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dc.contributor.author Paput László
dc.contributor.author Bánhidy Ferenc
dc.contributor.author Czeizel Endre
dc.date.accessioned 2014-12-22T09:15:57Z
dc.date.available 2014-12-22T09:15:57Z
dc.date.issued 2011
dc.identifier.citation pagination=126-137; journalVolume=51; journalIssueNumber=3; journalTitle=CONGENITAL ANOMALIES;
dc.identifier.uri http://repo.lib.semmelweis.hu//handle/123456789/839
dc.identifier.uri doi:10.1111/j.1741-4520.2011.00319.x
dc.description.abstract The objective of this study was to evaluate the possible association of drug treatments in pregnant women with a higher risk of congenital abnormalities of the external ear, particularly microtia/anotia, in their children. The frequency of drug treatments was compared in the mothers of cases with isolated or multiple (syndromic) ear abnormalities and in the mothers of three different controls: controls matched to cases, all controls (these controls had no defects) and malformed controls in the population-based large dataset of the Hungarian Case-Control Surveillance of Congenital Abnormalities. There was no significantly higher use of any drug in the mothers of 354 cases with isolated external ear abnormalities than in the mothers of different controls. However, of 156 cases with multiple ear abnormalities, 11 had mothers with hydroxyethylrutosidea treatment and a characteristic pattern of congenital abnormalities was found in these children. Four cases with multiple ear abnormalities were born to epileptic mothers treated with valproate, phenytoin and polytherapy in two cases. Drug treatments are not important in the origin of isolated ear abnormalities. However, a higher risk of multiple ear abnormalities was found in children born to mothers with treatment of hydroxyethylrutosidea or antiepileptic drugs during pregnancy.
dc.relation.ispartof urn:issn:0914-3505
dc.title Association of drug treatments in pregnant women with the risk of external ear congenital abnormalities in their offspring: a population-based case-control study
dc.type Journal Article
dc.date.updated 2014-12-18T09:51:37Z
dc.language.rfc3066 en
dc.identifier.mtmt 1740298
dc.identifier.wos 000293975800004
dc.identifier.pubmed 21848996
dc.contributor.department SE/ÁOK/K/II. Sz. Szülészeti és Nőgyógyászati Klinika
dc.contributor.institution Semmelweis Egyetem


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