Heavy Prenatal Alcohol Exposure is Related to Smaller Corpus Callosum in Newborn MRI Scans
Autor: | Christopher M. R. Warton, Greetje de Jong, Fleur L. Warton, Lilla Zöllei, Sandra W. Jacobson, Nadine M. Lindinger, Christopher D. Molteno, Paul A. Taylor, Pia Wintermark, Neil C. Dodge, Ernesta M. Meintjes, Andre van der Kouwe, H. Eugene Hoyme, Joseph L. Jacobson, Simon K. Warfield, Ellen Grant, R. Colin Carter |
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Rok vydání: | 2016 |
Předmět: |
0301 basic medicine
Adult Male Pediatrics medicine.medical_specialty Alcohol Drinking Fetal alcohol syndrome Medicine (miscellaneous) Toxicology Corpus callosum Article Corpus Callosum 03 medical and health sciences South Africa Young Adult 0302 clinical medicine Pregnancy Medicine Humans Longitudinal Studies Craniofacial Young adult Fetus medicine.diagnostic_test business.industry Infant Newborn Gestational age Magnetic resonance imaging medicine.disease Magnetic Resonance Imaging Psychiatry and Mental health 030104 developmental biology Anesthesia Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects Female business 030217 neurology & neurosurgery |
Zdroj: | Alcoholism, clinical and experimental research. 41(5) |
ISSN: | 1530-0277 |
Popis: | BACKGROUND Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) studies have consistently demonstrated disproportionately smaller corpus callosa in individuals with a history of prenatal alcohol exposure (PAE) but have not previously examined the feasibility of detecting this effect in infants. Tissue segmentation of the newborn brain is challenging because analysis techniques developed for the adult brain are not directly transferable, and segmentation for cerebral morphometry is difficult in neonates, due to the latter's incomplete myelination. This study is the first to use volumetric structural MRI to investigate PAE effects in newborns using manual tracing and to examine the cross-sectional area of the corpus callosum (CC). METHODS Forty-three nonsedated infants born to 32 Cape Coloured heavy drinkers and 11 controls recruited prospectively during pregnancy were scanned using a custom-designed birdcage coil for infants, which increases signal-to-noise ratio almost 2-fold compared to the standard head coil. Alcohol use was ascertained prospectively during pregnancy, and fetal alcohol spectrum disorders diagnosis was conducted by expert dysmorphologists. Data were acquired using a multi-echo FLASH protocol adapted for newborns, and a knowledge-based procedure was used to hand-segment the neonatal brains. RESULTS CC was disproportionately smaller in alcohol-exposed neonates than controls after controlling for intracranial volume. By contrast, CC area was unrelated to infant sex, gestational age, age at scan, or maternal smoking, marijuana, or methamphetamine use during pregnancy. CONCLUSIONS Given that midline craniofacial anomalies have been recognized as a hallmark of fetal alcohol syndrome in humans and animal models since this syndrome was first identified, the CC deficit identified here in newborns may support early identification of a range of midline structural impairments. Smaller CC during the newborn period may provide an early indicator of fetal alcohol-related cognitive deficits that have been linked to this critically important brain structure in childhood and adolescence. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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