Forums > Parents with PreemiesPage 1 2 3by: Mommy to an angel and twi

breastfeeding & cigs.

posted 8th Oct
I was just wondering if smoking cigarettes while breastfeeding is bad? If so, what are the issues with it? i need to know!!!!
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I have 2 kids & 1 angel baby & live in Blue Springs, Missouri
posted 8th Oct
Quoting Mommy to an angel and twi:“ I was just wondering if smoking cigarettes while breastfeeding is bad? If so, what are the issues with it? i need to know!!!!”

I was told to do it right afterwards.
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I have 2 kids & 4 angel babies & live in Iowa
posted 8th Oct
Most breastfeeding experts agree that smoking and breastfeeding is better than not breastfeeding at all...but 2nd and 3rd hand smoke is a BIG risk factor. Did you quit while you were pregnant? There is a huge increase in the chance of SIDS, I know.
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I have 2 kids & 3 angel babies & live in League City, Texas
posted 8th Oct
As far as i heard better not to smoke but its not contraindiacted, its just encouraged. Basically if it comes down to you smoking and breastfeeding or not then yea bf
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I'm due with triplets June 2nd, have 3 kids & live in Beverly Hills, California
posted 8th Oct
Its my personal opinion that if you've made it through your pregnancy without smoking (and I sure hope you have!) you should wait until you're done breastfeeding to start smoking again.
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I have 1 child & 1 angel baby & live in California
posted 8th Oct
yes. i don't do it. and i've heard if you do, you need at least 95 mins for the nicottine levels to leave your system before BFing again so basically BF, smoke, wait a while, BF again.
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I have 1 child & live in North Carolina
posted 8th Oct
Quoting Mommy to an angel and twi:“ I was just wondering if smoking cigarettes while breastfeeding is bad? If so, what are the issues with it? i need to know!!!!”

no, it's not bad. i smoke WHILE i breastfeed.  
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I have 1 child & live in Georgia
posted 8th Oct
i am prolly goin to get shit for this and as will you for posting it but
i smoke and breast feed, i try to make sure i smoke right atfer he eats. so its aleast 2-4 hours before his next feed, his pedi said that its is "safe" if you wat a hour or so. because he is only getting the nicotine, not any of the other stuff. even tho she would rather me not smoke and not breast feed., but some times i slip and smoke bfore

its better to smoke and breast feed
then to
smoke and formula feed IMO and what his pedi said
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I have 1 child & 3 angel babies & live in Michigan
posted 8th Oct
breastfeeding and smoking is STILL better than formula feeding.

BUT, I still don't recommend it.
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I have 1 child & live in Georgia
posted 8th Oct
yeah, i just wasnt sure if it was okay if i started up again since my twins were born or if it wasnt such a good idea! Thanks guys!
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I have 2 kids & 1 angel baby & live in Blue Springs, Missouri
posted 8th Oct
Quoting dedicatedlife {TNTC}:“ yes. i don't do it. and i've heard if you do, you need at least 95 mins for the nicottine levels to leave your system before BFing again so basically BF, smoke, wait a while, BF again.”


that would prob. be different depending on the variables involved. how much mama weighs and how much is smoked, etc... either way the nicotine may get to the baby. i wouldn't do it.
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I have 1 child & live in Wisconsin
posted 8th Oct
"lung cancer kills more women than breast, uterine, and ovarian cancers combined."http://www.hhs.gov/asl/testify/t020514.html

You have to make the call for you and your babies health. If you can stop smoking it's better for your children. I personally wouldn't smoke for the sake of the children. If it can potentially give you lung cancer what will all that tobacco do to your infants? Also I've even heard that 3rd hand smoke is believed to be more dangerous then once thought. Like I said you have to make the call in your families health and what is more important to you.
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I have 1 child & live in Washington
posted 9th Oct
Quoting Mommy to an angel and twi:“ yeah, i just wasnt sure if it was okay if i started up again since my twins were born or if it wasnt such a good idea! Thanks guys!”




is that a serious question? why on earth would it be ok to start again??
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I have 3 kids & live in Ohio
posted 9th Oct
Quoting MommytoKenz,Lily,&Harlow:“ ”


right? if you can make through 9 month...you CAN quit!! its not good for you or the babies!!!

