Division of Emergency Medicine, Children's Hospital Boston, 300 Longwood Avenue, Boston, MA 02115, USA.
Alcohol Clin Exp Res. 2012 Nov;36(11):1973-82. doi: 10.1111/j.1530-0277.2012.01810.x. Epub 2012 Aug 15.
Prenatal alcohol exposure has been associated with pre- and postnatal growth restriction, but little is known about the natural history of this restriction throughout childhood or the effects of prenatal alcohol on body composition. The objective of this study was to examine the effects of heavy prenatal alcohol exposure on longitudinal growth and body composition.
Eighty-five heavy drinking pregnant women (≥2 drinks/d or ≥4 drinks/occasion) and 63 abstaining and light-drinking controls (<1 drink/d, no binging) were recruited at initiation of prenatal care in an urban obstetrical clinic in Cape Town, South Africa and prospectively interviewed during pregnancy about alcohol, smoking, drug use, and demographics. Among their children, length/height, weight, and head circumference were measured at 6.5 and 12 months and at 5 and 9 years. Percent body fat (BF) was estimated at age 9 years using bioelectric impedance analysis.
In multiple regression models with repeated measures (adjusted for confounders), heavy alcohol exposure was associated with reductions in weight (0.6 SD), length/height (0.5 SD), and head circumference (0.9 cm) from 6.5 months to 9 years that were largely determined at birth. These effects were exacerbated by iron deficiency in infancy but were not modified by iron deficiency or measures of food security at 5 years. An alcohol-related postnatal delay in weight gain was seen at 12 months. Effects on head circumference were greater at age 9 than at other age points. Although heavy alcohol exposure was not associated with changes in body composition, children with fetal alcohol syndrome (FAS) and partial fetal alcohol syndrome (PFAS) had lower percent BF than heavy exposed nonsyndromal and control children.
Heavy prenatal alcohol exposure is related to prenatal growth restriction that persists through age 9 years and an additional delay in weight gain during infancy. FAS and PFAS diagnoses are associated with leaner body composition in later childhood.
产前酒精暴露与产前和产后生长受限有关,但对于整个儿童期这种限制的自然史以及产前酒精对身体成分的影响知之甚少。本研究的目的是研究重度产前酒精暴露对纵向生长和身体成分的影响。
85 名重度饮酒孕妇(≥2 份/d 或≥4 份/次)和 63 名不饮酒和轻度饮酒对照组(<1 份/d,不酗酒)在南非开普敦的一家城市产科诊所开始产前护理时被招募,并在怀孕期间接受关于酒精、吸烟、药物使用和人口统计学的前瞻性访谈。在他们的孩子中,6.5 个月和 12 个月以及 5 岁和 9 岁时测量身长/身高、体重和头围。在 9 岁时使用生物电阻抗分析估计体脂百分比(BF)。
在具有重复测量的多元回归模型中(调整混杂因素),与 6.5 个月至 9 岁期间的体重(0.6 SD)、身长/身高(0.5 SD)和头围(0.9 cm)减少相关,这些减少主要在出生时确定。婴儿期缺铁会加剧这些影响,但在 5 岁时缺铁或食物保障措施并不能改变这些影响。在 12 个月时,观察到与酒精相关的体重增加延迟。在 9 岁时,与其他年龄点相比,头围的影响更大。尽管产前酒精暴露与身体成分的变化无关,但胎儿酒精谱系障碍(FAS)和部分胎儿酒精谱系障碍(PFAS)儿童的体脂百分比低于重度暴露的非综合征和对照组儿童。
重度产前酒精暴露与产前生长受限有关,这种受限持续到 9 岁,婴儿期体重增加进一步延迟。FAS 和 PFAS 诊断与儿童后期更瘦的身体成分有关。