31 jan. 2008

Fetal Alcohol Syndrome Research - Adoption

The overall goal of the IAC research program is to identify risk factors that predict medical and developmental problems in international adoptees and thus develop strategies for intervention and education that maximizes each child's potential. Recently, investigators at the University of Minnesota conducted a NIH-funded study of 1,834 Minnesota families who adopted 2291 children from abroad during 1990-98 (International Adoption Project-IAP). This 556-item survey confirmed that alcohol/drug exposure is a common risk factor in international adoptees in Minnesota.

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Long-term effects of prenatal alcohol exposure on the size of the whisker representation in juvenile and adult rat barrel cortex

The major findings in the present study are (i) PAE significantly reduced the size of the total barrel field in Alc juvenile rats (13%) and adult rats (9%) compared to CF controls, (ii) PAE significantly reduced the total averaged sizes of individual PMBSF barrels in juvenile (14%) and adult (13%) rats, (iii) PAE did not significantly alter the septal area between barrels or the barrel pattern, (iv) PAE significantly reduced body weight of juvenile rats but only in comparison to PF controls (18%), (v) PAE significantly reduced whole brain (8%) and forebrain (7%) weights of juvenile rats but not adult rats, (vi) no differences were observed in forebrain/PMBSF body ratios nor was forebrain weight correlated with PMBSF area, and (vii) PAE resulted in a greater reduction in anterior barrels compared to posterior barrels. These results suggest that the effects of PAE previously reported in neonate PMBSF areas persist into adulthood.


Prenatal ethanol exposure disrupts the histological stages of fetal bone development

Prenatal ethanol exposure decreased the length of the resting zone, but increased the length of the hypertrophic zone. Enlargement of the hypertrophic zone is consistent with an effect of ethanol on the later stages of bone development; however, ethanol's effect on the resting zone indicates that earlier stages of bone development may also be disrupted. The functional significance of these morphological changes to long-term bone health remains to be determined.

Impaired Placentation in Fetal Alcohol Syndrome

These abnormalities were associated with significantly reduced levels of AAH expression in trophoblastic cells, particularly within the mesometrial triangle (deep placental bed) as demonstrated by real time quantitative RT-PCR, Western blot analysis, ELISA, and immunohistochemical staining. Ethanol-impaired placentation is associated with inhibition of AAH expression in trophoblasts. This effect of chronic gestational exposure to ethanol may contribute to IUGR in FAS.


Fetal alcohol exposure impairs Hedgehog cholesterol modification and signaling

Exposure of zebrafish embryos to low levels of alcohol during gastrulation blocks covalent modification of Sonic hedgehog by cholesterol. This leads to impaired Hh signal transduction and results in a dose-dependent spectrum of permanent developmental defects that closely resemble FASD. Furthermore, supplementing alcohol-exposed embryos with cholesterol rescues the loss of Shh signal transduction, and prevents embryos from developing FASD-like morphologic defects.

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Deficits in eye movement control in children with fetal alcohol spectrum disorders

Compared with controls, FASD children had elongated reaction times, excessive direction errors, and no express saccades. Metric analysis of correct prosaccades revealed a trend toward increased saccadic duration and decreased saccadic velocity in FASD subjects. CONCLUSION: These results reflect deficits in executive function and motor control, and are consistent with dysfunction of the frontal lobes, possibly due to disrupted inhibitory mechanisms. Therefore, eye movement tasks may be powerful and easy tools for assessing executive function deficits in FASD.

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New science on fetal alcohol exposure

Dr. Eugene Hoyme spent years studying Fetal Alcohol Syndrome at Stanford University. He's now head of pediatrics at Sanford Health in Sioux Falls, S.D. He's taking his research to South Africa. (MPR Photo/Cara Hetland)


Dr. Eugene Hoyme, chairman of pediatrics at Sanford Health, is known around the world for developing diagnostic criteria for this disorder. Hoyme says many countries deny alcohol consumption during pregnancy is a problem.
Hoyme uses Italy as an example, where drinking wine has been part of the culture for 2,000 years. He says many doctors refuse to even discuss the effects of that behavior.
"We did a study and the prevalence is 2 percent in Italy, and 1 percent in the United States. The Italians still have a hard time believing that's really true, and it's just because [wine] is like mother's milk to them," says Hoyme. "Part of it is, as a society we don't accept alcohol is a problem and we don't do a good job educating physicians about it."

