Smoking and Pregnancy
Don't smoke during your pregnancy and limit how much time you spend in environments where there is secondhand smoke.
The risks involved with smoking during pregnancy
Fewer women are smoking during their pregnancy now than in the past. But many women still smoke. Even if a pregnant woman doesn't smoke, she may be exposed to secondhand smoke at home, at work, or in social settings. New research has focused on the dangers from third-hand smoke. These are the chemicals, particles, and gases of tobacco that are left on hair, clothing, and furnishings.
Smoke can be harmful to a fetus in many ways. It may cause:
Low birth weight
Preterm birth
Stillbirths
Higher risk for birth defects
Babies born to smokers may also have these problems:
Poor lung development
Asthma and respiratory infections
Higher risk for sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS)
Physical growth problems
Intellectual development problems
Behavioral problems
Childhood obesity
Colic
The mother can also have problems during her pregnancy because of smoking:
Placental problems
Preterm labor
Infections in the uterus
Researchers think that carbon monoxide and nicotine from cigarettes cause many of these harmful effects. Carbon monoxide lowers oxygen in the blood. Nicotine stimulates certain hormones.
Babies of mothers who are regularly exposed to secondhand smoke during pregnancy are more likely to have reduced fetal growth and low birth weight.
A woman who quits smoking early in her pregnancy raises her chance of delivering a healthy baby.