Exposure in the womb to bisphenol A, a common ingredient found in many
plastics, may be associated with impaired lung function in children, a new
report says.
by John
Tyburski
Copyright © Daily
Digest News, KPR Media, LLC. All rights reserved.
Researchers
at the University of Maryland School of Medicine in Baltimore report today that
exposure to a common chemical in plastics during prenatal development is
sometimes associated with pulmonary system problems later on in childhood,
including reduced lung function and chronic wheezing.
Over the
past three decades, health officials have observed a rise in asthma rates, and
environmental factors such as airborne particles and tobacco smoke have been
identified as risk factors. Some research also suggests a link between exposure
to bisphenol A (BPA) and asthma.
In a study
described in a report published
on Monday in the journal JAMA Pediatrics, researchers looked at nearly
400 mothers and their respective infants enrolled in a birth cohort study
conducted in the greater Cincinnati, Ohio, area, collecting urine samples
during pregnancy and child urine samples each year after birth to measure BPA
exposure. The outcomes measured were parent-reported wheeze and child forced
expiratory volume in the first second of expiration, or FEV1, a standard lung
function test.
The study
revealed that a 14.2 percent decrease in the percentage predicted FEV1 at four
years of age was associated with every 10-fold increase in average maternal
urinary BPA concentration. However, the researchers found no association with
the same measurements at five years of age. Every 10-fold increase in maternal
urinary BPA concentration was weakly associated with about a 55 percent
increase in the odds of child wheezing. A 10-fold increase in maternal urinary
BPA was associated with a 4.27-fold increase in the odds of child persistent
wheeze. However, no associations were observed between the outcomes and child
urinary BPA concentrations.
“We found
that prenatal BPA exposure that occurred during early pregnancy was
inconsistently associated with diminished lung function, increased odds of
wheeze and a persistent wheeze phenotype in young children,” the authors wrote.
“If future studies confirm that prenatal BPA exposure may be a risk factor for
impaired respiratory heath, it may offer another avenue to prevent the
development of asthma.”
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