Prenatal Alcohol Exposure

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter 3 Environmental Toxicants and Neurocognitive Development
Advertisements

Better Safe Than Sorry: The Biological Basis of Fetal Alcohol Syndrome and other Alcohol-Related Birth Defects.
Fetal Alcohol Syndrome Manish Saran MD Department of Psychiatry Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center Shreveport February 8, 2006.
Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder: A Preventable Epidemic Barry S Parsonson PhD Explore & Applied Psychology International.
Risky Drinking by Women of Child-Bearing Age: Trends and Implications Courtney R. Green, PhD Manager of Research Development Canada FASD Research Network.
Chapter 3: Prenatal Development and Birth Teratogens: Hazardous to the Baby’s Health By Kati Tumaneng (for Drs. Cook & Cook)
Alcohol and the Fetus Leslie McCrory, LPC, LCAS, CCS
Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorders Presenter Sr. Suzette Fisher, SND, Ed.S. Prevention, Education, Intervention, and Advocacy Emerging Issues in Maternal.
Brenda Stade, PhD Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder Dr. Brenda Stade, RN
Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder (FASD) Reducing alcohol-related harm through a nonjudgmental approach Dr. Samuel Harper.
Streissguth et al.(1994) Seattle Longitudinal study started in 1974 to examined long term effects of PAE At this point there was little evidence that alcohol.
Behavioral Phenotype (Kodituwakku, 2007) A characteristic pattern of motor, cognitive, linguistic, and social observations consistently associated with.
Fetal Alcohol Syndrome Fetal Alcohol Effects Alcohol-Related Birth Defects Articles: Alcohol Alert Alcohol, Health and Research World.
Prenatal Alcohol Exposure
Fetal Alcohol Syndrome (FAS)
DID YOU KNOW…… The destructive and irresponsible use of alcohol and other drugs costs North Carolina more than $5.5 billion annually. Approximately 15%
Alcohol, tobacco, & other drugs
Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder
Formerly Fetal Alcohol Syndrome and Fetal Alcohol Effect.
Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorders (FASD). What is FASD? 2.
 start with a single cell that begins to divide!.
By: Lauren Nash Dani Blevins Phylicia Kelly Krystle Jordan
Effects of Alcohol During Pregnancy. How does consuming alcohol effect your baby’s development? Your baby is continually growing throughout the nine months.
Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder. Click View then Header and Footer to change this footer What is FASD? Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder is a new term that.
FETAL ALCOHOL SPECTRUM DISORDERS The Basics. DEFINITION OF ALCOHOLISM  PRIMARY  DISEASE  OFTEN PROGRESSIVE AND FATAL  IMPAIRED CONTROL  PREOCCUPATION.
Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorders
References 1. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorders. Retrieved February 17, 2007, from
Exposure to Teratogens as a Risk Factor for Psychopathology Chapter 9 Nicole A. Crocker, Susanna L. Fryer, and Sarah N. Mattson.
Fetal Alcohol Syndrome:
Alcohol-Exposed Youth and the Court Jo Nanson, Ph. D., Judge Mary- Ellen Turpel-Lafond, P. Blakley,M. D., Ph. D.
FETAL ALCOHOL SPECTRUM DISORDERS The Basics. DEFINITION OF ALCOHOLISM  PRIMARY  DISEASE  OFTEN PROGRESSIVE AND FATAL  IMPAIRED CONTROL  PREOCCUPATION.
 Teratogen: a substance capable of interfering with fetal development  Teratology: the biological study of birth defects  Toxicology: the science of.
Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorders
Prenatal Alcohol Exposure Causes Birth Defects Alcohol and pregnancy do not mix.
Daily Objective The students will be able to identify the cause, characteristics, and the treatment or prevention of the birth defects presented in class.
Fetal Alcohol Syndrome FAS Pre-Quiz. An Ounce of Prevention  2000, 2005 The Curators of the University of Missouri.
Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder Dr. Brenda Stade, RN
Better Safe Than Sorry: The Biological Basis of Fetal Alcohol Syndrome and other Alcohol-Related Birth Defects.
Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorders: Competency I - Foundation The Arctic FASD Regional Training Center is a project of the UAA Center for Behavioral Health.
Copyright Alcohol Medical Scholars Program1 Fetal Alcohol Syndrome (FAS) An Overview Lauren D. Williams, M.D. University of Miami School of Medicine.
Section 3- Fetal Alcohol Syndrome There is No Excuse!
+ Fetal Alcohol Syndrome (FAS) By: Jordyn Maher. + What is FAS? Fetal Alcohol Syndrome (FAS) is a disorder a child can have if their mother consumes alcohol.
Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorders: Competency V – Screening, Assessment, and Diagnosis The Arctic FASD Regional Training Center is a project of the UAA.
1 Psychology 304: Brain and Behaviour Lecture 23.
Fetal alcohol spectrum disorders: Biological effects of alcohol on fetus The Arctic FASD Regional Training Center is a project of the UAA Center for Behavioral.
FASEout Project Alcohol Use and Pregnancy and Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder.
Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder By:Nicoleta Kourouniotis Collaboration and Consultation
1 Stimulating Systems Change for Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder (FASD) Canadian Public Health Association Conference June 2, 2008.
Fetal Alcohol Syndrome
FETAL ALCOHOL SYNDROME
Fetal Alcohol Effects.
An Ounce of Prevention  2000, 2005, 2011 The Curators of the University of Missouri Chapter 3 Alcohol.
MELISSA M FLAHERTY Assignment One- Disability PowerPoint.
FETAL ALCOHOL SYNDROME The Facts About FAS and Alcohol Related Neurodevelopmental Disorder (ARND)
Intellectual Disability Nama: Nurul Ali’im bt Zainal Abidin Matrix no: Kod kursus: GTN 301 Nama: Nurul Ali’im bt Zainal Abidin Matrix no:
1 FAS 101 PowerPoint Presentation I Segment 3: FAS 101.
Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorders Fetal Alcohol Syndrome Fetal Alcohol Effects Alcohol-Related Neurodevelopmental Disorder Alcohol-Related Birth Defects.
UNDERSTANDING PRENATAL ALCOHOL EXPOSURE
Understanding Prenatal Alcohol Exposure. Slide 2 Prenatal Alcohol Exposure Causes Birth Defects Alcohol and pregnancy do not mix.
Facial Features of FAS.
Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder (FASD)
FASD 101 Susan Elsworth.
Intellectual Disabilities
FETAL ALCOHOL SYNDROME
Better Safe Than Sorry: The Biological Basis of Fetal Alcohol Syndrome and other Alcohol-Related Birth Defects.
Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorders Ira J. Chasnoff, MD
Presentation transcript:

