| Copyright © 2009. National Academy of Sciences. All rights reserved. Terms of Use and Privacy Statement |
Below are the first 10 and last 10 pages of uncorrected machine-read text (when available) of this chapter, followed by the top 30 algorithmically extracted key phrases from the chapter as a whole.
Intended to provide our own search engines and external engines with highly rich, chapter-representative searchable text on the opening pages of each chapter.
Because it is UNCORRECTED material, please consider the following text as a useful but insufficient proxy for the authoritative book pages.
Do not use for reproduction, copying, pasting, or reading; exclusively for search engines.
OCR for page 87
APPENDIX D
COHORT ADJUSTMENT OF FERTILITY FOR ANTICHOLINERGIC TEST GROUP,
USING NO-CHEMICAL-TEST GROUP FOR COMPARISON
The following cohort evaluations of the anticholinergic test
group were made with the "no chemical test" (NCT) group for compari-
son. (See Results section on family relationships for details of
adjustments.) It should be cautioned that the NOT population is a
peculiar comparison group for this purpose. The results, shown in
Table~D-l, are included for completeness.
Births to men tested with anticholinergics were fewer than would
have been expected on the basis of the experience of the men in the
NOT group. However, the deficit exists even for early births
(before testing or not more than 1 year after test--births of
children conceived before testing) and was even larger for such
births than for later births. For the early period, the number of
births (282) was only 73% of the number expected (384.3~; the
corresponding percentages for 2-4 years after testing, 5-7 years
after testing, 8-10 years after testing, and more than 10 years
after testing were 91%, 99%, 90YO, and 109%. Therefore, the most
likely explanation of the difference is that the selection process
that assigned some volunteers to anticholinergic chemicals and
others to no active chemicals (NOT), by whatever criteria were used,
succeeded in distinguishing men who would have fewer children from
those who would have more.
Not only was the number of births in the anticholinergic group
low, but the male-to-female ratio among the children was low. It
was also low among children conceived before testing. No satis-
factory explanation is apparent, but the difference does not appear
to be attributable to drug exposure.
-87-
OCR for page 88
TABLE D-1
Numbers and Sex of Offspring of Men Exposed
to Anticholinergics (Total),
by Year Since Testing and Expected Values,
Adjusted for Age and Year of Testing (NCT Group as Reference)
No. Males
Time of Bi
Before testing to
1 year after testing 138
2-4 years after testing 198
5-7 years after testing 223
8-10 years after testing 192
11+ years after testing 208
2 or more years
Obs. Exp.
209.0
246.9
284.2
234.0
214.2
No. Females
b
Obs. Exp.
140
215
276
199
199
167.0
201.4
222.2
20S.7
160.3
Total
Obs. Exp.
282 384. 3
416
455.5
509 514.6
402 446.3
418 385 .1
after testing 821 979 .3 889 789 .6 1, 745 1, 801.5
a Total includes children of unknown sex.
b No-chemical-test (NCT) group used as standard for adjustment.
-88-
Representative terms from entire chapter:
children conceived