Transcript FAS1

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dTGWdcWjuZ8
Fetal Alcohol Effects
What is FAS??
Fetal Alcohol Syndrome is growth,
mental, and physical problems that
may occur in a baby when a mother
drinks alcohol during pregnancy.
Symptoms of FAS
• Poor growth while the baby is in the womb and
after birth
• Decreased muscle tone and poor coordination
• Delayed development and problems in three or
more major areas: thinking, speech, movement,
or social skills
• Heart defects such as ventricular septal defect
(VSD) or atrial septal defect (ASD)
Problems with the face, including:
Narrow, small eyes with large
epicanthal folds
Small head
Small upper jaw
Smooth groove in upper lip
Smooth and thin upper lip
• As the child approaches adolescence,
the typical facial features become less
pronounced. In some adults, facial
characteristics have become so
normalized that early childhood
photographs must be used to confirm
diagnosis
Symptoms of FAE
• Infants may show slow growth and
developmental delay, unusual facial features,
irritability, brain and neurological disorders,
mental retardation and problems with their
attachment to their fathers.
• Kids and school-age children may have
problems with learning, low tolerance for
frustration, inadequate social boundaries and
difficulty reading.
• Teenagers can have continuous learning
problems, depression, anxiety and inappropriate
sexual behavior
• This birth defect does not affect one part
of the population more then the other.
Although it would make sense that it would affect babies of younger mothers
more because they might not know they are pregnant and go to parties and drink.
Is it genetic or environmental?
• No. This is environmental. Although
alcoholism is genetic.
Diagnosis
• Must be based on solid evidence, its
difficult to diagnose at and after.
• Small size and weight before and after
birth (pre and post retardation)
• No lab test can determine FAS.
• Most common features of FAS involve the growth,
performance, intelligence, head and face, skeleton,
and heart of the child
•Growth is slowed.
•Intelligence is diminished. The average IQ of a
child with FAS is in the 60s. (This level is considered
mild mental retardation and qualifies a child in the
U.S. as educable mentally retarded.)
•Learning Disabilities
Cure / Treatments
• There is no medication or treatment that
will reverse the symptoms of fetal alcohol
syndrome and the other disorders that are
associated with alcohol-related birth
defects.
• There is no treatment to reverse or
change the physical features or brain
damage associated with maternal alcohol
use during the pregnancy.
• There is no cure in the future, just more
prevention.
• If your planning to be pregnant, are
pregnant or there is a possibility of you
being pregnant you should not drink
alcohol what so ever. What affects your
body affects the baby, and can cause
disabilities. Such as, FAS or FAE.
• These are completely preventable by not
drinking alcohol.
• Provided grant funding for FAS
• They supported the National Council on
Alcoholism in its push for legislation to
bring public attention to the dangers of
alcohol use by pregnant women.
• This led to a 1989 law mandating a
warning label about the risk of birth
defects that alcoholic beverages still carry
today.