Potter S M, Zelazo P R, Stack D M, Papageorgiou A N
Department of Psychology and Research Institute, McGill University and Montreal Children's Hospital, Montreal, Canada.
Pediatrics. 2000 Mar;105(3):E40. doi: 10.1542/peds.105.3.e40.
Studies with animals have shown that in utero exposure to cocaine interferes with fetal brain development by disrupting the processes of neuronal proliferation, differentiation, and migration, often leading to subsequent neurobehavioral deficits. However, studies with humans have produced inconsistent findings. Although neurobehavioral abnormalities have been observed among cocaine-exposed infants in several studies and in some cases dose-response effects have been found, the specific neurobehaviors affected vary from one study to the next. Researchers studying the effects of fetal cocaine-exposure are faced with many difficult challenges. For example, women who use cocaine typically use other substances in addition to cocaine, many of the methods available for identifying cocaine-exposed neonates are not reliable, and the available methods for assessing cocaine-exposed newborns may not be sufficiently sensitive to detect the subtle effects of cocaine on the developing central nervous system. Despite these difficulties, there is a growing body of research that suggests that fetal cocaine exposure is associated with subsequent language deficits among children exposed in utero. However, it is virtually impossible to disentangle the effects of the impoverished environments in which these children are often raised from the effect, if any, of fetal cocaine exposure. To determine the effects of fetal cocaine exposure independent of postnatal environmental effects, cocaine-exposed neonates would ideally be tested within the first few weeks of birth, and to identify early risks for subsequent language delay, well-researched auditory information processing measures could be used.
The purpose of the present study was to assess the effects of fetal cocaine exposure on neonatal auditory information processing ability. To overcome limitations of some previous studies on the neuroteratogenic effects of cocaine, such as unreliable subject identification techniques, inadequate control over confounding variables, and questionable measures of central nervous system integrity, a valid measure of auditory information processing was used in a rigorous, case-control design.
Newborn information processing was assessed using habituation and recovery of head-turning toward an auditory stimulus across the 3 phases of the procedure: familiarization, novelty, and dishabituation. During the familiarization phase, the infant orients and habituates to a repeated word; during the novelty phase, the infant recovers head-turning to a novel word and subsequently habituates to this word; and during the dishabituation phase the infant displays renewed head-turning to the return of the original stimulus. Testing takes approximately 20 minutes. This procedure has been shown previously to discriminate among infants at high-, moderate-, and low-risk for subsequent developmental delay. Twenty-five cocaine-exposed and 25 nonexposed control neonates, identified by meconium analysis, urine analysis, and/or maternal self-report, were tested on the auditory information processing procedure. The majority of infants were tested within the first few days of birth. Cocaine-exposed and control neonates were matched on birth weight, gestational age, Apgar scores, age at testing, and socioeconomic status as reflected by household income. Mothers were matched on age, weight gain, cigarette smoking, and alcohol consumption.
Fetal cocaine exposure was associated with impaired auditory information processing. Both cocaine-exposed and nonexposed control neonates oriented to the familiarization stimulus, but cocaine-exposed neonates displayed impaired habituation. Moreover, cocaine-exposed neonates did not recover or habituate to the novel stimulus or dishabituate to the return of the familiarization stimulus. (ABSTRACT TRUNCATED)
动物研究表明,子宫内接触可卡因会干扰胎儿大脑发育,破坏神经元增殖、分化和迁移过程,常导致随后的神经行为缺陷。然而,人类研究结果并不一致。尽管在多项研究中观察到可卡因暴露婴儿存在神经行为异常,且在某些情况下发现了剂量反应效应,但不同研究中受影响的具体神经行为各不相同。研究胎儿可卡因暴露影响的研究人员面临诸多难题。例如,使用可卡因的女性通常除了可卡因还使用其他物质,许多用于识别可卡因暴露新生儿的方法不可靠,且现有的评估可卡因暴露新生儿的方法可能不够灵敏,无法检测到可卡因对发育中的中枢神经系统的微妙影响。尽管存在这些困难,但越来越多的研究表明,胎儿期接触可卡因与子宫内暴露儿童随后出现的语言缺陷有关。然而,要将这些儿童通常成长的贫困环境的影响与胎儿期可卡因暴露的影响(如果有)区分开来几乎是不可能的。为了确定独立于出生后环境影响的胎儿可卡因暴露的影响,理想情况下应在出生后的头几周内对可卡因暴露新生儿进行测试,并且为了识别随后语言延迟的早期风险,可以使用经过充分研究的听觉信息处理测量方法。
本研究的目的是评估胎儿可卡因暴露对新生儿听觉信息处理能力的影响。为了克服先前一些关于可卡因神经致畸作用研究的局限性,如不可靠的受试者识别技术、对混杂变量控制不足以及中枢神经系统完整性测量方法存在问题,在严格的病例对照设计中使用了有效的听觉信息处理测量方法。
通过对新生儿进行转头朝向听觉刺激的习惯化和恢复过程评估其信息处理能力,该过程包括三个阶段:熟悉、新奇和去习惯化。在熟悉阶段,婴儿对重复的单词进行定向并习惯化;在新奇阶段,婴儿对新单词恢复转头,随后对该单词习惯化;在去习惯化阶段,婴儿对原始刺激的再次出现重新表现出转头。测试大约需要20分钟。先前已证明该程序可区分随后发育延迟风险高、中、低的婴儿。通过胎粪分析、尿液分析和/或母亲自我报告确定的25名可卡因暴露新生儿和25名未暴露对照新生儿接受了听觉信息处理程序测试。大多数婴儿在出生后的头几天内接受了测试。可卡因暴露新生儿和对照新生儿在出生体重、胎龄、阿氏评分、测试时年龄以及家庭收入所反映的社会经济地位方面进行了匹配。母亲在年龄、体重增加、吸烟和饮酒方面进行了匹配。
胎儿可卡因暴露与听觉信息处理受损有关。可卡因暴露新生儿和未暴露对照新生儿都对熟悉刺激进行了定向,但可卡因暴露新生儿表现出习惯化受损。此外,可卡因暴露新生儿对新刺激没有恢复或习惯化,对熟悉刺激的再次出现也没有去习惯化。(摘要截断)