December 3, 2007

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25 jan. 2008

Ghana: Pregnant women warned to stay off alcohol

The Ghana Organisation on Foetal Alcohol Syndrome (GOFAS) has said that the consumption of alcohol in the country is on the rise but Ghanaians are ignoring its devastating effects on consumers.The Association said the consumption of alcohol is largely to blame for the high rise in mental and physical disability cases in the country, which people continue to attribute to curse from their families.

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22 jan. 2008

Pre-natal alcohol exposure shapes sensory preference, upping odds of later alcohol use and abuse


2 studies help explain why teens exposed to fetal alcohol are at high risk for heavy drinking and perpetuating a family cycle of alcohol addiction
WASHINGTON – Young people whose mothers drank when pregnant may be more likely to abuse alcohol because, in the womb, their developing senses came to prefer its taste and smell. Researchers with the State University of New York Developmental Ethanol Research Center have found that because the developing nervous system adapts to whatever mothers eat and drink, young rats exposed to alcohol (ethanol) in the womb drank significantly more alcohol than non-exposed rats.

December 2007

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The World's Hardest-Drinking Countries

Luxembourg:
Pure annual alcohol consumption: 15.5 liters per capita.
Europe: Home of much natural beauty, old traditions and booze. Lots and lots of booze. Yes, all but one of the World's 15 Heaviest-Drinking Countries are in Europe, a continent where cultural traditions--and tax policies on alcohol--die hard.
Our top 15 listing comes from a 2006 survey by the Organization for Economic Co-Operation and Development, which tracks per capita alcohol consumption around the globe. Rankings are based on the number of liters of pure alcohol consumed per person per year, from beer, wine and spirits combined (the three have progressively higher percentages of alcohol content).

November 2007

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Three-Dimensional Medical Imaging Could Improve Doctors' Ability to Diagnose Fetal Alcohol Syndrome

16 November 2007—Digital facial models created from three-dimensional scans could give doctors a new diagnostic tool for identifying children with fetal alcohol spectrum disorders, a broad range of effects resulting from alcohol exposure in the womb. Although such children often have symptoms common to other developmental disorders, they require different interventions, and better diagnostics could help more kids get the right treatment.

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Antidepressants, Exercise, Age, Even Food Intake, Affect Generation Of New Brain Cells

ScienceDaily (Nov. 9, 2007) — Recent research shows that the production of new brain cells may be crucial for antidepressants to be effective and that the medication's effectiveness is strongly influenced by age. What's more, meal frequency, type of food, and physical exercise affect the brain's ability to manufacture these new cells. For the first time in nonhuman primate models, scientists have documented the cause-and-effect relationship between antidepressant drugs and neurogenesis. The researchers found that the antidepressant drug fluoxetine improved the behavior of macaque monkeys with depression-like symptoms.
They also discovered that administering the drugs to normally behaving monkeys did not influence their behavior but did alter their brains by boosting neurogenesis in the hippocampus, an area involved in memory and learning.

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Maternal Alcohol Drinking During Pregnancy Associated With Risk For Childhood Conduct Problems

ScienceDaily (Nov. 6, 2007) — Maternal alcohol drinking during pregnancy appears to be associated with conduct problems in children, independently of other risk factors, according to a report in the November issue of Archives of General Psychiatry.
Previous research has linked maternal drinking during pregnancy to several problems in offspring, including conduct problems, criminal behavior, attention and impulsivity problems and alcohol disorders, according to background information in the article. However, new questions have been raised about the strength of the evidence, as some researchers have suggested that certain family processes or genetic risk factors could be associated with both maternal drinking and childhood problems.

