Study pinpoints ectopic smoke link
Scientists have discovered why women who smoke have a higher risk of developing ectopic pregnancies. Researchers have found that female smokers who have an ectopic pregnancy have raised levels of a protein - called - - in their Fallopian tubes, which increases the risk of an egg implanting outside the womb. The team at the University believe that a chemical in cigarette smoke - called cotinine - triggers a chain reaction that increases levels in the Fallopian tubes. Around one in 50 pregnancies in the western world is ectopic, with over 300,000 ectopic pregnancies in the is believed to prevent the muscles in the tube walls from contracting, hindering the transfer of the egg to the womb. The study found that women who smoked and developed ectopic pregnancy had double the levels of this protein in their Fallopian tubes compared to non-smokers who had previously had a healthy pregnancy. While it may be easy to understand why inhalation of smoke the lungs, this shows that components of cigarette smoke also enter the blood stream and affect seemingly unconnected parts of the body like the reproductive tract. Dr Andrew Horne Clinical Scientist at the University's Reproductive Developmental Sciences Division - Maternal mortality.

