Cigarette smoking during early pregnancy reduces the number of embryonic germ and somatic cells

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Standard

Cigarette smoking during early pregnancy reduces the number of embryonic germ and somatic cells. / Mamsen, Linn; Lutterodt, M C; Andersen, Elisabeth Anne Wreford; Skouby, S O; Sørensen, K P; Andersen, C Yding; Byskov, A G.

I: Human Reproduction, Bind 25, Nr. 11, 01.11.2010, s. 2755-61.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Mamsen, L, Lutterodt, MC, Andersen, EAW, Skouby, SO, Sørensen, KP, Andersen, CY & Byskov, AG 2010, 'Cigarette smoking during early pregnancy reduces the number of embryonic germ and somatic cells', Human Reproduction, bind 25, nr. 11, s. 2755-61. https://doi.org/10.1093/humrep/deq215

APA

Mamsen, L., Lutterodt, M. C., Andersen, E. A. W., Skouby, S. O., Sørensen, K. P., Andersen, C. Y., & Byskov, A. G. (2010). Cigarette smoking during early pregnancy reduces the number of embryonic germ and somatic cells. Human Reproduction, 25(11), 2755-61. https://doi.org/10.1093/humrep/deq215

Vancouver

Mamsen L, Lutterodt MC, Andersen EAW, Skouby SO, Sørensen KP, Andersen CY o.a. Cigarette smoking during early pregnancy reduces the number of embryonic germ and somatic cells. Human Reproduction. 2010 nov. 1;25(11):2755-61. https://doi.org/10.1093/humrep/deq215

Author

Mamsen, Linn ; Lutterodt, M C ; Andersen, Elisabeth Anne Wreford ; Skouby, S O ; Sørensen, K P ; Andersen, C Yding ; Byskov, A G. / Cigarette smoking during early pregnancy reduces the number of embryonic germ and somatic cells. I: Human Reproduction. 2010 ; Bind 25, Nr. 11. s. 2755-61.

Bibtex

@article{df2668a8fd8b43cab9e12230f5c82832,
title = "Cigarette smoking during early pregnancy reduces the number of embryonic germ and somatic cells",
abstract = "BACKGROUND: Cigarette smoking during pregnancy is associated with negative reproductive consequences for male fetuses in adult life such as reduced testicular volume and sperm concentration. The present study evaluates the number of germ and somatic cells present in human embryonic first-trimester gonads in relation to maternal smoking. METHODS: The study includes 24 human first-trimester testes, aged 37-68 days post-conception, obtained from women undergoing legal termination of pregnancy. A questionnaire was used to obtain information about smoking and drinking habits during pregnancy. Validated stereological methods were used to estimate gonadal cell numbers in histological sections. Results were also evaluated in the context of previously published data on ovaries from our laboratory. RESULTS: A significant reduction in the number of germ cells by 55% [95% confidence interval (CI) 74-21% reduction, P = 0.004] and somatic cells by 37% (95% CI 59-3%, P = 0.023) was observed in testes prenatally exposed to maternal cigarette smoking, compared with unexposed. The effect of maternal smoking was dose-dependent being higher in the heavy smokers and remained consistent after adjusting for possible confounders such as alcohol and coffee consumption (P = 0.002). The number of germ cells in embryonic gonads, irrespective of gender, was also significantly reduced by 41% (95% CI 58-19%, P = 0.001) in exposed versus non-exposed embryonic gonads. CONCLUSIONS: Prenatal exposure to maternal cigarette smoke reduces the number of germ and somatic cells in embryonic male and female gonads. This effect may have long-term consequences on the future fertility of exposed offspring. These findings may provide one potential cause of the reduced fertility observed during recent years.",
author = "Linn Mamsen and Lutterodt, {M C} and Andersen, {Elisabeth Anne Wreford} and Skouby, {S O} and S{\o}rensen, {K P} and Andersen, {C Yding} and Byskov, {A G}",
year = "2010",
month = nov,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1093/humrep/deq215",
language = "English",
volume = "25",
pages = "2755--61",
journal = "Human Reproduction",
issn = "0268-1161",
publisher = "Oxford Academic",
number = "11",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Cigarette smoking during early pregnancy reduces the number of embryonic germ and somatic cells

