AI Article Synopsis

  • There is a lack of information about modifiable risk factors for congenital cardiovascular defects, but recent studies have identified genetic causes and growing evidence of environmental and maternal factors that could influence cardiac development.
  • Research highlights the benefits of periconceptional multivitamin or folic acid intake in reducing fetal cardiac disease risk, while also noting risks from maternal illnesses and specific drug and environmental exposures.
  • The text concludes with guidelines for prospective parents to potentially minimize the risk of major cardiac malformations, addresses pregnancy monitoring issues, and points out areas where more research is needed.

Article Abstract

Prevention of congenital cardiovascular defects has been hampered by a lack of information about modifiable risk factors for abnormalities in cardiac development. Over the past decade, there have been major breakthroughs in the understanding of inherited causes of congenital heart disease, including the identification of specific genetic abnormalities for some types of malformations. Although relatively less information has been available on noninherited modifiable factors that may have an adverse effect on the fetal heart, there is a growing body of epidemiological literature on this topic. This statement summarizes the currently available literature on potential fetal exposures that might alter risk for cardiovascular defects. Information is summarized for periconceptional multivitamin or folic acid intake, which may reduce the risk of cardiac disease in the fetus, and for additional types of potential exposures that may increase the risk, including maternal illnesses, maternal therapeutic and nontherapeutic drug exposures, environmental exposures, and paternal exposures. Information is highlighted regarding definitive risk factors such as maternal rubella; phenylketonuria; pregestational diabetes; exposure to thalidomide, vitamin A cogeners, or retinoids; and indomethacin tocolysis. Caveats regarding interpretation of possible exposure-outcome relationships from case-control studies are given because this type of study has provided most of the available information. Guidelines for prospective parents that could reduce the likelihood that their child will have a major cardiac malformation are given. Issues related to pregnancy monitoring are discussed. Knowledge gaps and future sources of new information on risk factors are described.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.106.183216DOI Listing

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