Logo image
Prenatal cocaine exposure and childhood obesity at nine years
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

Prenatal cocaine exposure and childhood obesity at nine years

Linda L. LaGasse, Ronnesia B. Gaskins, Henrietta S. Bada, Seetha Shankaran, Jing Liu, Barry M. Lester, Charles R. Bauer, Rosemary D. Higgins, Abhik Das and Mary Roberts
Neurotoxicology and teratology, Vol.33(2), pp.188-197
03-01-2011
PMCID: PMC3058125
PMID: 21109003

Abstract

Life Sciences & Biomedicine Neurosciences Neurosciences & Neurology Science & Technology Toxicology
Little is known about the association between prenatal cocaine exposure and obesity. We tested whether prenatal cocaine exposure increases the likelihood of obesity in 561 9-year-old term children from the Maternal Lifestyle Study (MLS). Overall, 21.6% of children met criterion for obesity (body mass index [BMI]>= 95th percentile, age and sex-specific). While there was no overall cocaine effect on obesity, multivariate logistic analysis revealed that children exposed to cocaine but not alcohol were 4 times more likely to be obese (OR 4.11, CI 2.04-9.76) than children not exposed to either drug. No increase in obesity prevalence was found in children exposed to alcohol but not cocaine (OR 1.08, Cl .59-1.93) or both (OR 1.21, CI 0.66-2.22). Alcohol exposure may attenuate the effect of cocaine exposure on obesity. Increased obesity associated with cocaine but not alcohol exposure was first observed at 7 years. BMI was also elevated from 3 to 9 years in children exposed to cocaine but not alcohol, due to increasing weight but normal height. Prenatal exposure to cocaine may alter the neuroendocrine system and metabolic processes resulting in increased weight gain and childhood obesity. (C) 2010 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
url
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ntt.2010.11.002View
Published (Version of record) Open

Related links

Metrics

Details

Logo image