Alcoholism, clinical and experimental research | 2019

Spatial navigation in children and young adults with fetal alcohol spectrum disorders.

 
 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


BACKGROUND\nRodent studies have consistently shown that prenatal alcohol exposure (PAE) impairs performance on the Morris Water Maze (MWM), a test of spatial navigation. A previous study comparing boys with fetal alcohol syndrome (FAS) to controls found poorer performance on the virtual water maze (VWM), a human analogue of the MWM. We examined PAE effects on virtual navigation in both sexes using the VWM in a moderately exposed Detroit cohort (N=104; mean=19.4 yr) and a heavily exposed Cape Town, South African cohort (N=62; mean=10.4 yr).\n\n\nMETHODS\nThe task requires the participant to learn the location of a hidden platform in a virtual pool of water. The set of acquisition trials requires the participant to learn the location of the hidden platform and to return to that location repeatedly. The single probe trial requires the participant to return to that location without knowing that the platform has been removed.\n\n\nRESULTS\nNo effects of FASD diagnostic group or PAE were detected on virtual navigation in the Detroit moderately exposed cohort. By contrast, in the more heavily exposed Cape Town cohort, the FAS/partial FAS (PFAS) group took longer to locate the hidden platform during acquisition than non-syndromal heavy exposed (HE) and control groups, an effect that persisted even after controlling for IQ. Among boys, both the FAS/PFAS and HE groups performed more poorly than controls during acquisition, and both boys and girls born to women who binge drank performed more poorly than those born to abstainers/light drinkers. Both amount and frequency of PAE were related to poorer performance during the probe trial at 10 years of age.\n\n\nCONCLUSIONS\nThese data demonstrate deficits in spatial navigation among heavily exposed syndromal boys and girls and in non-syndromal exposed boys.

Volume None
Pages None
DOI 10.1111/acer.14210
Language English
Journal Alcoholism, clinical and experimental research

Full Text