnitude of risk is small and capable of being further reduced by careful therapeutics. It follows that the causative chain of events leading to an apparently drug-associated anomaly is tenuous, being dependent on conditioning circumstances, many of them imponderable. The lack of specificity of the abnormalities, nearly all of which can occur when no drugs have been taken, confirms their multifactorial origin.

                There is increasing recognition of the role of folic acid, and probably other B vitamins as one of these cofactors. There is no doubt that deficiency of these vitamins can cause abortion and congenital abnormalities. In animals, folic acid will protect against a wider range of teratogenic stimuli than is represented by known foliate antimetabolites. A number of therapeutic agents suspected of teratogenicity have been found to interfere with folic acid absorption and metabolism. Recently it has been demonstrated that supplementation of dietary folate, initiated before conception, tends to prevent recurrence of neural tube defects and other anomalies in women who have previously had an affected baby. The lack of specificity of drug- associated anomalies is consistent with impairment of folate status being a final common pathway for the generation of a proportion of congenital abnormalities.

Placental Transfer of Drugs
Transmission of nearly all drugs to the fetus is by simple diffusion. The rate of transfer relates directly to the concentration gradient of unbound, unionized drug. The diffusion constant is inversely related to molecular weight and directly to lipid solubility. In practice very nearly all therapeutic agents pass through to the fetus; heparin, with its molecular weight of more than 15000, is an exception; curare, which is highly polar, is another.  The rate of transfer is not of much significance except with agents such as anesthetics which are given for short periods of time on a single occasion. When a therapeutic concentration of a drug is maintained in the maternal circulation it will eventually reach the fetus in meaningful amounts.

Metabolism in the Fetus
Subject to conditioning factors, the pharmacodynamics of teratogenic agents is like those of any other drug. That is, the likelihood that they will have an effect is directly related to their concentrating at the appropriate site in the developing fetus. The ability of the fetus to metabolise, detoxicate or exerted a drug is therefore of great importance in reducing its effective concentration. Knowledge of these functions is limited, but there is individual variation in the ability of the fetal liver to metabolise drugs and to generate detoxicating enzymes. Although the fetal kidney starts to function in the third month of pregnancy, some drugs passing into the amniotic fluid, renal function is immature and this is not an important route of elimination. 

                The dependence of fetal plasma concentration of diffusion across the placenta prevents accumulation of free drug in the fetal circulation, but a few agents can be concentrated in specific fetal organs. Examples are iodine, which is accumulated in the fetal thyroid, and radioactive strontium, which is taken  up by developing bone.

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