Muzi.com News Gallery Library Forum Celebrity Movies Chinastar Regions Channels
Set Home|Subscribe|Premium Home|MyMuzi

Home | Most-viewed Story | Most-viewed Coverage | Region | People | Time | Events | Business | Sports | Showbiz | IT | Politics | Military | Society | Education | Life | Health
  Muzi.com : Muzi (English) : News
  New step reported in untangling nature vs nurture
Last updated: 2009-02-02


New step reported in untangling nature vs nurture
2009-02-02

Category
Pregnancy
Nations
U.K.
U.S.
Category
Regions
Regions
Europe
North America
Pacific Rim
Source
(AP)

WASHINGTON - Untangling the mystery of inherited versus acquired traits may be a step closer. Arguments have been long and contentious over how much people inherit and how much they are influenced by their environments.

Researchers led by Frances Rice and Anita Thapar of Britain's Cardiff University focused on reports that smoking by the mother during pregnancy increased the chance of low birth weight and anti-social behavior in children.

The researchers studied 533 children who were genetically related to the mother that carried them and 195 who resulted from egg donations and thus were not genetically related to the mother. The children were aged from 4 to 10 and had been conceived at clinics in the United Kingdom and United States.

"What we have been able to confirm is that cigarette smoke in pregnancy does lower birth weight regardless of whether the mother and child are genetically related or not," Thapar said.

However, that was not the case with anti-social behavior in children, such as temper tantrums, fighting, bullying and disobedience.

They found that smoking during pregnancy was associated with higher levels of anti-social behavior in children who were genetically related to their mothers, but not in children of unrelated mothers.

"It is now clear that offspring anti-social behavior is more dependent on inherited factors passed from mother to child, as our group of children with mothers who smoked during pregnancy with no direct genetic link showed no increased signs of anti-social behavior," Thapar said.

"This suggests that other influencing factors such as the mother's personality traits and other inherited characteristics are at play during the development of a baby."

Such findings can help guide efforts to improve children's health, she said. For example, having the mother quit smoking is clearly important in improving a child's birth weight.

But it may be better to spend money on parenting skills after birth than on arguing that quitting smoking could improve children's behavior, she added.

The results were reported in Tuesday's edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Thapar said the researchers are planning further studies on attention deficit-hyperactivity disorder, emotional symptoms, health outcomes and stress.

"The average reader needs to be careful and clear about what sorts of prenatal interventions are going to be helpful for what sorts of child health outcomes, so that public health money is spent in an effective fashion," she said in an interview via e-mail.

___

On the Net:

PNAS: http://www.pnas.org

 Pregnancy  
  Profile News33GalleryLinks  
  Hundreds of thousands protest abortion reforms in Spain (2009-10-17)
  Pregnant? Get a flu shot -- but it may be a hassle (2009-09-29)
  Exercise During Pregnancy Keeps Newborn Size Normal (2009-09-23)
  Oxfam warns of inaction on child, mother mortality (2009-09-13)
  RU-486 abortion drug to be allowed in Italy (2009-08-01)
  Warning signs missed in baby dismemberment case (2009-07-28)
  Health Tip: How New Dads Can Prepare for Birth (2009-07-24)
  Generational shift for U.S. Hispanics on abortion (2009-07-14)
  Abortion pill used in a quarter of US abortions (2009-07-09)
  Call for autopsy to unravel tragedy of stillbirth (2009-03-02)
  Asthma May Start in the Womb (2009-02-14)
  New step reported in untangling nature vs nurture (2009-02-02)
  8 Is Enough: The Limits to Human Reproduction (2009-01-30)
  Future of abstinence-only funding is in limbo (2009-01-18)
  Mississippi has highest teen birth rate, CDC says (2009-01-07)
  Shaping good health as teens outgrow pediatrician (2009-01-06)
  Cell phone soap operas deliver safe-sex message (2009-01-03)
  Many Teens Don't Keep Virginity Pledges (2008-12-29)
  Vatican hits out at controversial abortion pill (2008-12-15)
  Vatican bioethics text says humans not mere cells (2008-12-12)
  Men Are Red-Faced, Women Greenish (2008-12-08)
  "Pregnant man" pregnant again (2008-11-13)
  Cut coffee intake for a healthier baby, says study (2008-11-04)
  Study links teen pregnancy to sexy TV shows (2008-11-03)
  Breast-Fed Baby May Mean Better Behaved Child (2008-10-29)


Stories Coverages

NewsGuide EventCityPeopleShowCompany 
 ENTSportsBIZEDULifeMilitaryPoliticsSocietyHealth 
[Afghan Terror War]: Obama expects support for more Afghanistan troops (09:08 11/25)


[2008 U.S. Layoff Crisis]: Weekly jobless claims drop below 500,000 (09:08 11/25)


[2008 U.K. Recession]: Britain is last major nation in recession (09:08 11/25)


[2009 GM Bankruptcy]: GM grapples with Saab, Opel futures (09:08 11/25)


[2009 Swine Flu]: Millions begin hajj amid swine flu fears (09:08 11/25)


[2009 Iran Election]: Iran detains scores of students, rights group says (09:08 11/25)


[Large Hadron Collider]: Big Bang machine achieves first particle collisions (09:09 11/25)

[2008 U.S. Real Estate Crisis]: October U.S. new home sales seen rising 2 percent (09:08 11/25)

[2008 U.S. Recession]: U.S. consumer spending rises, jobless claims tumble (09:08 11/25)

[Israel-Palestine]: Israel set to declare settlement limits: government sources (09:08 11/25)



Muzi.com

Muzi.com : About | Sitemap | Ads | Contact
All Rights Reserved 1994-2006 - All rights reserved.