The study presents data on cardiovascular malformations in Bavarian livebirths, born between 1984 and 1991. Cases have been ascertained retrospectively by reviewing hospital records of all children being referred to a children's hospital up to 2 years of age. The classification scheme was based on abnormalities in developmental mechanisms. Among 984,570 livebirths, 7020 cases with structural congenital heart disease were identified. The birth prevalence was 7.1 per 1000 livebirths. Between 1984 and 1991, total prevalence increased from 5.9/10(3) to 8.0/10(3). Prevalence in males was 7.3/10(3) and in females 6.9/10(3). 78.1% of all heart defects were isolated, the remaining 21.9% were associated either with chromosomal abnormalities (9.6%), non-chromosomal syndromes (1.0%), or noncardiac malformations of other organ systems (11.3%). Total fatality rate was 12.0%, with two thirds of deaths occurring within a month of birth or the following month of life. Data were compared with those of the Baltimore-Washington Infant Study. This study presents for the first time regional data on birth prevalences of congenital heart defects in Germany. The classification scheme reduces the wide spectrum of phenotype cardiovascular defects to several pathogenetic groups. The defects in each group may be related to similar causal factors.
This study considers whether or not exposure to radioactive fallout from the Chernobyl accident led to an increased prevalence of congenital malformations in infants born in Bavaria, the German state with the highest levels of contamination after the accident. The odds ratios for major malformations after the accident relative to before were used as indicators for adverse health effects. Since measurements of caesium in soil showed that contamination was considerably higher in Southern Bavaria than in Northern Bavaria, the odds ratios were calculated for both regions separately. Analysis did not show a significant increase in any of the odds ratios of the selected malformations in Southern Bavaria as compared to Northern Bavaria. Consequently, this study provides no evidence that radiation from Chernobyl caused an increase in the birth prevalence of major congenital malformations.
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