Journal article

Pre-pubertal smoke exposure of fathers and increased risk of offspring asthma: a possible transgenerational effect

J Liu, G Bowatte, J Pham, JL Perret, JW Holloway, AJ Lowe, JA Burgess, C Svanes, P Thomas, MA Russell, B Erbas, CJ Lodge, D Martino, GD Mishra, MJ Abramson, EH Walters, SC Dharmage, DS Bui

European Respiratory Journal | EUROPEAN RESPIRATORY SOC JOURNALS LTD | Published : 2022

Abstract

Asthma is a major non-communicable disease in children [1]. Pre- and post-natal exposure to tobacco smoke are major risk factors for childhood asthma [1, 2]. While there is evidence that mothers' intrauterine exposure to second-hand smoke is associated with asthma in the offspring [3, 4], there is also increasing concern that fathers who start smoking before completing puberty may elevate the risk of asthma in their offspring [4, 5]. The suggestion is that this may be as a result of epigenetic changes to sperm precursor (stem) cells during gonadal maturation [4, 5]. However, this is rather speculative, and as yet little is actually known about whether fathers' passive smoke exposure througho..

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