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Prenatal tobacco exposure linked to hearing loss

Impact on ear nerves studied

Exposure to tobacco smoke while in the womb can lead to diminished hearing by adolescence, doctors have found in the first study ever to link tobacco use and hearing impairment.

The new research suggests that compounds contained in tobacco smoke cross the placenta and exert harmful effects on the auditory system.

The analysis, conducted by Drs. Michael Weitzman and Anil Lalwani of New York University-Langone School of Medicine in Manhattan, focused on both maternal smoking and tobacco use by household members.

“I think some people would say this adds to the litany of horrible consequences of an epidemic involving a man-made product that began causing serious health effects 110 years ago with the massive sale of tobacco products,” Weitzman said.

In the past, doctors have linked low birth weight, asthma, sudden infant death syndrome and recurrent ear infections to both maternal smoking and exposure of the mother to secondhand smoke while pregnant.

Weitzman noted that even though his research was not designed to pinpoint a mechanism by which tobacco smoke damages the ability to hear, it is possible, he said, that tobacco's byproducts can injure the developing ear in numerous ways.

The research focused on hearing loss due to nerve damage.

“It is possible that (hearing loss) might occur because of decreased blood flow and decreased oxygenation, or higher carbon monoxide levels,” he said.

Weitzman, a professor of pediatrics and environmental medicine, studied the medical records of 964 adolescents between ages 12 and 15, who had participated in the federal government's National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey during 2005-06.

Sixteen percent of parents admitted to smoking.

Reporting in the journal Otolaryngology — Head and Neck Surgery, the team found smokers' children were more likely to suffer a loss of hearing audible sounds, such as those that occur during normal speech.

There was also a threefold increase in the odds of low-frequency hearing loss in one ear, according to the research.

Lalwani studied the losses in tone. The aim of their research, Weitzman said, was to determine two factors: exposure to prenatal tobacco smoke and hearing impairment associated with nerve damage.

This kind of hearing loss is subtle but debilitating, Weitzman and his colleagues say. “If you have subtle hearing loss, it can change how you perceive the world, you may miss every other word that people are saying,” Weitzman said.

He said kids with subtle hearing loss perform poorly in school and tend to have behavioral problems because of their inability to adequately hear.

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