HealthyWomen.org
Call Us: 1-877-986-9472 (toll-free)
      Spell Checker
Publications & Resources Sign up for Free e-Newsletters
Health Topics A-Z
 
Table of Contents
 
 
Publications & ResourcesText size: A A A July 4, 2008

Women's Health in the News

Drinking While Pregnant May Alter Child's Brain
Tuesday, July 24, 2007

HealthDay News

Neurological changes could boost risks for ADHD, other problems, researchers say

TUESDAY, July 24 (HealthDay News) -- Being exposed to alcohol before birth may lead to behavioral problems later on, U.S. researchers report.

Heavy prenatal alcohol exposure does not always lead to fetal alcohol syndrome, noted a team reporting in the August issue of Alcoholism: Clinical & Experimental Research. In some cases, it can cause cognitive and behavioral problems without the facial features characteristic of fetal alcohol syndrome.

In their study, researchers at San Diego State University (SDSU) examined 22 children and adolescents (ages 8 to 18 years) -- 13 with and 9 without histories of heavy prenatal alcohol exposure. The participants were part of a larger study at the Center for Behavioral Teratology, SDSU.

The participants who were exposed to heavy alcohol before birth had altered responses in the frontal-striatal areas of the brain.

"We found two regions within the prefrontal cortex where the youth with alcohol-exposure histories had increased brain activation and one area in the subcortex (called the caudate nucleus) where the alcohol-exposed youth had decreased brain activation," study co-author Susanna L. Fryer, a graduate student in the SDSU/University of California, San Diego, joint doctoral program in clinical psychology, said in a prepared statement.

These brain regions are thought to be involved with the inhibition of behavior. In fact, the participants with alcohol exposure were also at greater risk for attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) and other psychiatric diseases linked with poor control of inhibition.

"Prenatal alcohol exposure can cause damage to the brain that results in significant problems with regulating behavior and optimal thinking and learning," Fryer said.

SOURCE: Alcoholism: Clinical & Experimental Research, news release, July 24, 2007

Copyright © 2006 ScoutNews, LLC. All rights reserved.

 
  Email this Page Email this Page
Sign up for Free E-Newsletters Print this Page Print this Page
ORDER PUBLICATIONS |  FREE E-NEWSLETTERS |  RSS FEEDS |  SITE MAP |  CONTACT US
National Women's Health Resource Center   157 Broad Street, Suite 106   Red Bank, NJ 07701   1-877-986-9472 (toll-free)