Abstract

To evaluate the effect of maternal smoking on intrauterine growth of babies who died of sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS), birthweights of SIDS infants and their surviving siblings were compared with birthweights of infants in sibships were all infants survived the first year of life. We studied 184,349 mothers with at least two births registered in the population-based Swedish Medical Birth Registry during 1983-91. The mother being the unit of analysis, birthweight and gestational age of her infants were the repeated measures used in a repeated measures analysis of variance. Mothers whose first two infants survived at least 1 year, smoked less than mothers of SIDS infants, 25 and 41% (P < 0.01). Overall, SIDS mothers did not smoke more while pregnant with the SIDS infant than while pregnant with the surviving sibling. SIDS siblings weighted, on average, 90 g less than infants in non-affected sibships. SIDS babies were even lighter, 193 g, and had 3.8 days shorter mean gestational age, compared with same birth-order babies in non-affected sibships. After adjustment for gestational age, the birthweight difference changed only slightly for SIDS siblings, while the difference for SIDS infants was reduced from 193 to 110 g. Further adjustment for smoking reduced the birthweight difference for SIDS siblings, from 74 to 50 g, and SIDS infants, from 110 to 82 g. Intrauterine growth retardation of sibships with a SIDS baby is explained only partly by maternal smoking. The even lower birthweight of the SIDS baby, resulting from shorter gestational age, cannot be explained by smoking, suggesting pregnancy factors specific to the SIDS baby and not to its siblings.

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