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Fetal Alcohol SyndromeIn
1973, Jones and Smith coined the term "fetal alcohol syndrome" (FAS) to
describe a pattern of abnormalities observed in children born to alcoholic
mothers. It was originally postulated that malnutrition might be
responsible for these defects. However, the pattern of malformation associated
with FAS is not seen in children born to malnourished women, and alcohol has
been found to be acutely toxic to the fetus independently of the effects of
malnutrition.
Criteria for defining FAS were standardized by the Fetal
Alcohol Study Group of the Research Society on Alcoholism in 1980, and
modifications were proposed in 1989 by Sokol and Clarren. The proposed criteria
are 1) prenatal and/or postnatal growth retardation (weight and/or length below
the 10th percentile); 2) central nervous system involvement, including
neurological abnormalities, developmental delays, behavioral dysfunction,
intellectual impairment, and skull or brain malformations; and 3) a
characteristic face with short palpebral fissures (eye openings), a thin upper
lip, and an elongated, flattened midface and philtrum (the groove in the middle
of the upper lip).
Sokol and Clarren suggested the term
"alcohol-related birth defects" (ARBD) to describe anatomic or
functional abnormalities attributed to prenatal alcohol exposure. The
term "possible fetal alcohol effect(s)" (FAE) indicates that alcohol is being
considered as one of the possible causes of a patient's birth defects. In the
view of Sokol and Clarren, the frequent use of this term to indicate a birth
defect judged milder than FAS is incorrect, although others continue to use it
that way.
Mental handicaps and hyperactivity are probably the most
debilitating aspects of FAS, and prenatal alcohol exposure is one of the
leading known causes of mental retardation in the Western World. Problems with
learning, attention, memory, and problem solving are common, along with
incoordination, impulsiveness, and speech and hearing impairment. Deficits in
learning skills persist even into adolescence and adulthood.
It is
generally accepted that the adverse effects of prenatal alcohol exposure exist
along a continuum, with the complete FAS syndrome at one end of the
spectrum and incomplete features of FAS, including more subtle
cognitive-behavioral deficits, on the other. Thus, infants with suboptimal
neurobehavioral responses may later exhibit subtle deficits in such aspects of
daily life as judgment, problem solving, and memory.
Catchment data on
the incidence of FAS are derived from the Birth Defects Monitoring Program of
the Centers for Disease Control (CDC). Based on data from 1,500 hospitals, CDC
reported the nationwide incidence of FAS to be 0.3-0.9 per 10,000 births
(excluding Native Americans). In contrast, Abel and Sokol surveyed 19 published
epidemiologic studies worldwide. The overall rate from all studies was 1.9
cases per 1,000 live births. The average for retrospective studies surveyed by
Abel and Sokol was 2.9 per 1,000, compared with 1.1 per 1,000 for prospective
studies. Most reported cases in the United States came from study sites where
the mothers were black or Native American and of low socioeconomic status. The
estimated rate at these sites was 2.6 per 1,000 compared with 0.6 per 1,000
from other study sites, where the mothers were predominantly white and of
middle socioeconomic status.
According to the CDC catchment study,
incidences of FAS per 10,000 total births for different ethnic groups were as
follows: Asians 0.3, Hispanics 0.8, whites 0.9, blacks 6.0, and Native
Americans 29.9. Because of differences in study design, the ratios among the
various ethnic groups derived from the CDC catchment data cannot be used to
estimate FAS incidence for different ethnic groups as obtained from prospective
and retrospective studies. Among Native Americans, the incidence of FAS varies
among different cultures. Health units serving principally Navajo and Pueblo
tribes report an FAS prevalence similar to that for the overall U.S.
population, while for Southwest Plains Indians, a much higher prevalence was
reported (1 case per 102 live births). Several factors, such as cultural
influences, patterns of alcohol consumption, nutrition, and metabolic
differences have been suggested to play a role in this difference.
In
the case of blacks, the risk of FAS remains about sevenfold higher than for
whites, even after adjustment for the frequency of maternal alcohol
intake, occurrence of chronic alcohol problems, and parity (number
of children borne). This raises the question of some kind of genetic
susceptibility, the nature of which is unknown.
Apart from
epidemiology, the key questions in FAS research include, How much alcohol is
too much? and, When is the fetus at greatest risk? The major problem in
addressing these questions is the lack of a specific physiological measure that
accurately reflects alcohol consumption. There is no biological marker
currently available to measure alcohol intake, and self-reports of alcohol
consumption may be unreliable, perhaps especially so during pregnancy.
Morrow-Tlucak and colleagues found that women with more-serious
alcohol-related problems are those more likely to underreport their
alcohol consumption when interviewed during pregnancy.
While it is
apparent that children who meet the criteria for FAS are born only to those
mothers who consume large amounts of alcohol during pregnancy, studies
have reported neurobehavioral deficits and intrauterine growth retardation in
infants born to mothers who reported themselves to be moderate alcohol
consumers during pregnancy. In a prospective study of 359 newborns, Ernhart and
colleagues found a trend toward increasing head and facial abnormalities with
increasing embryonic alcohol exposure. An effect occurred at even the lowest
reported levels of alcohol intake, so that a clear threshold (minimum amount of
alcohol to produce an effect) could not be defined.
Given the range of
defects that result from prenatal alcohol exposure, the search for an overall
threshold for fetal risk may be unreasonable. Instead, each abnormal outcome in
brain structure and function and growth might have its own dose-response
relationship. Animal research has shown that different profiles of
alcohol-related birth defects are related to critical periods for specific
aspects of fetal development. Thus, heavy alcohol consumption throughout
pregnancy results in a wide variety of effects characteristic of FAS, while
episodic binge drinking at high le vels results in partial expression of
the syndrome, with the abnormalities being unique to the period of exposure.
Vulnerability of individual organ systems may be greatest at the time of their
most rapid cell division.
An important strategy for preventing
alcohol-related birth defects is the development of better screening techniques
to identify women at high risk for heavy alcohol consumption throughout their
pregnancy. Currently available laboratory tests for detecting biochemical
markers of heavy drinking are not as sensitive as self-report screening
instruments, whereas the latter are complicated by denial.
A possible
way to overcome denial might be to inquire about past, rather than present,
drinking. This is suggested by the results of a study showing that self-reports
of first trimester drinking made at the seventh month of pregnancy are often
higher than those made at the fourth month. The researchers suggested that
women may feel safer reporting higher levels of drinking farther away from the
event. Although this strategy may not reveal a drinking problem until
relatively late in pregnancy, intervention at this time is still useful. While
abstaining from alcohol during the second trimester does not eliminate
the risk of fetal abnormalities, it does seem to mitigate some of the
behavioral effects that may occur shortly after birth.
Sokol and
colleagues developed a simple and brief questionnaire to help circumvent denial
and underreporting of heavy drinking by pregnant women. The test instrument,
referred to as T-ACE, correctly identified 69 percent of the "risk drinkers"
(defined as those consuming 1 ounce of absolute alcohol per day, equivalent to
two standard drinks per day) out of a cohort of 971 pregnant women. T-ACE was
found to be superior to other standard instruments used for detecting alcohol
abuse, such as MAST and CAGE. The test is brief, and may be administered easily
in prenatal clinics and obstetricians' offices. Its key feature is a tolerance
("T") question, "How many drinks does it take to make you feel 'high?' "
(Tolerance is acquired by drinking.) Clinical experience suggests that
questions about tolerance are less apt to be perceived by lay persons as an
indication of drinking, and are therefore less likely to trigger denial. A more
reliable indicator of heavy drinking awaits the development of objective
biochemical markers.
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