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Pregnant Drinkers Have Undersized Kids
Excerpt By Jennifer
Thomas, HealthScoutNews
(HealthScoutNews) -- If
you're pregnant, don't drink. Not even a drop.
A new study says women who drank less
than one drink a day not only tended to have smaller babies, but
those children remained small well into their teens.
When the children of drinkers were
examined at 14 years of age, they were smaller and shorter than
the children of mothers who abstained from alcohol during pregnancy.
Researchers say the study shows the
threshold for danger to the fetus may be even lower than thought,
especially if the drinking is continuous throughout the early
part of pregnancy.
"I'd just like to get the message
out that drinking during pregnancy is not a good idea," says
Nancy Day, lead author of the study and a professor of psychiatry,
pediatrics and epidemiology at the University of Pittsburgh School
of Medicine.
"There's always been some debate
about whether there is a safe level of drinking or not. This data
shows that there clearly is not," Day says.
The study appears in the October issue
of the journal Alcoholism: Experimental and Clinical Research.
Researchers interviewed 565 women
during pregnancy, after delivery and when their children were
14 years old. The women were healthy, had low incomes and were
at least 18 years old.
One-quarter of the women had one or
more drinks a day. One-quarter drank no alcohol. The rest drank
occasionally during pregnancy.
The women were divided into four categories:
"abstainers" (no alcohol), "light drinkers"
(less than 1.5 drinks per week), "moderate" (1.5 drinks
per week to less than one drink per day) and "heavy"
drinkers (one or more drinks per day).
Drinking even lightly during the first
and second trimester resulted in lower weights for the children,
as well as smaller stature and smaller head circumference at age
14. The more the woman drank, the smaller the child.
The average weight of a 14-year-old
child of a woman who didn't drink during pregnancy was 152 pounds.
For light drinkers, it was 149 pounds. For moderate drinkers,
it was 143 pounds. For heavy drinkers, it was 136 pounds.
Alcohol -- specifically binge drinking
-- has been linked with fetal alcohol syndrome, says Dr. Andrei
Rebarber, a specialist in high-risk pregnancies at New York University
Medical Center.
Children with this condition can
have a range of physical and mental birth defects, including small
heads, facial malformations, growth deficiency, irritability and
low IQs.
In the new study, the children's
small size didn't mean they suffered from fetal alcohol syndrome.
But, Day says, "their small size means there is a marker
that there was damage from alcohol."
Rebarber says studies such as Day's
underscore the importance of avoiding alcohol during pregnancy.
"Most ob-gyns have a zero
tolerance for alcohol during pregnancy," says Rebarber, an
assistant professor of obstetrics and gynecology at New York University
School of Medicine. "There is no real safe amount to drink
during pregnancy because we don't know what the threshold is."
Rebarber adds that doctors don't
know precisely why alcohol causes problems during pregnancy.
Some studies show alcohol can have
a toxic affect on the placenta, leading to fetal malnutrition.
Studies with animals have also shown alcohol can interfere with
DNA and protein formation, he says.
Day notes that the women in her
study came from stressful environments, with high rates of medical,
economic, psychiatric, social and legal problems. These added
stressors may have contributed to the continued growth deficits
of the alcohol-exposed children, she says.
In a related study from the same
journal, researchers found that children whose mothers drank during
pregnancy had a harder time relating to their mothers and a harder
time coping with the problems of daily life.
However, mothers who gave their
children a lot of support were able to counteract the effect of
alcohol exposure and help their children develop positive coping
skills, according to the study.
Researchers assessed the alcohol
consumption of 42 low-income mothers and how they related to their
children when they were between the ages of 3 and 5, both in the
home and in a laboratory setting.
None of the children had fetal
alcohol syndrome.
About 80 percent of the children
of moderate to heavy drinkers had insecure attachments to their
mother, compared to only 36 percent of the children of abstainers
and light drinkers.
"It appears that while prenatal
alcohol exposure may be associated with increased risk for the
development of a difficult temperament in childhood, if the mother
is able to respond to the child in a supportive, nurturing manner,
the child may be more able to deal with frustration and stress
and may be more likely to develop secure attachment relationships,"
says lead author Mary J. O'Connor of the University of California,
Los Angeles.
What To Do
For more information about alcohol
and pregnancy, visit the National
Organization on Fetal Alcohol Syndrome. If you're pregnant
and need help with an alcohol problem, the National
Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism has a list of resources
and agencies that can assist you.
Reference
Source 101
For more information on how to prevent other diseases, use
PreventDisease.com's "Quick
Prevention Resources".
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