Fetal Alcohol Syndrome
Alcohol-related neurodevelopmental disorder
intellectual or behavioral problems
incidence
.2-1.5 infants in every 1000 births
Co-morbidities of FAS
ADHD conduct disorder drug/alcohol abuse mental health disorders inappropriate behaviors
Clinical Features of FAS
CNS: intellectual disability, behavior problems, poor coordination, problems with sight/hearing, poor memory, slowed growth throughout life Physical: small head, short palpebral fissures, ptosis, epicanthic folds, short upturned nosse, long smooth philthrum, thin upper lip, small jaw
Etiology of FAS
alcohol enters the blood stream, crosses the placenta to the fetuses system fetal metabolism is much slower so it takes away from nutrition and oxygen reaching the baby's vital organs (brain)
Diagnostic Tests of FAS
cant be done before birth chromosomal analysis to rule out other disorders optical coherence tomography to quantify heart defects diffusion tensor imaging to evaluate the effects of prenatal alcohol exposure to the brain
Pathophysiology of FAS
ethyl alcohol disrupts DNA and protein synthesis--> prevents cell migration metabolism of carbs, proteins, and fats is disturbed amino acids, glucose, folic acid and zinc can't be transferred HPA acis is affects so less effective reactions to stress
Fetal Alcohol Syndrome Definition
growth, mental and physical impairments that may occur in a baby when a women consumes alcohol during pregnancy especially when it occurs in the first trimester
Fetal Alcohol Effects
have every impairment but the facial features
FAS
most severe type with both neurodevelopmental and physical impairments
Alcohol-related birth defects
physical defects and signs
CNS damage with FAS
poor memory, attention deficits, impulsive behaviors, poor reasoning skills Impaired hippocampus dendrites reduced cerebellar size decreased size of corpus callosum
Partial FAS
presence of some of the S/S but not meeting diagnostic criteria