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Prenatal alcohol exposure and infant behavior: immediate effects and implications for later development. Coles CD. Smith IE. Falek A. Advances in Alcohol & Substance Abuse. 6(4):87-104, 1987. Abstract: Infants exposed to alcohol prenatally, even when they
do not suffer from fetal alcohol syndrome (FAS), may be at high risk
for many of the negative outcomes typically found among children of
alcoholics including hyperactivity and other behavioral and learning
problems. A series of studies are described designed to investigate
the incidence and persistence of central nervous system (CNS) related
behavioral alterations in three groups of infants born to low SES black
women: (1) those who never drank in pregnancy; (2) those who drank at
an average of 12 ounces of absolute alcohol (AA) per week throughout
pregnancy; and (3) those who drank an equivalent amount but stopped
by the second trimester of pregnancy. Only healthy, full-term infants
were examined for the physical dysmorphic features associated with FAS
and for behavioral alterations that could be assessed using the Brazelton
Neonatal Behavioral Assessment Scale. One hundred and three neonates
were examined at three days; those who had been exposed to alcohol were
found to be less optimal in neurobehavioral responses. Infants whose
mothers continued to drink were significantly lower on their orientation
toward auditory and visual stimuli, motor performance, and autonomic
regulation than the nonexposed infants. Although a second study found
that some of these effects were related to neonatal withdrawal syndrome,
a follow-up to 30 days of age in a subsample of the original group found
that there were persistent behavioral alterations. Infants in the stopped-drinking
group showed more recovery over the first month than did those in the
continued-drinking group in reflexive behavior and autonomic control.
A reassessment at six months of 60 of the infants who had been tested
at three days indicated that differences in orientation, motor performance,
reflexive behavior and autonomic control were predictive of mental and
motor performance on the Bayley Scales of Infant Development. This series
of studies supports the contention that the negative effects on infant
behavior of prenatal alcohol exposure are both immediate and persistent.
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