Originally published August 7, 2007 at 12:00 AM | Page modified August 7, 2007 at 2:06 AM
Study links women's obesity, birth defects
Women who are obese before pregnancy face a higher risk of having babies with a variety of birth defects than women with a healthy weight...
The Associated Press
CHICAGO — Women who are obese before pregnancy face a higher risk of having babies with a variety of birth defects than women with a healthy weight, a new study suggests.
The results involving nearly 15,000 women from eight states found abnormalities of the spine, heart, arms, legs and abdomen, building on previous research that showed heart and spine defects. The greatest risk was for spina bifida.
"Obese women should not be overly alarmed by these findings because their absolute risk of having a child with a birth defect is low, and the cause of the majority of birth defects is unknown," said University of Texas researcher Kim Waller, the study's lead author.
Still, the results underline yet another reason for women to maintain a healthy weight, Waller said.
The findings, published Monday in the August edition of Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine, suggest that about 4 percent of women who are obese before pregnancy will have babies with major birth defects, versus 3 percent for healthy-weight women, Waller said.
Obese women faced double the risk of having babies with spina bifida than women of healthy weight. With spina bifida, the most common disabling birth defect in the United States, the spinal column fails to close properly.
Babies born to very heavy women also were 60 percent more likely to have a rare defect in which abdominal organs protrude through the belly button; 40 percent more likely to have heart defects; 36 percent more likely to have shortened arms or legs; and at least 20 percent more likely to have any of several gastrointestinal deformities.
Copyright © 2007 The Seattle Times Company
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