Drug‐related teratogenic and pathologic causes of birth defects in a tertiary hospital in Southwestern Nigeria

Abstract Birth defects are important causes of neonatal morbidity and mortality. A good understanding of the etiology is a vital step toward developing improved treatment and preventive strategies. We conducted an audit of medical records of newborns with birth abnormalities in a tertiary hospital o...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Ifeanyichukwu Offor, Olufunsho Awodele, Kazeem A. Oshikoya
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2019-02-01
Series:Pharmacology Research & Perspectives
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/prp2.452
id doaj-144689dae6064adea10077c760aab074
record_format Article
spelling doaj-144689dae6064adea10077c760aab0742021-05-02T13:27:31ZengWileyPharmacology Research & Perspectives2052-17072019-02-0171n/an/a10.1002/prp2.452Drug‐related teratogenic and pathologic causes of birth defects in a tertiary hospital in Southwestern NigeriaIfeanyichukwu Offor0Olufunsho Awodele1Kazeem A. Oshikoya2Department of Pharmacology, Therapeutics & Toxicology College of Medicine University of Lagos Lagos NigeriaDepartment of Pharmacology, Therapeutics & Toxicology College of Medicine University of Lagos Lagos NigeriaDepartment of Pharmacology College of Medicine Lagos State University Lagos NigeriaAbstract Birth defects are important causes of neonatal morbidity and mortality. A good understanding of the etiology is a vital step toward developing improved treatment and preventive strategies. We conducted an audit of medical records of newborns with birth abnormalities in a tertiary hospital over a 10‐year period, using a Pro forma designed to collect information on obstetric history, antenatal history, sociodemographics of parents, and the type of birth abnormality. Of the 180 medical records reviewed, female babies were 92 (51.1%) and male babies were 86 (47.8%). The mean age of the fathers was 38.2 + 6.2, and mothers 31.8 + 4.9. Majority 115 (63.9%) of the mothers had records of acute illnesses, and 23 (12.8%) chronic illnesses during pregnancy. Unspecified febrile illness 44 (38.3%), malaria 40 (34.8%), typhoid 8 (6.9%), hypertension 13 (56.5%), pregestational diabetes 4 (17.4%), and HIV 3 (13.0%) were the commonest maternal pathologies. Most of the documented birth abnormalities were Down's syndrome 34 (15.2%); congenital hydrocephalus 32 (14.3%); acyanotic congenital heart defect 30 (13.4%); deformity of the digits 26 (11.6%); and ventricular septal defect 20 (8.9%). The prevalence of maternal pathologies calls for concern, as these may be implicated in birth defects, therefore should be further investigated in future studies.https://doi.org/10.1002/prp2.452birth abnormalitiesbirth defectscongenital anomaliesnewbornsteratogenteratogenic
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ifeanyichukwu Offor
Olufunsho Awodele
Kazeem A. Oshikoya
spellingShingle Ifeanyichukwu Offor
Olufunsho Awodele
Kazeem A. Oshikoya
Drug‐related teratogenic and pathologic causes of birth defects in a tertiary hospital in Southwestern Nigeria
Pharmacology Research & Perspectives
birth abnormalities
birth defects
congenital anomalies
newborns
teratogen
teratogenic
author_facet Ifeanyichukwu Offor
Olufunsho Awodele
Kazeem A. Oshikoya
author_sort Ifeanyichukwu Offor
title Drug‐related teratogenic and pathologic causes of birth defects in a tertiary hospital in Southwestern Nigeria
title_short Drug‐related teratogenic and pathologic causes of birth defects in a tertiary hospital in Southwestern Nigeria
title_full Drug‐related teratogenic and pathologic causes of birth defects in a tertiary hospital in Southwestern Nigeria
title_fullStr Drug‐related teratogenic and pathologic causes of birth defects in a tertiary hospital in Southwestern Nigeria
title_full_unstemmed Drug‐related teratogenic and pathologic causes of birth defects in a tertiary hospital in Southwestern Nigeria
title_sort drug‐related teratogenic and pathologic causes of birth defects in a tertiary hospital in southwestern nigeria
publisher Wiley
series Pharmacology Research & Perspectives
issn 2052-1707
publishDate 2019-02-01
description Abstract Birth defects are important causes of neonatal morbidity and mortality. A good understanding of the etiology is a vital step toward developing improved treatment and preventive strategies. We conducted an audit of medical records of newborns with birth abnormalities in a tertiary hospital over a 10‐year period, using a Pro forma designed to collect information on obstetric history, antenatal history, sociodemographics of parents, and the type of birth abnormality. Of the 180 medical records reviewed, female babies were 92 (51.1%) and male babies were 86 (47.8%). The mean age of the fathers was 38.2 + 6.2, and mothers 31.8 + 4.9. Majority 115 (63.9%) of the mothers had records of acute illnesses, and 23 (12.8%) chronic illnesses during pregnancy. Unspecified febrile illness 44 (38.3%), malaria 40 (34.8%), typhoid 8 (6.9%), hypertension 13 (56.5%), pregestational diabetes 4 (17.4%), and HIV 3 (13.0%) were the commonest maternal pathologies. Most of the documented birth abnormalities were Down's syndrome 34 (15.2%); congenital hydrocephalus 32 (14.3%); acyanotic congenital heart defect 30 (13.4%); deformity of the digits 26 (11.6%); and ventricular septal defect 20 (8.9%). The prevalence of maternal pathologies calls for concern, as these may be implicated in birth defects, therefore should be further investigated in future studies.
topic birth abnormalities
birth defects
congenital anomalies
newborns
teratogen
teratogenic
url https://doi.org/10.1002/prp2.452
work_keys_str_mv AT ifeanyichukwuoffor drugrelatedteratogenicandpathologiccausesofbirthdefectsinatertiaryhospitalinsouthwesternnigeria
AT olufunshoawodele drugrelatedteratogenicandpathologiccausesofbirthdefectsinatertiaryhospitalinsouthwesternnigeria
AT kazeemaoshikoya drugrelatedteratogenicandpathologiccausesofbirthdefectsinatertiaryhospitalinsouthwesternnigeria
_version_ 1721491132365406208