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Query: UMLS:C0026827 (
hypotonia
)
5,860
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The most notable features of
fetal alcohol syndrome
involve the face and eyes, and include microcephaly, short palpebral fissures, an underdeveloped philtrum and a thin upper lip. Evidence of intrauterine or postnatal growth retardation, mental retardation or other neurologic abnormalities, and at least two of the typical facial features are necessary to make the diagnosis. Newborns with the syndrome may be irritable, with
hypotonia
, severe tremors and withdrawal symptoms. Mild mental retardation, the most common and serious deficit, and a variety of other anomalies may accompany
fetal alcohol syndrome
. Sensory deficits include optic nerve hypoplasia, poor visual acuity, hearing loss, and receptive and expressive language delays. Atrial and ventricular septal defects, as well as renal hypoplasia, bladder diverticula and other genitourinary tract abnormalities, may occur. Complete abstinence during pregnancy is recommended, since alcohol consumption in each trimester has been associated with abnormalities, and the lowest innocuous dose of alcohol is not known.
...
PMID:Fetal alcohol syndrome. 794 1
The complex relationship between alcohol use and pregnancy involves socioeconomic, biomedical, psychological, and ethical factors. In recent years alcohol abuse on the part of women of childbearing age has been increasing steadily. Currently, a significant segment of the American population is at risk for an alcoholic pregnancy. Discussion includes a review of the literature concerning alcohol and pregnancy and covers the following: the symptomatology of
fetal alcohol syndrome
; prospective and epidemiologic human studies; animal models; etiology of
fetal alcohol syndrome (FAS)
; maternal aspects of alcoholism and pregnancy and associated risk factors; paternal drinking and the theory of germ cell damage; use of ethanol in obstetrics; prevention of
FAS
; and questions to be answered in the future. The Fetal Alcohol Study Group of the Research Society of Alcoholism has promulgated a list of minimal criteria that must be met before a diagnosis of
fetal alcohol syndrome (FAS)
can be made. These criteria include prenatal and postnatal growth retardation and at least 2 of the following characteristic facial features: microcephaly, microopthalmia, and/or short palpebral fissures; and midfacial hypoplasia (defined as absent or rudimentary philtrum, thin vermilion border of upper lip, hypoplastic maxilla). The label "possible FAS" also is recommended if the criteria are not met, but congenital damage due to alcohol still is suspected. Virtually all infants with
FAS
have very low birth weights for their gestational age, usually at or below the third percentile. Body length and head circumference also are reduced to a similar degree. Mental retardation is the most debilitating and tragic aspect of this syndrome. Hyperactivity, hyperresponsiveness, hyperacusis,
hypotonia
, and tremulousness also are commonly described in
FAS
infants. Numerous studies involving large numbers of pregnant women have provided important data concerning the epidemiology and symptomatology of maternal alcohol use. All of these studies have been based on self reported use of alcohol, and the relationship of these reports to actual intake probably varies. Available prospective studies permit the estimation of the incidence of
FAS
in general and clarify to some extent the magnitude of risks an alcoholic woman has for giving birth to a defective child. Animal studies are very important in the study of alcohol and pregnancy because they provide an opportunity to control for variables that are seldom accounted for in human beings. One can control dosage and timing of ethanol administration, nutritional factors via pair feeding, and environment, and one can consider individual variation through cross strain comparisons.
...
PMID:Pregnancy and alcohol. 1233 10
Little is known about the effect of inhalation of methanol and other solvents on the pregnancy and the growth of the fetus. We report a preterm male infant who developed cerebral infarcts in utero, leading to large areas of bilateral frontal cortical leukomalacia following chronic maternal inhalation of carburetor-cleaning fluid during pregnancy. The infant presented with acute fetal distress with significant metabolic acidosis at birth. Initial
hypotonia
was followed by generalized hypertonicity. This infant did not exhibit typical facial features of
fetal alcohol syndrome
.
...
PMID:Intrauterine cerebral infarcts and bilateral frontal cortical leukomalacia following chronic maternal inhalation of carburetor cleaning fluid during pregnancy. 1464 72