Prenatal Alcohol Exposure Alcohol is a know teratogen. Teratogens are substances that, when exposed to a developing fetus, impair normal development and cause birth defects in prenatal development. Teratogens can result in (Streissguth 1997): death malformations growth deficiency functioning deficits Teratogens may have a dose-response effect, in that as the dose of the teratogen increases the deficits and impairments also increase.

Prenatal Alcohol Exposure Alcohol has an interaction effect on development: alcohol interacts with the genes to produce impairments in offspring. Not all children exposed to the same amount of alcohol will show similar deficits. Some children exposed to higher levels of alcohol may have less severe deficits than others exposed to lower levels or at different times during pregnancy. In fact, the timing of the exposure during pregnancy, amount of alcohol consumed, other drug use, genetics of mother and children, stress, mothers ability to metabolize alcohol, and age of mother may all interact to produce various deficits. (Malbin, 2002)

Malbin (2002) PAE during the first trimester generally results in damage to physical structure and PAE during the third trimester typically affects growth or size of the fetus. The brain (CNS) develops throughout the entire pregnancy, and is affected by alcohol exposure at any time during pregnancy (Streissgith, 1997).

Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder (FASD) Prenatal alcohol exposure produces a range of effects including: Fetal Alcohol Syndrome (FAS) Fetal Alcohol Effect (FAE) Fall under the new category of FASD FASD refers to individuals who may have physical, mental, behavioral, and/or learning disabilities as a result of maternal alcohol consumption (Chudley et al., 2005).

Fetal Alcohol Syndrome (FAS) FAS was first identified in 1973 by Jones & Smith, based on case observations in which clinicians noted a similar pattern of malformations among infants born to alcoholic mothers. Similar effects of prenatal alcohol exposure were noted by Lemoine and Colleagues in France (1968).

FAS is characterized by: growth deficiency in weight and or height facial features that may include short palpebral fissures (eye length), smooth philtrum (groove above upper lip) , thin upper lip, flat midface, and short nose damage to the CNS as indexed by microcephaly, cognitive deficits, learning problems, attentional difficulties, hyperactivity, and/or motor problems

From Streissguth and Little (1994).

