Division of Emergency Medicine, Children's Hospital Boston, Boston, Massachusetts 02115, USA.
Alcohol Clin Exp Res. 2013 Mar;37(3):452-62. doi: 10.1111/j.1530-0277.2012.01940.x. Epub 2012 Sep 26.
Fetal alcohol-related growth restriction persists through infancy, but its impact later in life is less clear. Animal studies have demonstrated important roles for maternal nutrition in fetal alcohol spectrum disorders, but the impact of prenatal maternal body composition has not been studied in humans. This study examined the effects of prenatal alcohol exposure on longitudinal growth from birth through young adulthood and the degree to which maternal weight and body mass index (BMI) moderate these effects.
Nearly 480 mothers were recruited at their first prenatal clinic visit to overrepresent moderate-to-heavy use of alcohol during pregnancy, including a 5% random sample of low-level drinkers and abstainers. They were interviewed at every prenatal visit about their alcohol consumption using a timeline follow-back approach. Their children were examined for weight, length/height, and head circumference at birth, 6.5 and 13 months, and 7.5, 14, and 19 years.
In multiple regression models with repeated measures (adjusted for confounders), prenatal alcohol exposure was associated with longitudinal reductions in weight, height, and weight-for-length/BMI that were largely determined at birth. At low-to-moderate levels of exposure, these effects were more severe in infancy than in later childhood. By contrast, effects persisted among children whose mothers drank at least monthly and among those born to women with alcohol abuse and/or dependence who had consumed ≥ 4 drinks/occasion. In addition, effects on weight, height, and head circumference were markedly stronger among children born to mothers with lower prepregnancy weight.
These findings confirm prior studies demonstrating alcohol-related reductions in weight, height, weight-for-height/BMI, and head circumference that persist through young adulthood. Stronger effects were seen among children born to mothers with smaller prepregnancy weight, which may have been because of attainment of higher blood alcohol concentrations in smaller mothers for a given amount of alcohol intake or to increased vulnerability in infants born to women with poorer nutrition.
胎儿酒精相关生长受限持续到婴儿期,但在生命后期的影响尚不清楚。动物研究表明,母体营养在胎儿酒精谱系障碍中起着重要作用,但在人类中尚未研究产前母体身体成分的影响。本研究检查了产前酒精暴露对从出生到成年早期的纵向生长的影响,以及母亲体重和体重指数(BMI)对这些影响的调节程度。
近 480 名母亲在第一次产前诊所就诊时被招募,以代表怀孕期间中度至重度饮酒,包括 5%的随机低水平饮酒者和戒酒者样本。她们在每次产前就诊时都通过时间线回溯法就其饮酒情况进行了访谈。她们的孩子在出生时、6.5 个月和 13 个月、7.5 个月、14 个月和 19 岁时接受了体重、身高/长度和头围检查。
在具有重复测量的多元回归模型中(调整了混杂因素),产前酒精暴露与体重、身高和体重-长度/BMI 的纵向下降有关,这些下降主要在出生时确定。在低至中度暴露水平下,这些影响在婴儿期比在后期儿童期更为严重。相比之下,在母亲至少每月饮酒的儿童中以及在母亲有酒精滥用和/或依赖且每次饮酒至少 4 杯的儿童中,这些影响仍然存在。此外,在母亲怀孕前体重较低的儿童中,体重、身高和头围的影响明显更强。
这些发现证实了先前的研究,表明与酒精相关的体重、身高、体重-身高/BMI 和头围下降持续到成年早期。在母亲怀孕前体重较小的儿童中,这些影响更强,这可能是因为在摄入相同量的酒精时,较小母亲的血液酒精浓度更高,或者是因为营养状况较差的母亲所生婴儿的脆弱性增加。