LIVING HEALTHY Published November5, 2014 By Scott M.

Study Reports Pregnant Women Exposed to Air Pollution Are More Likely to Have ADHD Babies

Sign up to get the latest news delivered to your inbox every week!

According to a study conducted by Columbia University, pregnant women exposed to air pollution are five times more likely to have children who develop behavior problems related to attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, or ADHD, reports WebMD.com

The study says that a child's risk of ADHD symptoms by age 9 appears to increase dramatically if they were exposed in the womb to high levels of air pollutants called polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), researchers at Columbia reported.

Compared to children with low PAH exposure, children exposed to high levels are more likely to have both an increased number of symptoms and more intense symptoms, lead author Frederica Perera, a professor of environmental health sciences at Columbia's Mailman School of Public Health in New York City, told WebMD.com

Pollutants and other environmental factors likely interact with an unborn child's genetics to increase their risk of ADHD later in life, said Stephen Faraone, a professor of psychiatry at SUNY Upstate Medical University in Syracuse, N.Y., who reviewed the study's findings.

"We think it means as the brain is developing, these toxins change something in the functional connectivity or structure of the brain that downstream leads to ADHD," Faraone said. He noted that studies like this prove an association but not a direct cause-and-effect link between air pollution and ADHD.

Sign up to get the latest news delivered to your inbox every week!

send email twitt facebook google plus reddit comment 0

©2014 YouthsHealthMag.com. All Rights Reserved.

Real Time Analytics