4.5 Article

Prenatal alcohol exposure and infant gross motor development: a prospective cohort study

Journal

BMC PEDIATRICS
Volume 19, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12887-019-1516-5

Keywords

Alcohol; Motor Skills; Infancy; Perinatal

Categories

Funding

  1. Australian National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) [GNT630517]
  2. National Drug and Alcohol Research Centre (NDARC), University of New South Wales (UNSW)
  3. Australian Government under the Substance Misuse Prevention and Service Improvements Grants Fund
  4. Australian Rotary Health
  5. Foundation for Alcohol Research and Education
  6. Financial Markets Foundation for Children (Australia)
  7. NDARC Education Trust (NET)
  8. Australian Centre for Perinatal Science
  9. ARH
  10. NDARC
  11. UNSW
  12. NHMRC Practitioner Fellowship [1021480]
  13. Australian Research Council Principal Research Fellowship
  14. NHMRC Principal Research Fellowship Award from the NHMRC

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BackgroundMaternal alcohol consumption in pregnancy may have adverse effects on child gross motor (GM) development. There have been few human studies on this topic, particularly ones examining low exposure. This study examined the association between prenatal alcohol exposure (PAE) and infant GM development at 12-months of age.MethodsParticipants were 1324 women recruited from antenatal clinics in Sydney and Perth, Australia. Maternal and paternal alcohol use was assessed in pregnancy via interview; offspring GM development was measured at 12-months with the Bayley Scales of Infant Development (BSID-III).ResultsAny alcohol use in pregnancy was common: 56.1%, of pregnant women drank early in Trimester one (0-6weeks), however this reduced to 27.9% on average thereafter and at predominantly low levels. However, infant BSID GM scale scores were not found to differ significantly as a function of PAE in the first 6-weeks (low, moderate, binge or heavy PAE), nor with low PAE across pregnancy.ConclusionsWe found no evidence to suggest that low PAE is associated with measurable impairment in infant GM development at 12-months. Further research is needed to examine potential PAE impacts on GM development in heavier exposure groups and through the childhood years when subtle GM deficits may be more detectable.

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