Iris E. Smith
Emory University
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Featured researches published by Iris E. Smith.
Neurotoxicology and Teratology | 1991
Claire D. Coles; Ronald T. Brown; Iris E. Smith; Kathleen A. Platzman; Stephen Erickson
Alcohol is a potent teratogen associated with dysmorphology, growth retardation, and neurological damage in children with the full fetal alcohol syndrome (FAS); alcohol is also associated with growth retardation and behavioral alterations in neonates prenatally exposed to various dosages. Questions remain about the long-term consequences of prenatal alcohol exposure. This study reports on the follow-up of a subsample of 68 children, the majority of whom were low income and black (mean age: 5 years, 10 months) who were first evaluated as neonates. Physical and cognitive outcomes of 25 children of women who drank throughout pregnancy [absolute alcohol (AA)/week: mean = 11.80 oz), even after receiving an educational intervention to stop drinking, were compared with outcomes of children in two contrast groups: a) women (n = 22) who stopped drinking (AA/week: mean = 11.46 oz) in the second trimester after an educational intervention but resumed postpartum; and b) women who did not drink during pregnancy and who drank little postnatally (n = 21). Children were compared for alcohol-related birth defects (ARBDs), growth (height, weight, and head circumference), and cognitive, academic, and adaptive measures. Neonatal and current physical measures were correlated to determine predictability of neonatal status. When the effects of age and gender were controlled, children in the continued-to-drink group showed significantly more ARBDs and had smaller head circumferences than those in the other two groups. When current drinking reported by caretakers was controlled, the children who were exposed throughout pregnancy also showed significant and consistent deficits in several areas of intellectual functioning including sequential processing (short-term memory and encoding) and overall mental processing. Alcohol-exposed children displayed significant deficits in preacademic skills when compared with children of nondrinkers, with both alcohol groups deficient in premath and reading skills. There were no differences in adaptive behavior at follow-up. These data suggest that alcohol exposure throughout pregnancy is correlated with persistent physical differences as well as identifiable deficits in sequential memory processes and specific academic skills. However, even when alcohol use is limited to the first part of pregnancy, significant deficits in academic skills and growth parameters are measurable.
Neurotoxicology and Teratology | 1992
Claire D. Coles; Kathleen A. Platzman; Iris E. Smith; Mark E. James
Effects on fetal growth and neonatal behavior of cocaine and alcohol use in pregnancy were investigated in infants born to women in a low-income, predominantly black population. Despite the increased use of cocaine by pregnant women and the accompanying public concern, behavioral studies of exposed neonates are limited in number and scope. In most studies, confounding factors (e.g., polydrug abuse, prematurity, infant health status) have not been controlled so the actual effects of cocaine and other drug exposure are not clear. Accordingly, this study investigated effects of prenatal drug exposure although controlling experimentally for other factors known to be associated with poor outcomes in infants: prematurity, other illicit drug use, associated diseases (e.g., sexually transmitted diseases [STDs]), and duration of drug use. In addition, other factors statistically controlled were: experimenter effects, timing of assessment, and effects of duration, amount, and frequency of cocaine, alcohol, marijuana, and nicotine exposure. One hundred and seven full-term infants were assessed at 2, 14, and 28 days using the Brazelton Neonatal Behavioral Assessment Scale (BNBAS) by testers blind to infant status. Growth factors (i.e., birthweight, length, head circumference) were also assessed.
Neurotoxicology and Teratology | 1991
Ronald T. Brown; Claire D. Coles; Iris E. Smith; Kathleen A. Platzman; Jeffrey Silverstein; Stephen Erickson
Alcohol, a potent teratogen, has been suggested as an etiologic agent in attention deficit disorder with hyperactivity (ADHD), which is often diagnosed in children with fetal alcohol syndrome (FAS) and in children of alcoholics. We studied attentional and behavioral factors associated with diagnosis of this disorder in children selected from a predominantly low-income, black population who were tested as part of a longitudinal follow-up of children with prenatal alcohol exposure. Sixty-eight children with a mean age of 5 years 10 months, born to three groups of mothers, were assessed. These groups consisted of: a) women who reported not drinking during pregnancy (n = 21), b) women who reported drinking throughout pregnancy (n = 25), and c) women who reported drinking an equivalent amount but who stopped drinking after educational intervention during the second trimester (n = 22). Dimensions assessed included factors related to attention on a computerized task, impulsivity, and the presence of psychiatrically significant internalizing and externalizing behaviors. In addition, free play and mother-child interactions were video-taped, and evidence of overactive and noncompliant behaviors were noted. Hyperactivity and impulsive behavior were not evident. Results indicated that children exposed throughout pregnancy showed deficits in the ability to sustain attention and were more often described by teachers, although not by their mothers, as showing attentional and behavioral problems. Problems in both internalizing and externalizing behaviors also were noted by teachers. However, when current drinking was controlled, only externalizing behaviors remained different by group.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
The Journal of Pediatrics | 1984
Claire D. Coles; Iris E. Smith; Paul M. Fernhoff
Although neonatal withdrawal syndrome is often noted in infants of narcotics addicts, ethanol withdrawal has been reported only among neonates with fetal alcohol syndrome. To examine the possibility that ethanol withdrawal occurs more widely and to identify its characteristics, the behavior of eight neonates born to women who drank a mean of 21 ounces of absolute alcohol per week during gestation was compared with that of two contrast groups: 15 infants whose mothers drank an equivalent amount but stopped in the second trimester, and 29 infants whose mothers never drank. None of the 52 infants had fetal alcohol syndrome, and all were in good health. Neurobehavioral evaluation 3 days postnatally compared the groups for the occurrence of characteristic signs of withdrawal from central nervous system depressants. Whereas there was no difference in the frequency of withdrawal symptoms among infants of mothers who never drank (mean 1.4) or of mothers who stopped drinking (mean 1.8), infants of mothers who continued to drink (mean 4.7) had significantly more tremors, hypertonia, restlessness, excessive mouthing movements, unconsolable crying, and reflex abnormalities. By interfering with state control and interactive behaviors, withdrawal could affect mother-infant bonding as well as the conditions that foster cognitive and social development.
