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Pediatrics | 2005

A Practical Clinical Approach to Diagnosis of Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorders: Clarification of the 1996 Institute of Medicine Criteria

H. Eugene Hoyme; Philip A. May; Wendy O. Kalberg; Piyadasa W. Kodituwakku; J. Phillip Gossage; Phyllis M. Trujillo; David Buckley; Joseph H. Miller; Alfredo S. Aragón; Nathaniel Khaole; Denis Viljoen; Kenneth Lyons Jones; Luther K. Robinson

Background. The adverse effects of alcohol on the developing human represent a spectrum of structural anomalies and behavioral and neurocognitive disabilities, most accurately termed fetal alcohol spectrum disorders (FASD). The first descriptions in the modern medical literature of a distinctly recognizable pattern of malformations associated with maternal alcohol abuse were reported in 1968 and 1973. Since that time, substantial progress has been made in developing specific criteria for defining and diagnosing this condition. Two sets of diagnostic criteria are now used most widely for evaluation of children with potential diagnoses in the FASD continuum, ie, the 1996 Institute of Medicine (IOM) criteria and the Washington criteria. Although both approaches have improved the clinical delineation of FASD, both suffer from significant drawbacks in their practical application in pediatric practice. Objective. The purpose of this report is to present specific clarifications of the 1996 IOM criteria for the diagnosis of FASD, to facilitate their practical application in clinical pediatric practice. Methods. A large cohort of children who were prenatally exposed to alcohol were identified, through active case-ascertainment methods, in 6 Native American communities in the United States and 1 community in the Western Cape Province of South Africa. The children and their families underwent standardized multidisciplinary evaluations, including a dysmorphology examination, developmental and neuropsychologic testing, and a structured maternal interview, which gathered data about prenatal drinking practices and other demographic and family information. Data for these subjects were analyzed, and revisions and clarifications of the existing IOM FASD diagnostic categories were formulated on the basis of the results. Results. The revised IOM method defined accurately and completely the spectrum of disabilities among the children in our study. On the basis of this experience, we propose specific diagnostic criteria for fetal alcohol syndrome and partial fetal alcohol syndrome. We also define alcohol-related birth defects and alcohol-related neurodevelopmental disorder from a practical standpoint. Conclusions. The 1996 IOM criteria remain the most appropriate diagnostic approach for children prenatally exposed to alcohol. The proposed revisions presented here make these criteria applicable in clinical pediatric practice.


Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research | 2011

Impaired delay and trace eyeblink conditioning in school-age children with fetal alcohol syndrome.

Sandra W. Jacobson; Mark E. Stanton; Neil C. Dodge; Mariska Pienaar; Douglas S. Fuller; Christopher D. Molteno; Ernesta M. Meintjes; H. Eugene Hoyme; Luther K. Robinson; Nathaniel Khaole; Joseph L. Jacobson

BACKGROUND Classical eyeblink conditioning (EBC) involves contingent temporal pairing of a conditioned stimulus (e.g., tone) with an unconditioned stimulus (e.g., air puff). Impairment of EBC has been demonstrated in studies of alcohol-exposed animals and in children exposed prenatally at heavy levels. METHODS Fetal alcohol syndrome (FAS) was diagnosed by expert dysmorphologists in a large sample of Cape Coloured, South African children. Delay EBC was examined in a new sample of 63 children at 11.3 years, and trace conditioning in 32 of the same children at 12.8 years. At each age, 2 sessions of 50 trials each were administered on the same day; 2 more sessions the next day, for children not meeting criterion for conditioning. RESULTS Six of 34 (17.6%) children born to heavy drinkers were diagnosed with FAS, 28 were heavily exposed nonsyndromal (HE), and 29 were nonexposed controls. Only 33.3% with FAS and 42.9% of HE met criterion for delay conditioning, compared with 79.3% of controls. The more difficult trace conditioning task was also highly sensitive to fetal alcohol exposure. Only 16.7% of the FAS and 21.4% of HE met criterion for trace conditioning, compared with 66.7% of controls. The magnitude of the effect of diagnostic group on trace conditioning was not greater than the effect on short delay conditioning, findings consistent with recent rat studies. Longer latency to onset and peak eyeblink CR in exposed children indicated poor timing and failure to blink in anticipation of the puff. Extended training resulted in some but not all of the children reaching criterion. CONCLUSIONS These data showing alcohol-related delay and trace conditioning deficits extend our earlier findings of impaired EBC in 5-year-olds to school-age. Alcohol-related impairment in the cerebellar circuitry required for both forms of conditioning may be sufficient to account for the deficit in both tasks. Extended training was beneficial for some exposed children. EBC provides a well-characterized model system for assessment of degree of cerebellar-related learning and memory dysfunction in fetal alcohol exposed children.


Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research | 2010

An FMRI study of number processing in children with fetal alcohol syndrome.