Fetal Alcohol Effects (FAE) FAE was used to refer to children who did not have all the characteristics of FAS (usually absence of some or all facial features and/or lack of growth deficiency) but still had PAE and some CNS dysfunction (Clarren and Smith 1978). The Institute of Medicine (IOM) identified 3 classifications of Fetal Alcohol Effects: Alcohol Related Neurodevelopmental Disorder (ARND): refers to individuals with alcohol exposure and CNS and neurobehavioral deficits. Alcohol-Related Birth Defects (ARBD): refers to individuals with some congenital physical abnormalities as a result of alcohol exposure (heart, vision, hearing, skeletal problems). Partial FAS: refers to individuals with some facial characteristics, and either growth or CNS deficits

FASD Previously used diagnostic categories tended to focus on the presence or absence of facial dysmorphology. With research we have learned that relatively few children prenatally exposed to alcohol have all of the physical features required to diagnose FAS. The FAS facial features occur during a short period of vulnerability early in the first trimester (based on a mouse model) (Sulik et al., 1981). The neurobehavioral consequences of prenatal alcohol exposure can occur with exposure throughout pregnancy.

FASD Studies directly comparing the degree of neuropsychological impairments in those with and without the physical features of FAS yield no meaningful differences The neuropsychological deficits associated with prenatal alcohol exposure appear to be independent of the physical characteristics of FAS. The spectrum approach to terminology is advantageous over previous categorical approaches, because diagnosis of an FASD focuses more on CNS deficits as these are of greater functional significance than the physical features.

Diagnosis of an FASD Chudley et al. recommend evaluating: Growth Facial Features Neurobehavioral Functioning Alcohol exposure Physical features are not required for a diagnosis of an FASD.

Neurobehavioral Assessment Hard and soft neurological signs Brain structure (MRI, circumference) Cognition (IQ) Communication (receptive and expressive) Academic achievement Memory Executive functioning and abstract reasoning Attention/hyperactivity Adaptive behavior, social skills, social communication. Chudley et al., 2005

Behavioral Phenotype (Kodituwakku, 2007) A characteristic pattern of motor, cognitive, linguistic, and social observations consistently associated with a biological disorder (O’Brien & Yule, 1995) Causal connections between PAE and neurobehavioral effects are difficult to make because of the interaction of environmental and genetic factors.

Cognitive Functions (Kodituwakku, 2007) Intellectual ability: decreased IQ in children and adults with FASD. Some dose-dependent effects Deficits in both verbal and performance aspects Attention and speed of processing: Significant deficits in sustained and focused attention. Slower processing speed

Cognitive Functions (Kodituwakku, 2007) Executive Functioning (EF): higher-order cognitive processes involved in goal-oriented behavior such as planning, inhibition, working memory, set-shifting, flexible thinking, strategy use, fluency and behavior regulation. These EF deficits in FASD have been documented on tests of cognitive flexibility, inhibition, planning and strategy use, concept formation and verbal reasoning, set-shifting, working memory measures, and fluency – all cognitive-based or ‘cool’ EF tests. Also show deficits on ‘hot’ EF tests assessing emotion-related behaviors and decision making.

Cognitive Functions (Kodituwakku, 2007) Language: some mixed effects but generally poorer language abilities. Visual Perception: Most impaired on tasks that involve integration of information, planning, and visual-motor integration. Learning and Memory: slower at learning Deficits on both visual and verbal memory tasks.

Cognitive Functions (Kodituwakku, 2007) Number Processing: although children with FASD have difficulties in many academic areas, math appears to be the most severely affected. Streissguth et al. (1994) conducted a large longitudinal study on children with PAE. Out of many cognitive and academic tests, math was the most difficult and most highly correlated with PAE. These math deficits were stable over time Effects were generally dose-dependent Math deficits in FASD are even lower than expected based on IQ scores.

Behavioral Dysfunction (Kodituwakku, 2007) Classroom Behaviors: distractible, inattentive, hyperactive, restless Adaptive Behavior: personal and social skills needed to live independently Most deficits in social skills, interpersonal relationships One study of adolescents and adults with FASD (mean age 17 years) found adaptive functioning skills to be at the level of a 7-year-old (Streissguth et al., 1991) Emotional Functioning: mental health disorders and emotional difficulties

Atypical Brain Development (Kodituwakku, 2007) Decrease in white matter and increase in gray matter Abnormalities in: Frontal lobe Corpus Callosum Basal Ganglia Cerebellum

FASD The incidence of FASD is estimated to range from 3-10 /1000 births. FASD is one of the most common known causes of mental retardation. Lifetime cost of FASD is estimated to be $1.5 - 2 million per person. A recent Canadian study estimates annual costs of FASD at $344,208,000 for care of those less than 21 years of age.