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American Journal of Public Health logoLink to American Journal of Public Health
. 1998 Jun;88(6):893–896. doi: 10.2105/ajph.88.6.893

Exposure of young infants to environmental tobacco smoke: breast-feeding among smoking mothers.

M A Mascola 1, H Van Vunakis 1, I B Tager 1, F E Speizer 1, J P Hanrahan 1
PMCID: PMC1508233  PMID: 9618615

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: This study examined the degree to which breast-feeding and cigarette smoking by mothers and smoking by other household members contribute to the exposure of infants to the products of tobacco smoke. METHODS: The subjects were 330 mother-infant pairs derived from a cohort of 1000 pairs enrolled in a longitudinal study of the pulmonary effects of prenatal and postnatal smoking. The main outcome measure was corrected urinary cotinine levels. RESULTS: Urinary cotinine levels were 10-fold higher in breast-fed infants of smoking mothers than among bottle-fed infants of smoking mothers. Among infants of nonsmoking mothers, urine cotinine levels were significantly increased in infants living in homes with other smokers; in this group there was no significant difference between bottle-fed and breast-fed infants. Infants whose mothers smoked in the same room as the infant had only nonsignificant increases in cotinine levels compared with infants whose mothers restricted their smoking to other rooms. CONCLUSIONS: Breast-fed infants of smoking mothers have urine cotinine levels 10-fold higher than bottle-fed infants whose mothers smoke, suggesting that breast-feeding, rather than direct inhalation of environmental tobacco smoke, is the primary determinant of cotinine levels in infants whose mothers smoke.

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Selected References

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