“二手烟”对女婴的伤害更大?
(2012-04-03 08:38:05)
标签:
保健吸烟二手烟儿童肺功能过敏育儿 |
分类: 健康贴士 |
美国辛辛那提大学的研究结果提示“婴幼儿阶段暴露于二手烟(secondhand smoke),女孩受到的伤害远较男孩大,如在2岁时易患过敏,7岁时可易出现肺功能受损等。”
Secondhand Smoke Affects Young Girls More Than Boys: Study
By age 7, lung function was six times worse for exposed girls than boys, research shows
FRIDAY, March 30 (HealthDay News) -- The health effects of early life exposure to secondhand smoke appear to be greater in girls than in boys, a new study finds.
University of Cincinnati researchers looked at 476 children and found that those who were exposed to high levels of secondhand smoke and also had allergic sensitizations at age 2 were at higher risk for decreased lung function at age 7.
The investigators also found that lung function among children exposed to similar levels of secondhand smoke and allergic sensitization -- in which the immune system develops antibodies that show up in an allergy test -- was six times worse in girls than in boys.
"Our study shows that the timing of allergic sensitization is crucial because children who are sensitized by age 2 are more likely to suffer the greatest lung deficits during childhood as a result of secondhand-smoke exposure," study first author Kelly Brunst, a doctoral candidate in the epidemiology and biostatistics division at the University of Cincinnati, said in a university news release.
"This association was not observed at age 4 or 7, emphasizing the importance of this critical window for lung development," Brunst added.
The study, conducted by
epidemiologists with the university's Cincinnati Childhood Allergy
and Air Pollution Study (CCAAPS), was published online March 21 in
the journal
"Our results provide valuable information regarding the interwoven relationships between early-life exposure to secondhand tobacco smoke, allergic sensitization, gender and lung function," Grace LeMasters, a professor of environmental health and principal investigator at CCAAPS, said in the news release.
"It's likely that the complex interaction between secondhand smoke and pulmonary [lung] function loss in boys and girls is ultimately dependent on the timing of exposure as well as the child's 'total load' in relationship to cumulative risk factors -- exposures, allergic sensitization, asthma status, genetic susceptibility and sex hormones," LeMasters said.
SOURCE: University of Cincinnati, news release, March 26, 2012