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WHO publications



JUST PUBLISHED, January 2008


65 Result(s) list of WHO publications published in the last 6 months.

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Impulsivity May Especially Vex Alcoholics With Antisocial And Borderline Personality Disorders

ScienceDaily (Oct. 25, 2007) — Impulsivity is a problem common to many different personality and psychiatric disorders, including alcoholism. A new study that looked at impulsivity among alcoholic subpopulations has found that, one, the inability to delay gratification may be a vulnerability marker for alcoholism, and two, certain inhibitory-control issues may be specific to antisocial and borderline personality disorders.

"Around 50 percent of alcoholic patients have psychiatric disorders that include pathological impulsivity," said Gabriel Rubio, associate professor at Complutense University of Madrid, Spain. Yet few studies have explored behavioral measures of impulsivity within different alcoholic subpopulations, which could have important treatment and relapse implications.

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WASHINGTON REPORT, October 2007




In this issue:
Federal Developments TTB Proposes Nutrition Labels for Alcoholic Beverages
Federal Alcohol Tax Update
STOP Act Appropriations Fall Short
Advocacy News Campaign for a Family-Friendly Nationals Stadium
Global Strategy Efforts at the WHA
Mark Your Calendars Alcohol Policy 14 Conference


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More Women in England Dying from Alcohol

Alcohol-related deaths among women in England have nearly doubled in the past 15 years as drinking rates also have risen, according to a new government report.
Reuters reported Oct. 22 that the report, Health Profile of England 2007, found that the U.K. had one of the lowest female alcohol death rates in Europe during the 1970s, but now about 14 of 100,000 women ages 35-54 die from alcohol-related problems.

October 23, 2007

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Australia May Cut Drinking Recommendations

The agency's new draft guidelines on alcohol consumption say that drinkers should down no more than two servings of wine or medium-strength beer daily, about two-thirds lower than the previous recommendations.

October 17, 2007

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KORRIDOREN OCH ALKOHOLEN – En studie av korridorboendets inverkan på alkoholkonsumtionen

Rickard Sjöstedt & Patrik Holmqvist
E-mail: rickardsjostedt@hotmail.com, patrikholmvisst@hotmail.com
VT 2001 Uppsats 344, 41-60p
Lunds Universitet, Sociologiska Institutionen

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10% of inmates victims of fetal alcohol

A study of 91 inmates at Stony Mountain penitentiary found 10 per cent have some form of Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder, 10 times the incidence in the general population. University of Manitoba faculty of medicine researcher Dr. Ab Chudley is the first to study the incidence of FASD in an adult prison population.
"There are numbers floating around, but no one has done the research among adult offenders," said Patricia MacPherson, research manager with the Correctional Service of Canada's addictions research centre. She helped conduct the 18-month study among offenders under age 30. "This is the first of its kind anywhere worldwide."

Mar 17 2007

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60% of pregnant women drink alcohol - report

More than 60 per cent of women continue to drink alcohol while pregnant, according to a new survey.
The survey is the largest study of its kind ever conducted in Ireland, and the findings were unveiled by Minister for Health Mary Harney in the Coombe Women's Hospital this morning.
It examines trends in the consumption of alcohol, tobacco and drugs by over 120,000 pregnant women during the past two decades.
Irish and UK-born mothers were more likely to report themselves as consuming more than six units of alcohol a week compared with EU and non-EU nationals. A total of 7.1 per cent of those surveyed admitted to drinking more than six units of alcohol per week.
The highest percentage category reporting drinking over 10 units per week was the 18-24 year-olds, while more than two-thirds of all pregnant under-18 year olds reported drinking alcohol during pregnancy.

March, 2007

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Many Russian Women Drink During Pregnancy, Study Finds

Russian women are aware that drinking can damage developing fetuses — but nearly two-thirds continue to drink after they become pregnant, according to new research. Nearly 900 Russian women were interviewed at job centers, physicians’ offices, schools, hospitals and clinics for the study, which appears in the February issue of the journal Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research.

