Prenatal tobacco and tobacco-cannabis co-exposure: Relationship with attention and memory in middle childhood.
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
7-2024
Identifier
DOI: 10.1016/j.ntt.2024.107371
Abstract
We examined associations between prenatal tobacco exposure (with and without cannabis exposure) and children's performance on laboratory measures of sustained attention, attentional set shifting, and working memory in middle childhood (9-12 years of child age). Participants were recruited in the first trimester of pregnancy and oversampled for prenatal tobacco exposure; with a smaller sample (n = 133; n = 34 non-substance exposed, n = 37 exposed to tobacco only, n = 62 co-exposed) invited (oversampled for co-exposure) to participate in the middle-childhood assessment (M age = 10.6, SD = 0.77; 68% Black, 20% Hispanic). Results for sustained attention indicated lower attention (percent hits) at the first epoch for tobacco only exposed compared to non-exposed and co-exposed; a trend (p = .07) towards increases in impulsive responding across time (a total of 8 epochs) for tobacco exposed (with and without cannabis) compared to non-exposed children; and a significant association between higher number of cigarettes in the first trimester and greater increases in impulsive responding across epochs. However, children prenatally exposed to tobacco (with and without cannabis) demonstrated greater short-term memory compared to children not prenatally exposed, and this difference was driven by higher scores for children prenatally co-exposed to tobacco and cannabis compared to those who were non-exposed. Overall, results suggest that prenatal tobacco exposure, especially in the first trimester, may increase risk for impulsive responding on tasks requiring sustained attention, and that co-use of cannabis did not exacerbate these associations. The higher short-term memory scores among children who were co-exposed compared to non-exposed are perplexing and need replication, particularly in studies with larger sample sizes and samples exposed only to cannabis to examine this more closely.
Journal Title
Neurotoxicology and teratology
Volume
104
First Page
107371
Last Page
107371
MeSH Keywords
Humans; Female; Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects; Pregnancy; Attention; Child; Male; Memory, Short-Term; Cannabis; Memory; Nicotiana; Impulsive Behavior
Keywords
Attention; Cannabis; Prenatal substance exposure; Set shifting; Tobacco; Working memory
Recommended Citation
Shisler S, Lee JK, Schlienz NJ, et al. Prenatal tobacco and tobacco-cannabis co-exposure: Relationship with attention and memory in middle childhood. Neurotoxicol Teratol. 2024;104:107371. doi:10.1016/j.ntt.2024.107371