Ernesta M. Meintjes; Joseph L. Jacobson; Christopher D. Molteno; J. Christopher Gatenby; Christopher Warton; Christopher J. Cannistraci; H. Eugene Hoyme; Luther K. Robinson; Nathaniel Khaole; John C. Gore; Sandra W. Jacobson

BACKGROUND Number processing deficits are frequently seen in children exposed to alcohol in utero. METHODS Functional magnetic resonance imaging was used to examine the neural correlates of number processing in 15 right-handed, 8- to 12-year-old children diagnosed with fetal alcohol syndrome (FAS) or partial FAS (PFAS) and 18 right-handed, age- and gender-matched controls from the Cape Coloured (mixed ancestry) community in Cape Town, South Africa, using Proximity Judgment and Exact Addition tasks. RESULTS Control children activated the expected fronto-parietal network during both tasks, including the anterior horizontal intraparietal sulcus (HIPS), left posterior HIPS, left precentral sulcus, and posterior medial frontal cortex. By contrast, on the Proximity Judgment task, the exposed children recruited additional parietal pathways involving the right and left angular gyrus and posterior cingulate/precuneus, which may entail verbally mediated recitation of numbers and/or subtraction to assess relative numerical distances. During Exact Addition, the exposed children exhibited more diffuse and widespread activations, including the cerebellar vermis and cortex, which have been found to be activated in adults engaged in particularly challenging number processing problems. CONCLUSIONS The data suggest that, whereas control children rely primarily on the fronto-parietal network identified in previous studies to mediate number processing, children with FAS/PFAS recruit a broader range of brain regions to perform these relatively simple number processing tasks. Our results are consistent with structural neuroimaging findings indicating that the parietal lobe is relatively more affected by prenatal alcohol exposure and provide the first evidence for brain activation abnormalities during number processing in children with FAS/PFAS, effects that persist even after controlling statistically for group differences in total intracranial volume and IQ.


Pediatrics | 2013

Facial dysmorphism across the fetal alcohol spectrum.

Michael Suttie; Tatiana Foroud; Leah Wetherill; Joseph L. Jacobson; Christopher D. Molteno; Ernesta M. Meintjes; H E Hoyme; Nathaniel Khaole; Luther K. Robinson; Edward P. Riley; Sandra W. Jacobson; Peter Hammond

OBJECTIVE: Classic facial characteristics of fetal alcohol syndrome (FAS) are shortened palpebral fissures, smooth philtrum, and thin upper vermillion. We aim to help pediatricians detect facial dysmorphism across the fetal alcohol spectrum, especially among nonsyndromal heavily exposed (HE) individuals without classic facial characteristics. METHODS: Of 192 Cape Coloured children recruited, 69 were born to women who reported abstaining from alcohol during pregnancy. According to multifaceted criteria, the remainder were allocated clinically to the FAS (n = 22), partial FAS (n = 26) or nonsyndromal HE (n = 75) categories. We used dense surface modeling and signature analyses of 3-dimensional facial photographs to determine agreement between clinical categorization and classifications induced from face shape alone, to visualize facial differences, and to consider predictive links between face shape and neurobehavior. RESULTS: Face classification achieved significant agreement with clinical categories for discrimination of nonexposed from FAS alone (face: 0.97–1.00; profile: 0.92) or with the addition of partial FAS (face: 0.90; profile: 0.92). Visualizations of face signatures delineated dysmorphism across the fetal alcohol spectrum and in half of the nonsyndromal HE category face signature graphs detected facial characteristics consistent with prenatal alcohol exposure. This subgroup performed less well on IQ and learning tests than did nonsyndromal subjects without classic facial characteristics. CONCLUSIONS: Heat maps and morphing visualizations of face signatures may help clinicians detect facial dysmorphism across the fetal alcohol spectrum. Face signature graphs show potential for identifying nonsyndromal heavily exposed children who lack the classic facial phenotype but have cognitive impairment.


Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research | 2009

Prenatal Alcohol Exposure and Interhemispheric Transfer of Tactile Information: Detroit and Cape Town Findings

Neil C. Dodge; Joseph L. Jacobson; Christopher D. Molteno; Ernesta M. Meintjes; Sumana Bangalore; Vaibhav A. Diwadkar; Eugene H. Hoyme; Luther K. Robinson; Nathaniel Khaole; Malcolm J. Avison; Sandra W. Jacobson

