In-utero exposure to indoor air pollution or tobacco smoke and cognitive development in a South African birth cohort study — Grace M. Christensen (2022) | RDL Network
In-utero exposure to indoor air pollution or tobacco smoke and cognitive development in a South African birth cohort study
Article 2022 en
Authors
GC
Grace M. Christensen
CR
Claire Rowcliffe
JC
Junyu Chen
Abstract
1 min read
We found an association of prenatal exposure to indoor air pollution (PM<sub>10</sub>) and tobacco smoke on neurodevelopment at two years of age, particularly cognition, language, and adaptive behavior. Further research is needed to understand underlying biological mediators.
Claire Rowcliffe, Junyu Chen, Aneesa Vanker, Nastassja Koen, Dan Joseph Stein, Meaghan J. Jones, Nicole Gladish, Michael S. Kobor, Kirsten A. Donald, Catherine J. Wedderburn, Heather J. Zar, Anke Huels
Dakotah Feil, Sarina Abrishamcar, Grace M. Christensen, Aneesa Vanker, Nastassja Koen, Anna Kilanowski, Nadia Hoffman, Catherine J. Wedderburn, Kirsten A. Donald, Michael S. Kobor, Heather J. Zar, Dan Joseph Stein, Anke Hüls
Dakotah Feil, Grace M. Christensen, Sarina Abrishamcar, Aneesa Vanker, Nastassja Koen, Anna Kilanowski, Nadia Hoffman, Kirsten A. Donald, Michael S. Kobor, Heather J. Zar, Dan Joseph Stein, Anke Hüls
Dakotah Feil, Sarina Abrishamcar, Grace M. Christensen, Aneesa Vanker, Nastassja Koen, Anna Kilanowski, Nadia Hoffman, Catherine J. Wedderburn, Kirsten A. Donald, Michael S. Kobor, Heather J. Zar, Dan Joseph Stein, Anke Hüls
Sarina Abrishamcar, Junyu Chen, Dakotah Feil, Anna Kilanowski, Nastassja Koen, Aneesa Vanker, Catherine J. Wedderburn, Kirsten A. Donald, Heather J. Zar, Dan Joseph Stein, Anke Hüls
Discussion(0)
No comments yet. Be the first to comment.