|
Even
Small Amounts of Alcohol
During Pregnancy May Be Harmful
Excerpt
By Keith Mulvihill
NEW YORK (Reuters
Health) - Children whose mother consumed even a small amount of
alcohol during pregnancy may be at increased risk of behavioral
problems later in life, according to the results of a new study.
Compared with
teetotalers, women who drank the equivalent of one cocktail a
week during pregnancy were three times more likely to have a child
diagnosed with behavioral problems, researchers report.
``This study
shows that adverse effects of prenatal alcohol exposure on childhood
behavior are seen at lower levels of exposure than previously
reported,'' said co-author Dr. Virginia Delaney-Black, of Children's
Hospital of Michigan, in an interview with Reuters Health.
Delaney-Black,
Dr. Beena Sood of Wayne State University in Detroit, Michigan,
and colleagues report their findings in the August issue of the
journal Pediatrics.
In the study,
506 women receiving prenatal care at an urban university hospital
answered questions about their alcohol consumption throughout
their pregnancy. The women were contacted again when their children
were between 6 and 7 years of age and agreed to have their children
tested for behavioral problems.
The investigators
found that maternal alcohol consumption in pregnancy was linked
to behavioral problems in children such as aggression, delinquent
behavior and attention problems.
``Significantly,
children with low levels of prenatal alcohol exposure--equivalent
to an average of one cocktail per week across pregnancy--were
three times as likely to have delinquent behavior scores in the
clinical range,'' Delaney-Black told Reuters Health. This was
true after the researchers took into account other factors that
can influence a child's behavior.
Alcohol consumption
during pregnancy can cause fetal alcohol syndrome. Symptoms of
the syndrome include physical defects as well as problems with
intellectual functioning, such as lowered IQ, attention deficits,
and behavioral and emotional problems.
Most studies
in humans to date have reported adverse effects of prenatal alcohol
exposure on childhood behavior at higher levels of exposure than
reported in this study. Recently, there has been a suggestion
that children exposed to even small amounts of alcohol prenatally
may have significant problems, Delaney-Black explained.
Both Sood
and Delaney-Black recommend that women avoid any amount of alcohol,
even a few sips of wine, for the duration of pregnancy, ``as we
do not know the 'safe' dose of alcohol exposure, if one exists,''
they told Reuters Health.
``We would
reinforce the Surgeon General's recommendation that pregnant women
should abstain from drinking during pregnancy,'' they added.
SOURCE:
Pediatrics 2001;108.
Reference
Source 89
For more information on how to prevent other diseases, use
PreventDisease.com's "Quick
Prevention Resources".
|