Low birth weight effects linger in adults

Published: July 9, 2009 at 10:31 PM

SEATTLE, July 9 (UPI) -- Infants who weigh less than 5-and-a-half pounds at birth may have respiratory problems that persist well into adulthood, U.S. researchers said.

"We report a previously unrecognized excess risk of hospitalization for respiratory illnesses in young adults with a history of low birth weight," lead researcher Dr. Eric C. Walter of the University of Washington said in a statement. "Our findings suggest that not only are (low birth weight) survivors at increased risk for long-term respiratory disorders, but that these disorders are clinically significant and associated with increased health care utilization."

The researchers used Washington state hospitalization records dating from Jan. 1, 1998, to Dec. 31, 2007.

The study, published in the American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine, found people with very low birth weight of less than 3.3 pounds or moderately low birth weight -- 3.3 to 5.5 pounds -- had an 83 percent and 34 percent higher risk, respectively, of hospitalization for respiratory diagnoses.

Those who had a history of very low birth weight had twice the risk of being hospitalized for asthma or respiratory infection and 2.6 times the risk of respiratory failure requiring mechanical ventilation.

Based on the findings, low birth weight may account for more than 22,000 adult hospitalizations per year, with charges in excess of $225 million per year, Walter said.

© 2009 United Press International, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Order reprints



Additional News Stories
Your Daily Horoscope (38 min)
The almanac
NBA: LA Lakers 110, New Orleans 99
NHL: Los Angeles Kings 4, Anaheim 3
NHL: San Jose 5, Ottawa 2
NBA: Miami 107, Portland 100
Singing protesters rile sheriff
fark
Unbelievable pics of how a coyote managed to survive being hit by a Honda, lucky for him it wasn't...
Google manages to pick 3rd worst option out of 2
"In 1872, the NY Times published two dozen letters on the subject of scrapple, a steampunk prototype...
Tiki-tour trail terminates in tree
Photoshop this Patriot's Act
Former SETI@home "God" revealed as high school technology department head who installed program...