Study: Fathers-to-be impact children's health, too

Study: Fathers-to-be impact children's health, too

(Lopolo/Shutterstock)


Save Story
Leer en español

Estimated read time: 4-5 minutes

This archived news story is available only for your personal, non-commercial use. Information in the story may be outdated or superseded by additional information. Reading or replaying the story in its archived form does not constitute a republication of the story.

ATLANTA, Georgia (CNN) — Mothers-to-be have long been warned about drinking alcohol and smoking cigarettes, but men who are trying to have children may want to be just as careful. A growing body of research suggests that what fathers are exposed to in the environment can have lasting effects on their children's health.

A new report details how various aspects of the father's life — from alcohol consumption and smoking to age and nutritional status — can influence the offspring's risk of developing fetal alcohol syndrome, birth defects, autism and other conditions.

The idea that maternal lifestyle and health can influence the fetus has been appreciated for a while, "but nobody thought about fathers because it did not seem there was a logical link between the two," said Joanna B. Kitlinska, associate professor of biochemistry and molecular and cellular biology at Georgetown University Medical Center. Kitlinska was part of the group of Georgetown researchers who wrote the article reviewing previous research, which was published Monday in the American Journal of Stem Cells.

Fathers can increase fetal alcohol risk

In the case of fetal alcohol syndrome, it makes sense that women should not consume alcohol during pregnancy because it crosses the placenta and can result in low birth weight, poor coordination, delays in cognitive development and heart defects.

However, Kitlinska and her colleagues point to research over the past decade suggesting that fathers who regularly consume alcohol before conceiving increase their child's risk of having fetal alcohol syndrome, even if the mother does not drink before or during pregnancy. Heavy drinking or alcoholism among fathers has been implicated in as many as 75 percent of affected children.

Related

When men drink alcohol, smoke or engage in other behaviors, it seems to leave a mark on their offspring through epigenetics, the biological processes that tweak genes without mutating them. Alcohol consumption has been associated with an epigenetic change called methylation, which adds to or takes away a molecule called a methyl group that sits on DNA and influences whether genes are active or silent.

Obesity

Another aspect of paternal health that could have a lasting effect on children, and possibly even on subsequent generations, is obesity. Research has linked obesity among fathers with the addition of methyl groups to genes that play roles in growth and metabolism; the methyl groups were added to genes both in sperm cells and in the offspring.

It is still not clear which genes in particular are affected by shifts in patterns of methylation, Kitlinska said. In many cases, methyl groups -- and epigenetic changes in general -- that the embryo inherits from the father or mother are "wiped out" as the embryo develops, but certain genes can be imprinted, meaning they preserve the changes through gestation and into childhood.

Father's age

Methylation could help explain the longstanding mystery of why older men are more likely to have children with autism, schizophrenia and heart defects.

One study found that people diagnosed with schizophrenia were twice as likely to have been born to fathers between 45 and 49 years old and three times more likely to have been born to fathers 50 and older, compared with fathers younger than 25, although the risks of children of older dads were still low. Another study found that children with autism were nearly six times as likely to have fathers who were 40 or older when they were conceived than fathers who were younger than 30 years of age.

Nevertheless, mutations in sperm DNA, which accumulate with age, could also play an important role in increasing the risk of these conditions among offspring. "My feeling, although nothing has been proven, is that the association [with paternal age] is more due to genetic changes," Kitlinska said.

Related

Increasing chances of healthy children

Research suggests that future fathers can increase the chances of having healthy children through "common sense recommendations" such as not drinking alcohol in excess or smoking, Kitlinska said.

When it comes to paternal age, the rise in risk is gradual. Studies of rates of schizophrenia and autism found that they inched up with every five-year increase in the father's age at the time of conception.

"With everything, there is a balance in life, because biology tells us to have children earlier, but the social and economic factors promote having children later," Kitlinska said.

For better or worse, this area of research is underscoring the important role that fathers play in the health of their children even from the earliest moments of development.

"The dad has to assume some of the responsibility, at least 50 percent of the birth of a healthy child," Krawetz said.

Copyright 2016 Cable News Network. Turner Broadcasting System, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

Related links

Most recent Family stories

Related topics

Family
Carina Storrs

    STAY IN THE KNOW

    Get informative articles and interesting stories delivered to your inbox weekly. Subscribe to the KSL.com Trending 5.
    By subscribing, you acknowledge and agree to KSL.com's Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.

    KSL Weather Forecast