Friday, May 17, 2024
ADVT 
Health

Grandmother's Smoking Linked To Autism In Grandchildren

Darpan News Desk IANS, 28 Apr, 2017 10:57 AM
  • Grandmother's Smoking Linked To Autism In Grandchildren
If a girl's maternal grandmother smoked during pregnancy, the girl is 67 per cent more likely to display certain traits linked to autism, such as poor social communication skills and repetitive behaviours, says a study.
 
The researchers also found that if the maternal grandmother smoked, this increased by 53 per cent the risk of her grandchildren having a diagnosed autism spectrum disorder (ASD).
 
"In terms of mechanisms, there are two broad possibilities. There is DNA damage that is transmitted to the grandchildren or there is some adaptive response to the smoking that leaves the grandchild more vulnerable to ASD," said one of the study authors Marcus Pembrey, Professor at University of Bristol in Britain. 
 
"We have no explanation for the sex difference, although we have previously found that grand-maternal smoking is associated with different growth patterns in grandsons and granddaughters," Pembrey said.
 
For the study, published in the journal Scientific Reports, the researchers followed all the participants in Children of the 90s study.
 
Based at the University of Bristol, Children of the 90s, also known as the Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children (ALSPAC), is a long-term health-research project that enrolled more than 14,000 pregnant women in 1991 and 1992. 
 
It has been charting the health and development of the parents and their children ever since and is currently recruiting the children of the original children into the study.
 
The findings suggest that if a female is exposed to cigarette smoke while she is still in the womb, it could affect the developing eggs -- causing changes that may eventually affect the development of her own children. 

MORE Health ARTICLES

Shining A Spotlight On Added Sugar: Some Ways To Reduce It In The Diet

Shining A Spotlight On Added Sugar: Some Ways To Reduce It In The Diet
Sugar sleuths can also be stumped by the current nutrition facts table on food products, which lists the total sugar in one item, lumping together naturally occurring and added sugars.

Shining A Spotlight On Added Sugar: Some Ways To Reduce It In The Diet

How To Tell If A Preschooler Needs Glasses - And How To Get The Kid To Wear Them

How To Tell If A Preschooler Needs Glasses - And How To Get The Kid To Wear Them
Angie Illerbrun had no idea her daughter Olivia was having trouble seeing until she had her own eyes checked and the optometrist suggested he take a look at the toddler's eyes as well.

How To Tell If A Preschooler Needs Glasses - And How To Get The Kid To Wear Them

Scientists Decode How X-Ray Damages DNA And Causes Cancer

Scientists Decode How X-Ray Damages DNA And Causes Cancer
Scientists have, for the first time, found how X-rays and radioactive particles cause cancer in humans by damaging DNA, a finding that may lead to more effective treatments for tumours caused by radiation.

Scientists Decode How X-Ray Damages DNA And Causes Cancer

Five Things You Should Know About How Lyme Disease Is Spread And Treated

 Blacklegged ticks become infected with Lyme disease bacteria by feeding on infected wild animals, such as deer, birds and rodents.

Five Things You Should Know About How Lyme Disease Is Spread And Treated

Zika Virus Can Live In Tears

A team of researchers, including one of Indian orgin, has found that Zika virus can live in the eyes and have identified genetic material from the virus in tears of mice.

Zika Virus Can Live In Tears

Twins Should Be Delivered Two Weeks Early To Minimise Deaths: Scientists

Twins Should Be Delivered Two Weeks Early To Minimise Deaths: Scientists
  It is well known that the risk of stillbirth is higher in twin pregnancies, researchers said.

Twins Should Be Delivered Two Weeks Early To Minimise Deaths: Scientists