AU - Mamsen, Linn

AU - Lutterodt, M C

AU - Andersen, Elisabeth Anne Wreford

AU - Skouby, S O

AU - Sørensen, K P

AU - Andersen, C Yding

AU - Byskov, A G

PY - 2010/11/1

Y1 - 2010/11/1

N2 - BACKGROUND: Cigarette smoking during pregnancy is associated with negative reproductive consequences for male fetuses in adult life such as reduced testicular volume and sperm concentration. The present study evaluates the number of germ and somatic cells present in human embryonic first-trimester gonads in relation to maternal smoking. METHODS: The study includes 24 human first-trimester testes, aged 37-68 days post-conception, obtained from women undergoing legal termination of pregnancy. A questionnaire was used to obtain information about smoking and drinking habits during pregnancy. Validated stereological methods were used to estimate gonadal cell numbers in histological sections. Results were also evaluated in the context of previously published data on ovaries from our laboratory. RESULTS: A significant reduction in the number of germ cells by 55% [95% confidence interval (CI) 74-21% reduction, P = 0.004] and somatic cells by 37% (95% CI 59-3%, P = 0.023) was observed in testes prenatally exposed to maternal cigarette smoking, compared with unexposed. The effect of maternal smoking was dose-dependent being higher in the heavy smokers and remained consistent after adjusting for possible confounders such as alcohol and coffee consumption (P = 0.002). The number of germ cells in embryonic gonads, irrespective of gender, was also significantly reduced by 41% (95% CI 58-19%, P = 0.001) in exposed versus non-exposed embryonic gonads. CONCLUSIONS: Prenatal exposure to maternal cigarette smoke reduces the number of germ and somatic cells in embryonic male and female gonads. This effect may have long-term consequences on the future fertility of exposed offspring. These findings may provide one potential cause of the reduced fertility observed during recent years.

AB - BACKGROUND: Cigarette smoking during pregnancy is associated with negative reproductive consequences for male fetuses in adult life such as reduced testicular volume and sperm concentration. The present study evaluates the number of germ and somatic cells present in human embryonic first-trimester gonads in relation to maternal smoking. METHODS: The study includes 24 human first-trimester testes, aged 37-68 days post-conception, obtained from women undergoing legal termination of pregnancy. A questionnaire was used to obtain information about smoking and drinking habits during pregnancy. Validated stereological methods were used to estimate gonadal cell numbers in histological sections. Results were also evaluated in the context of previously published data on ovaries from our laboratory. RESULTS: A significant reduction in the number of germ cells by 55% [95% confidence interval (CI) 74-21% reduction, P = 0.004] and somatic cells by 37% (95% CI 59-3%, P = 0.023) was observed in testes prenatally exposed to maternal cigarette smoking, compared with unexposed. The effect of maternal smoking was dose-dependent being higher in the heavy smokers and remained consistent after adjusting for possible confounders such as alcohol and coffee consumption (P = 0.002). The number of germ cells in embryonic gonads, irrespective of gender, was also significantly reduced by 41% (95% CI 58-19%, P = 0.001) in exposed versus non-exposed embryonic gonads. CONCLUSIONS: Prenatal exposure to maternal cigarette smoke reduces the number of germ and somatic cells in embryonic male and female gonads. This effect may have long-term consequences on the future fertility of exposed offspring. These findings may provide one potential cause of the reduced fertility observed during recent years.

U2 - 10.1093/humrep/deq215

DO - 10.1093/humrep/deq215

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 20823112

VL - 25

SP - 2755

EP - 2761

JO - Human Reproduction

JF - Human Reproduction

SN - 0268-1161

IS - 11

ER -

ID: 32106739