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Regina GRAZULEVICIENE, et al A population-based epidemiological study was undertaken to assess the prenatal
formaldehyde exposure effect on the incidence of low birth weight newborns in Kaunas
area in 1994. All women in childbirth were interviewed in person about their
sociodemographic characteristics, habits and reproductive and medical history. We
compared 244 cases of low birth weight newborns with 4,089 controls. The comparison
involved questionnaire information on 26 potential risk factors in low weight. We
employed multivariate logistic regression to adjust for potential variable effects of 12
selected low birth weight risk factors. The incidence of low birth weight newborns in
Kaunas was 56.2 per 1,000 live newborns. The crude risk ratio of low birth weight babies
among women subjected to formaldehyde exposure was 1.68 (95% CI 1.24-2.27) and to
TSP exposure was 1.59 (95% CI 1.13-2.20). The population attributable risk percentages
were 14.1% and 4.9%, respectively. Adjustment for age, occupation, education, marital
status, hypertonic disease, last pregnancy outcome, parents smoking, hazardous work,
formaldehyde, ozone and TSP exposure decreased the formaldehyde effect, OR 1.37 (95%
CI 0.90-2.09) and ozone effect, OR 1.44 (95% CI 0.47-4.41), and increased the TSP
effect, OR 2.58 (95% CI 1.34-4.99). The study results indicate that among the ambient air
pollutants examined TSP exposure had a statistically significant effect on low birth weight
risk. Insufficient control of other environmental risk factors could have influenced the
observed association
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