January 25, 2007

By Maia Szalavitz, Contributing Writer Health Behavior News Service

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Chinese Drink Nearly $60 Billion Worth of Alcohol

Chinese drinkers consume 20 percent of the world's alcohol products, drinking $59.5 billion worth of alcoholic beverages in 2006, Bloomberg reported Aug. 9.
Beer is the most popular drink in China, but liquor -- while only accounting for 9.8 percent of alcohol consumed -- represents 43 percent of the sales value. Many Chinese still drink traditional "baijiu" liquor, but rising affluence is expected to expand the market for more sophisticated tipples. Currently, foreign brands account for about 10 percent of liquor sales in China.
August 10, 2007

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NIH MERIT award advances fetal alcohol research

Susan Smith, a professor of nutritional sciences at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, has received a prestigious MERIT award from the National Institutes of Health, which provides research funding for up to 10 years. Smith is an expert on fetal alcohol exposure, the leading known cause of mental retardation in the world.
MERIT awards, short for Method to Extend Research in Time, are among the most selective research grants given by the NIH. Less than 5 percent of NIH-funded investigators are selected for the awards, which recognize researchers who have demonstrated superior competence and outstanding productivity in research endeavors of special importance or promise, according to the NIH.
Aug. 17, 2007
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No alcohol in pregnancy adviced //BBC

Pregnant women and those trying for a baby should avoid alcohol completely, according to new government advice.
It replaces existing advice that one to two units such as a couple of glasses of wine per week is acceptable.
The change follows concern from some sectors that there is no safe amount of alcohol that mothers-to-be can drink.
While heavy alcohol consumption during pregnancy is known to be damaging to the unborn child, the effects of more moderate intake are less clear.

Friday, 25 May 2007

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Kuba fällde Sverige i WHO

Publicerat: 24 maj 2007, 00:00
GENÈVE Ett svenskt förslag om en global strategi mot alkohol har slutat med ­fiasko vid WHO:s Världshälso­församling i Genève. Trots stöd från flera länder misslyckades Sverige igår att driva igenom en resolution efter motstånd från alko­holproducerande länder, främst Kuba.

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Tjugofem procent av gravida i Norge dricker sig berusade under fösta delen av graviditeten enligt en studie av 1749 gravida.

Significantly more alcohol consumption after pregnancy recognition was reported retrospectively at both T2 and T3 [T2 0.15 and T3 0.18 standard units per week (SU/wk)] than concurrently at T1 or T2 (T1 0.10 and T2 0.14 SU/wk). When comparing the 2 retrospective reports at T2 and T3, there was a significant increase over time.
Astrid Alvik, Tor Haldorsen, Berit Groholt, and Rolf Lindemann

1Sogn Centre for Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Ulleval University Hospital, University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway; 2Department of Biostatistics, Institute of Basic Medical Sciences, University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway; 3Ulleval University Hospital, Oslo, Oslo, Norway; and 4Neonatal Intensive Care Unit, Ulleval University Hospital, Oslo, Norway

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Alkoholförbud på Grönland

Publicerat: 12 maj 2007, 03:52
De grönländska myndigheterna har med omedelbar verkan beslutat att förbjuda försäljning och utskänkning av alkohol i staden Qaanaaq på norra Grönland. Orsaken är att barnen far illa av de vuxnas missbruk.

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Abnormal Cortical Thickness and Brain–Behavior Correlation Patterns in Individuals with Heavy Prenatal Alcohol Exposure

Quantitative magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) studies in children with fetal alcohol spectrum disorders (FASDs) have shown regional patterns of dysmorphology, most prominent in parietal and posterior temporal cortices. Various methods of image analysis have been employed in these studies, but abnormalities in cortical thickness have not yet been mapped over the entire cortical surface in individuals with FASD. Further, relationships between cognitive dysfunction and cortical thickness measures have not yet been explored. We applied cortical pattern matching algorithms and techniques for measuring cortical thickness in millimeters to the structural brain MRI images of 21 subjects with heavy prenatal alcohol exposure (8–22 years, mean age 12.6 years), and 21 normally developing control subjects (8–25 years, mean age 13.5 years). Dissociable cognitive measures, of verbal recall and visuospatial functioning, were correlated with cortical thickness, and group by test score interactions were evaluated for predicting cortical thickness. Significant cortical thickness excesses of up to 1.2 mm were observed in the FASD subjects in large areas of bilateral temporal, bilateral inferior parietal, and right frontal regions. Significant group by test score interactions were found in right dorsal frontal regions for the verbal recall measure and in left occipital regions for the visuospatial measure. These results are consistent with earlier analyses from our own and other research groups, but for the first time, we show that cortical thickness is also increased in right lateral frontal regions in children with prenatal alcohol exposure. Further, the significant interactions show for the first time that brain–behavior relationships are altered as a function of heavy prenatal alcohol exposure.
Cerebral Cortex Advance Access published online on April 18, 2007 Cerebral Cortex, doi:10.1093/cercor/bhm039
This Article