I got this info off a website:




jQuery.noConflict(); //make jQuery play well w/ others, like Prototype! jQuery(function(){ var htmlStr = jQuery("#addthiscontent").html(); jQuery(".subhead:first").css("width", "300px").css("float", "left") jQuery(".subhead:first").after("


HOW SMOKING HARMS BABIES


Topics you will find:
7 Ways Smoking Harms Babies in the Womb
4 Ways Smoking Increases the Risk of SIDS
Exposure to Kids
How Smoking Hampers Mothering
Health Warnings on Cigarette Packs
Resources to Help Stop Smoking


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7 WAYS SMOKING HARMS BABIES IN THE WOMB
document.write(''); Consider the physiological effects of smoking on yourself and your baby, especially the increased risk of SIDS. 1. It retards growth. Smoking stunts the growth of the developing fetus. Nicotine narrows the uterine blood vessels, thus reducing blood flow to the baby. Also, smoking puts the oxygen blocker carbon monoxide into the blood that nourishes baby. Carbon monoxide robs oxygen from the baby. Levels of carbon monoxide have been measured at six to seven times higher in the blood of pregnant mothers who smoke. Carbon monoxide levels in cigarette smoke resembles that of automobile exhaust. Smoking thus reduces the oxygen supply to the infant in the womb, in effect slightly smothering the defenseless baby. 2. It retards brain development. Nicotine has been shown experimentally to retard fetal brain growth in animals. The developing brain is particularly vulnerable to low levels of oxygen, and immaturity of the brain center that regulates breathing could contribute to SIDS. Recent studies of smoking mothers' infants who died in the womb provide insight into how exposure to smoking may injure developing brains. Besides causing neurological damage by lessening oxygen supply to the developing brain, nicotine may be poisonous to area of the brain directly involved with heart and breathing functions and arousal from sleep. Also, infants whose mothers smoked during pregnancy are more likely to have diminished arousal from sleep in response to a low-oxygen challenge. 3. It impairs breathing after birth. Mothers who smoked at least half a pack of cigarettes a day during pregnancy are nearly three times more likely to have babies with mucus-blocked airways or episodes of apnea. 4. It increases the likelihood of prematurity. The risk of SIDS goes up as baby's birthweight and gestational age go down. Babies of smoking mothers end up being smaller (due to intrauterine growth retardation), and smoking increases the risk of complications of pregnancy that lead to prematurity: premature rupture of fetal membranes, placenta previa, and premature detachment of the placenta. 5. Passive smoking also harms the baby. When expectant mothers are exposed to smoke from other people's cigarettes, their babies are also exposed. One study showed that a pregnant woman's exposure to smoke for at least two hours a day doubled her risk of delivering a low birthweight baby. While older studies claimed no increased SIDS risk if the father smoked, a newer study reports a higher risk of SIDS if the father smokes. Demand that your husband and co-workers respect the life inside your womb. If your job requires working in a smoke-contaminated environment while pregnant, know that this is a proven health hazard to your baby and is grounds for reassignment to a baby-healthy environment. As a testimony to the wisdom of the body, many mothers find they have an aversion to being around cigarette and cigar smoke (and to drinking alcohol) while pregnant. Listen to the warnings of your body and hundreds of medical studies: Don't expose yourself and your baby to smoke while pregnant. Legally, you have the right to work in a smoke-free environment. 6. Smoking harms mothers and babies.
  • Increases infertility (smoking could account for ten percent of infertility problems in mothers) Increases risk of ectopic pregnancy Increases risk of placenta previa Increases risk of premature separation of the placenta Increases risk of placental abnormalities (known as "smoker's placenta") Increases risk of problem pregnancies, e.g., pre-eclampsia Increases risk of prematurity under intrauterine growth retardation Increases risk of the newborn dying at birth by twenty percent; thirty-five percent if mother smokes more than thirty-five cigarettes a day Increases risk of respiratory infections in infant Increases risk of SIDS by two to five times

LONG-TERM EFFECTS OF MATERNAL SMOKING AND CHILDRENS' BRAIN DEVELOPMENTStudies have shown the following correlations between mothers who smoke during pregnancy, especially heavy smoking (greater than one pack a day) and the development of their children. Children of mothers who smoked during pregnancy are more likely to show:
  • Decreased newborn Apgar scores (if smoking more than one pack a day) Decreased mental performance scoring at age one year Decreased academic performance scores in the school-age child Reduced I.Q. Shorter stature (by one to two centimeters) Smaller head circumference as infants Increased learning difficulties (children were 25 percent more likely to have learning disabilities if their mother smoked greater than 20 cigarettes a day) Increased hyperactivity Increased behavioral problems
Studies on the long-term effects of smoking during pregnancy on children's mental and physical development did not all agree. Some showed slight or no adverse effects. The above conclusions represent the general consensus of outcome studies.