BACKGROUND Previous research has demonstrated that heavy prenatal alcohol exposure affects the size and shape of the corpus callosum (CC) and compromises interhemispheric transfer of information. The aim of this study was to confirm the previous reports of poorer performance on a finger localization test (FLT) of interhemispheric transfer in a cohort of heavily exposed children and to extend these findings to a cohort of moderately exposed young adults. METHODS In Study 1, the FLT was administered to 40 heavily exposed and 23 nonexposed children from the Cape Coloured community of Cape Town, South Africa, who were evaluated for fetal alcohol syndrome (FAS) dysmorphology and growth. Anatomical images of the CC were obtained using structural MRI on a subset of these children. In Study 2, the FLT was administered to a cohort of 85 moderate-to-heavily exposed young adults participating in a 19-year follow-up assessment of the Detroit Prenatal Alcohol Exposure cohort, whose alcohol exposure had been ascertained prospectively during gestation. RESULTS In Study 1, children with FAS showed more transfer-related errors than controls after adjustment for confounding, and increased transfer-related errors were associated with volume reductions in the isthmus and splenium of the CC. In Study 2, transfer-related errors were associated with quantity of alcohol consumed per occasion during pregnancy. More errors were made if the mother reported binge drinking (> or =5 standard drinks) during pregnancy than if she drank regularly (M > or = 1 drink/day) without binge drinking. CONCLUSIONS These findings confirm a previous report of impaired interhemispheric transfer of tactile information in children heavily exposed to alcohol in utero and extend these findings to show that these deficits are also seen in more moderately exposed individuals, particularly those exposed to binge-like pregnancy drinking.


Journal of Developmental and Behavioral Pediatrics | 2010

Population differences in dysmorphic features among children with fetal alcohol spectrum disorders

Philip A. May; J. Phillip Gossage; Matthew A. Smith; Barbara G. Tabachnick; Luther K. Robinson; Melanie A. Manning; Mauro Cecanti; Kenneth Lyons Jones; Nathaniel Khaole; David Buckley; Wendy O. Kalberg; Phyllis M. Trujillo; H. Eugene Hoyme

Objective: To examine the variation in significant dysmorphic features in children from 3 different populations with the most dysmorphic forms of fetal alcohol spectrum disorders, fetal alcohol syndrome (FAS), and partial fetal alcohol syndrome (PFAS). Method: Advanced multiple regression techniques are used to determine the discriminating physical features in the diagnosis of FAS and PFAS among children from Northern Plains Indian communities, South Africa, and Italy. Results: Within the range of physical features used to identify children with fetal alcohol spectrum disorders, specifically FAS and PFAS, there is some significant variation in salient diagnostic features from one population to the next. Intraclass correlations in diagnostic features between these 3 populations is 0.20, indicating that about 20% of the variability in dysmorphology core features is associated with location and, therefore, specific racial/ethnic population. The highly significant diagnostic indicators present in each population are identified for the full samples of FAS, PFAS, and normals and also among children with FAS only. A multilevel model for these populations combined indicates that these variables predict dysmorphology unambiguously: small palpebral fissures, narrow vermillion, smooth philtrum, flat nasal bridge, and fifth finger clinodactyly. Long philtrum varies substantially as a predictor in the 3 populations. Predictors not significantly related to fetal alcohol spectrum disorders dysmorphology across the 3 populations are centile of height (except in Italy) strabismus, interpupilary distance, intercanthal distance, and heart murmurs. Conclusion: The dysmorphology associated with FAS and PFAS vary across populations, yet a particular array of common features occurs in each population, which permits a consistent diagnosis across populations.


Drug and Alcohol Dependence | 2007

The epidemiology of fetal alcohol syndrome and partial FAS in a South African community

Philip A. May; J. Phillip Gossage; Anna Susan Marais; Colleen M. Adnams; H. Eugene Hoyme; Kenneth Lyons Jones; Luther K. Robinson; Nathaniel Khaole; Cudore L. Snell; Wendy O. Kalberg; Loretta S. Hendricks; Lesley E. Brooke; Chandra Stellavato; Denis Viljoen


Journal of Studies on Alcohol and Drugs | 2005

Fetal Alcohol Syndrome Epidemiology in a South African Community: A Second Study of a Very High Prevalence Area

Denis Viljoen; J. Phillip Gossage; Lesley E. Brooke; Colleen M. Adnams; Kenneth Lyons Jones; Luther K. Robinson; H. Eugene Hoyme; Cudore L. Snell; Nathaniel Khaole; Piyadasa W. Kodituwakku; Kwadwo Ohene Asante; Richard Findlay; Barbara Quinton; Anna Susan Marais; Wendy O. Kalberg; Philip A. May


Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research | 2008

Impaired Eyeblink Conditioning in Children With Fetal Alcohol Syndrome

Sandra W. Jacobson; Mark E. Stanton; Christopher D. Molteno; Matthew J. Burden; Douglas S. Fuller; H. Eugene Hoyme; Luther K. Robinson; Nathaniel Khaole; Joseph L. Jacobson


Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research | 2009

The Effects of Fetal Alcohol Syndrome on Response Execution and Inhibition: An Event-Related Potential Study

Matthew J. Burden; Colin Andrew; Dave Saint-Amour; Ernesta M. Meintjes; Christopher D. Molteno; H. Eugene Hoyme; Luther K. Robinson; Nathaniel Khaole; Charles A. Nelson; Joseph L. Jacobson; Sandra W. Jacobson

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Philip A. May

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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