The influence of maternal weight and alcohol exposure on infant physical characteristics and neurodevelopmental outcomes

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.crtox.2022.100076Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • Maternal weight was inversely related with infant dysmorphology score.

  • The rate of change was similar among all infants regardless of maternal weight.

  • Maternal weight may be protective but does not eliminate adverse effects of alcohol.

  • Regardless of maternal weight during pregnancy, alcohol remains a teratogen.

Abstract

Background

Mothers of children with fetal alcohol spectrum disorders tend to have lower weight compared to other mothers. Yet how alcohol and maternal weight may predispose infants to poorer physical growth and neurodevelopmental trajectories is relatively unexplained.

Methods

South African mothers (n = 406) were recruited prenatally and their offspring were provided standardized dysmorphology and neurodevelopment examinations at 6 weeks and 9 months of age. Maternal weight was obtained postpartum, and linear mixed modeling determined whether postpartum maternal weight and prenatal alcohol exposure significantly influenced infant growth, dysmorphology, and neurodevelopment within the first year of life.

Results

Postpartum maternal weight was positively associated with birth length, weight, and head circumference centile, but the rate of growth from birth to nine months was similar among all infants. Maternal weight was inversely associated with dysmorphology. Many infants in this population were performing within the borderline or extremely low range. Higher maternal weight was associated with significantly better cognitive and motor performance at 6 weeks; however, the rate of developmental growth was similar among all infants, regardless of postpartum maternal weight.

Conclusion

Higher postpartum maternal weight may be a protective factor but does not eliminate the adverse effects of alcohol on infant growth and dysmorphology. Regardless of maternal weight, alcohol remains a powerful teratogen and moderate to high use prenatally can result in adverse infant physical and neurocognitive development.

Keywords

Fetal alcohol spectrum disorders
Prenatal alcohol exposure
Maternal weight
Growth
Dysmorphology
Neurodevelopment
Infancy

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