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Comparative Study
. 1983 May;102(5):686-91.
doi: 10.1016/s0022-3476(83)80234-0.

Fetal and postnatal growth of children born to narcotic-dependent women

Comparative Study

Fetal and postnatal growth of children born to narcotic-dependent women

M H Lifschitz et al. J Pediatr. 1983 May.

Abstract

We studied the effect of heroin and methadone on birth length and 3-year stature of children of untreated heroin addicts (n = 22), women receiving methadone maintenance therapy (95% were polydrug users) (n = 21), and a drug-free comparison group (n = 28), after adjustment for biologic, demographic, and health variables. The mean birth lengths of both groups of drug-exposed infants were significantly below that of a comparison group; however, group means were similar after adjustment for sex, race, prenatal care, pregnancy weight gain, obstetrical risk, maternal education, and smoking. At 3 years of age the mean height was comparable for all groups. When adjusted for birth length, parental height, and smoking, the methadone group was significantly shorter than children exposed to heroin in utero, and the comparison group assumed an intermediate position. These data indicate that the effect of heroin and methadone on intrauterine growth cannot be differentiated from that of associated factors, and that postnatal growth of children exposed to narcotics during pregnancy is no more impaired than that of a high-risk comparison group. Children of all three groups deserve continued observation and efforts to improve their environment in order that their full potential might be achieved.

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