|
Pregnancy drinking harms baby's
vision: study
New York -
Infants whose mothers regularly drank during pregnancy may show
poor vision by the age of 6 months, according to a new study.
Prenatal alcohol exposure is known to
put babies at risk of fetal alcohol syndrome (FAS), a cluster of
problems such as poor growth, delayed mental development and unusual
facial features. Because it's unclear how much alcohol is needed to
put the developing fetus at risk, women who are pregnant or might
become pregnant are advised to avoid drinking.
In the new study, published in the
Journal of Pediatrics, many of the babies with vision problems, though
not all, also had FAS.
In addition, the vision damage was
found primarily among babies born to women age 30 or older.
Exactly why a mother's age might
matter is unclear, according to the researchers, but it may be related
to the fact that older women are likely to have been habitually
drinking for a longer time.
Dr. R. Colin Carter of Children's
Hospital Boston led the study, which included 131 South African women
and their 6-month-old babies. The researchers asked the women about
their drinking habits around the time of conception and during
pregnancy. They also gave the babies special tests that gauge the
sharpness of infants' vision.
The women were generally poorly
educated, and more than half said they drank while pregnant. The more
they drank, the study found, the higher the risk of their baby having
poor vision.
Nearly 17 percent of the babies had
FAS, and of these, 27 percent had vision test scores near the bottom
for their age -- compared with 9 percent of babies without FAS. Ten
babies who were not diagnosed with FAS also showed poor vision, and in
many of these cases, their mothers admitted to heavy drinking during
pregnancy.
The particular reason for the poorer
vision -- alcohol-induced damage to the eye's retina, for instance, or
to vision-related areas of the brain -- is unknown, according to the
researchers. It's also unclear, they add, whether the effect is
permanent.
Regardless, the researchers conclude,
the vision test used in this study could be a useful tool for spotting
some of the harmful effects of prenatal drinking. Screening of babies
born to relatively older women could be particularly useful, the study
authors add, since they may be at greater risk of vision problems from
alcohol exposure. --
Reuters
Click
Here To Have Your Say On This Story
Brudirect.com News
|