Despite a growing focus on the hazards of prescription painkillers for newborns, drinking during pregnancy remains the nation’s leading preventable cause of birth defects and developmental disorders in children. Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorders (FASD) encompass a wide variety of neurobehavioral and central nervous system disabilities related to alcohol use during pregnancy, including, but not limited to, developmental delays, growth retardation speech disabilities, and poor social skills. The classic physical characteristics of FASD, such as small head size, wide-set eyes and a thin upper lip, are not always present.
September 9th is International Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorders Awareness Day. Kenneth Warren, acting director of the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, said in a prepared statement that “Almost 40 years have passed since we recognized that drinking during pregnancy can result in a wide range of disabilities for children, of which fetal alcohol syndrome (FAS) is the most severe. Yet up to 30 percent of women report drinking alcohol during pregnancy.”
NIAAA, in a brief history of the disorder, calls fetal alcohol syndrome the “most common known cause of mental retardation.” Tragically, the knowledge of alcohol as a teratogen responsible for birth defects was not widely recognized by the medical community in American until the 1970s, when a group of crusading physicians began reporting observations of clustered birth defects among alcoholic mothers. (French doctors were on to FAS in the 1960s). In short order, the Surgeon General issued an FAS advisory, the U.S. Congress passed laws requiring pregnancy warning labels on alcoholic beverages, and doctors began warning their pregnant patients about the hazards of heavy drinking while pregnant. Nonetheless, CDC studies have shown that 0.2 to 1.5 cases of fetal alcohol syndrome (FAS) occur for every 1,000 live births.
Not surprisingly, the NIAAA finds that the risk for teratogenic injury and the severity of injury “appear to increase with greater levels of alcohol consumption.” Facial features associated with FAS are linked to early fetal exposure, so it is possible that “an embryo may escape the injury necessary to develop the characteristic FAS face but receive sufficient injury later in development to exhibit all the FAS-associated CNS and neurobehavioral deficits.”
Organ abnormalities are also characteristic of early exposure, while growth deficits are more likely the result of alcohol exposure later in pregnancy. Binge drinking—high peak dose drinking—is especially troublesome, as it has a great negative impact than low-dose steady drinking. But no period is risk-free. Genetic and environmental factors are plausibly invoked as contributors, but nobody knows what they are at present.
The disabilities caused by FASD often linger throughout adulthood, burdening families with anguish and heavy medical costs. “The message is simple, not just on Sept. 9, but every day,” says Warren. “There is no known safe level of drinking while pregnant. Women who are, who may be, or who are trying to become pregnant, should not drink alcohol.”
Graphics Credit: http://edmontonfetalalcoholnetwork.org/
It seems odd that it took so long for FAS to be recognized, given that people have been drinking for 5,000 years.
ReplyDeleteDid people just not notice the effects of alcohol in the old days, because babies were also being harmed by all kinds of other things like infections and malnutrition...?
Characterized as a modern disorder in the 1960s, but warnings about drinking and pregnancy go back to the Romans, the Greeks, other ancient civilizations. A British doctor in the late 1800s noted a high rate of stillbirths among alcoholic women.
ReplyDeleteIt is definitely great to be able to tap into the seemingly endless repertoire of information at our disposal these days in order to combat some of these conditions that are avoidable. It does seem, however, quite ridiculous that there are still cases occurring today--especially in the educated and developed world where the internet is readily available almost everywhere.
ReplyDeleteFAS is such a tragic condition because the child can't prevent it! Moms--and everyone else alike--spread the word to anyone you know about preventing this from happening! It's so important to your childrens' futures!
ReplyDeleteIt is a shame that expectant and nursing mothers will continue to drink despite how terrible it is for their baby. It's not hard to stop drinking alcohol, you just have to choose to do it.
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