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Abnormal Cortical Thickness and Brain–Behavior Correlation Patterns in Individuals with Heavy Prenatal Alcohol ExposureElizabeth R. Sowell1, Sarah N. Mattson2, Eric Kan1, Paul M. Thompson1, Edward P. Riley2 and Arthur W. Toga1

1 Laboratory of Neuro Imaging, Department of Neurology, University of California, Los Angeles, USA, 2 Center for Behavioral Teratology, San Diego State University, San Diego, CA, USA
Address correspondence to Elizabeth R. Sowell, PhD, Laboratory of Neuro Imaging, University of California, Neuroscience Research Building 1, Room 225, 635 Charles Young Drive South, Los Angeles, CA 90095-7334, USA. Email: esowell@loni.ucla.edu

Stay away from meth, pregnant women warned

Stay away from meth, pregnant women warned
Fetal brains less equipped to repair molecular damagethan adult brains: researcher
Janet French, The StarPhoenixPublished: Monday, March 19, 2007
Smoking, drinking and some prescription drugs have long been no-nos for pregnant women.
Although the effects of illicit drugs are harder to study, one University of Toronto researcher has found pregnant mice who receive just one low dose of methamphetamine have babies with developmental problems and compromised motor skills.

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Europeans support alcohol health warnings to protect vulnerable, Eurobarometer reveals

Brussels, 14th March 2007

Europeans support alcohol health warnings to protect vulnerable, Eurobarometer reveals
Almost eight out of ten Europeans (77%) agree with putting warnings on alcohol bottles and adverts in order to warn pregnant women and drivers of the dangers of drinking alcohol, according to the results of the special Eurobarometer on Alcohol presented by the European Commission today. The survey reveals that European public opinion is, in general, supportive of measures aiming to protect vulnerable groups in society and to reduce alcohol-related road accidents. According to the data, men drink more than women, and one in ten Europeans usually drink five or more drinks in one session, which is the widely used definition of binge drinking. Binge drinking is a particular problem among young people, with 19% of the 15-24 age group usually binge drinking when consuming alcohol.

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Fetal alcohol syndrome a big problem in Alaska

Fetal alcohol syndrome a big problem in Alaska
The Associated Press
Published: January 29, 2007 Last Modified: January 29, 2007

JUNEAU, Alaska (AP) -
Alaska has one of the highest fetal alcohol spectrum disorder rates in the country, according to the Alaska Department of Health and Social Services. Recent studies show 140 children in 10,000 are born with FASD in Alaska. More than 16 in 10,000 are born in Alaska with Fetal Alcohol Syndrome, the more serious of the disorders.

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Folic acid slows brain damage caused by formic acid in alcohol abuse

Formic acid, a byproduct of methanol, is known to alter the normal functioning of the nervous system and was found in higher quantities in alcoholics. The toxicity of formic acid was significantly
slowed down by administering folic acid in an animal model.
The study was led by Dr. Bhushan Kapur, Department of Clinical Pathology, Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre in collaboration with Dr. Peter Carlen, Department of Neurosciences, Toronto Western Division of the University Health Network.

TORONTO, ONTARIO, MEDIA RELEASE--(Marketwire - Nov. 22, 2007) - A new study with groundbreaking public health implications for treating alcoholism and preventing Fetal Alcohol Syndrome

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