Journal of Substance Abuse Treatment | 1992
Iris E. Smith; Donna Z. Dent; Claire D. Coles
The purpose of this study was to determine whether untreated pregnant and recently post-partum cocaine-abusing women could be differentiated from women who enrolled in drug treatment programs. The experimental sample was selected from women referred to the Georgia Addiction, Pregnancy, and Parenting Project, an intervention program for pregnant and postpartum addicted women, between January 1987 and January 1988 (n = 45). The comparison group was randomly selected from women who were admitted to two (2) day treatment programs during the same time period (n = 50). Groups were compared using the Addiction Severity Index (ASI) and the Psychiatric Symptom Checklist-90 (SCL-90). Results indicated that untreated women were less impaired socially and exhibited fewer symptoms of psychiatric distress. These findings confirm the commonly held belief that the severity of psychosocial distress may be an important motivating factor in the decision to enter drug treatment. Alternatively, the lack of gender-sensitive program components, such as childcare, and the social stigma attached to drug use in pregnancy may also account for the reluctance of pregnant and post-partum mothers to seek drug treatment. Implications for the development of intervention and treatment programs for women are discussed.
Infant Behavior & Development | 1987
Claire D. Coles; Iris E. Smith; Juliana S. Lancaster
Abstract Neonatal withdrawal and neurobehavioral differences have been reported in clinically normal infants of women drinking during pregnancy, with those exposed through the third trimester showing more serious deficits. Whether these are the transitory effects of withdrawal or indicative of persistent nervous system alterations is unclear since repeated neurobehavioral evaluations in early infancy have not been done previously with this population. To investigate whether there are persistent changes associated with prenatal alcohol exposure, 31 infants of women who (a) never drank, (b) continued drinking (13.34 oz, absolute alcohol [AA] per week) throughout pregnancy, or (c) stopped drinking (16.25 oz, AA) in the second trimester were assessed at 3 days, 14 days, and 30 days with the Brazelton Neonatal Behavioral Assessment Scale (BNBAS). Over the first month, differences were found among the groups in motor performance, autonomic regulation, and abnormal reflexive behavioral clusters with the performance of infants whose mothers continued to drink being less optimal. When a covariate analysis was done to examine changes over the first month associated with alcohol exposure when initial differences in performance were held constant, infants whose mothers continued to drink showed less improvement over time in these areas. Thus, there appear to be real and persistent nervous system differences during the first month in children exposed to alcohol prenatally.
Journal of the American Psychiatric Nurses Association | 2010
Ibrahim A. Kira; Iris E. Smith; Linda Lewandowski; Thomas Templin
Trauma developmental theory identifies gender discrimination (GD) as a type of persistent, ongoing trauma that has the potential for serious, negative effects on mental health. This study was conducted to examine the potential role of GD in the development of cumulative trauma disorders (CTD) and symptoms of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) as well as the role of GD in mediating the effects of other traumas on these disorders. The sample included 160 female torture survivors from more than 30 countries. Measures of PTSD, CTD, and types of trauma exposure were acquired as part of a larger study on refugee torture survivors. Structural equation modeling was used to test several plausible models for the direct and indirect effects of GD on PTSD and CTD, within the context of other trauma exposure. Results suggest that GD mediates the effects of identity traumas on CTD and PTSD. GD also had direct effects on CTD, including relationships with dissociation, suicidality, and deficits in executive function. GD did not appear to directly influence the development of PTSD. The implications of these results for assessment and treatment of women’s trauma-related disorders as well as strategies for their prevention are discussed.
Clinical Immunology and Immunopathology | 1984
John J. Madden; Robert M. Donahoe; Iris E. Smith; Deborah E. Martinson; Suzette Moss-Wells; Luella Klein
Ethanol use by pregnant women increased, in a dose-dependent manner, the rate of sheep erythrocyte rosette (E-rosette) formation with T lymphocytes. The time curve for E-rosette formation by T cells from nondrinking subjects was biphasic, with a rapid formation of half the E-rosettes within the first 16 min, followed by a much slower rate for E-rosette formation until the maximal T-cell percentage was reached overnight. For pregnant drinkers, greater than 85% of the E-rosettes formed during the initial rate period, with a concomitant smaller number forming during the overnight incubation. Despite the faster initial rate of E-rosette formation in the drinking subjects, the total percentage T cells was the same for both groups. Other demographic factors, like tobacco or marijuana use, or trimester, did not significantly contribute to the observed differences. An increase in the rate of E rosetting was also obtained by incubating lymphocytes from nondrinkers overnight in physiologically attainable concentrations of ethanol (less than or equal to 0.1%). These results demonstrate that drinking by pregnant women, even at relatively moderate levels (2 oz/week absolute ethanol), causes alterations in their cellular immune systems. With the ability of ethanol to cross the placental barrier and persist in utero, it is apparent that these levels of ethanol have the potential to affect the developing fetal immune system.
Journal of Substance Abuse Treatment | 1992
A. Thomas McLellan; Harvey Kushner; David S. Metzger; Roger H. Peters; Iris E. Smith; Grant R. Grissom; Helen M. Pettinati; Milton Argeriou
Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research | 1997
Claire D. Coles; Kathleen A. Platzman; Cheryl Raskind-Hood; Ronald T. Brown; Iris E. Smith