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4 WAYS SMOKING INCREASES THE RISK OF SIDS Suppose you were about to take your baby into a room when you noticed a sign that read: Warning, this room contains poisonous gases of around 4,000 chemicals, some of which have been linked to cancer and lung damage, and are especially harmful to the breathing passages of young infants. "I certainly wouldn't take my baby into there," you conclude. Yet, that's exactly what happens when you take your baby into a room frequented by smokers. "But we always sit in a non-smoking area of public places," you add. This is helpful, but not enough. Having a "Non-smoking area" is like trying to chlorinate half a swimming pool. Pollutants travel through the air. "But I only smoke outside," you rationalize. Also helpful, but not enough. Smoke sticks to clothing and hair. When your baby nestles on your shoulder with his nose on your smoke-contaminated clothing and near your hair your baby's inhales pollutants. Parents have a right to fume over the poisonous gases that come from a cigarette or cigar burning in their baby's presence. Among the many toxic ingredients in cigarette smoke are the oxygen blocker carbon monoxide; benzene, a potential carcinogen; ammonia; hydrogen cyanide, which is used in making rat poison; formaldehyde; and of course, nicotine. Here are some of the effects. 1. Bothers little breathers. Any poison that deprives the infant of oxygen increases the risk of SIDS. Cigarette and cigar smoke deprive the infant of oxygen, which could interfere with development of the brain center that controls breathing. When the body is chronically deprived of oxygen, it tries to compensate by increasing the production of a chemical that facilitates oxygen transport, called 2,3 DPG. Levels of this substance have been found to be higher in children exposed to smoke, indicating they are trying to compensate for chronic oxygen deprivation. Cotinine, the main chemical produced when the body breaks down nicotine, has been found in the blood of babies exposed to passive smoke, proof that harmful chemicals enter babies' bodies from cigarette or cigar smoke in the environment. Nicotine, cotinine, thiocyanate, and another nicotine byproduct, have also been found in the blood of breastfeeding infants whose mothers smoke. (Whether these poisons enter the baby via mothers' milk or secondhand smoke is uncertain.) The blood levels of the nicotine byproducts were proportional to the number of cigarettes smoked by the mother. 2. Hurts little hearts. Besides being harmful to growing lungs, smoking may harm growing hearts. Levels of HDL, best known as the "good cholesterol" that may protect from heart disease, was lower in children of smoking parents. In addition, researchers have found high levels of cotinine in the fluid around the hearts of some infants who died of SIDS. Smoke toxins have also been implicated in depressing the automatic regulation of heart rates. 3. Injures little brains. Previously, I mentioned how smoking prenatally may retard the growth of baby's brain. It appears that the brain of a baby of a smoker doesn't fare much better outside the womb. In experiments, nicotine acts as a breathing stimulant to animals that are breathing normally. But as soon as their breathing is compromised, nicotine seems to depress the compensatory breathing control mechanisms in the brain that should return the animal's breathing to normal. It is possible that a smoking mother's infant, whose breathing is already compromised, say, from a cold, could fail to restart breathing because of the effects of nicotine. 4. Blocks little noses. The nasal passages of babies are particularly sensitive to smoke and other irritants and allergens. Also, some babies are obligate nose breathers; meaning they insist on breathing through their nose and, unlike adults, do not switch to mouth breathing if their noses are blocked. Nasal passages that are stuffy and blocked because of smoke could compromise baby's breathing. The lower respiratory tract is lined with tiny filaments, called "cilia," which wave back and forth to clear mucous from the airway passages and help keep them open. Smoke paralyzes these cilia, leaving the increased mucous that is secreted during colds and allergies to clog the air passages. Children of smoking parents have two to three times more doctor visits because of respiratory infections. Respiratory viruses are frequently found at postmortem examination of SIDS infants. Respiratory infections within two weeks of death have been implicated in setting up a baby for SIDS.
DEADLY STATS
  • If both parents smoke, baby's SIDS risk is 3˝ times greater than if neither parent smokes. If mother smokes, but father doesn't, baby's risk is 2 times greater. If father smokes, but mother doesn't, baby's risk is 1˝ times greater.


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quote
I have 2 kids & 3 angel babies & live in League City, Texas
posted 9th Oct
It isn't good for the baby, but I had googled it for a friend of mine who can't work google Lol

They say that it takes 3 hours before the nicotene is out of your system, have a designated jacket to wear outside, and wash your hands//face before you hold your baby.
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I have 2 kids & live in Iowa
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