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Foetal Alcohol Syndrome

Foetal Alcohol Syndrome

National Organisation for Foetal Alcohol Syndrome And Related Disorders (NOFASARD)

Foetal Alcohol Syndrome (FAS), Foetal Alcohol Effects (FAE), Alcohol Related Neurodevelopmental Disorders (ARND) and Alcohol Related Birth Defects (ARBD) are all names for a spectrum of disorders that potentially result from pregnant women consuming alcohol.

Alcohol is a teratogen ie. an environmental agent that causes malformation of the embryo and the developing foetus. The effects of teratogen’s can cause functional deficits in individuals. Alcohol’s teratogenic effects on the developing foetus causes FAS/FAE/ARND/ARBD. The brain and the central nervous system of the unborn child are particularly sensitive to prenatal alcohol exposure and this can lead to long-term developmental disabilities.

How much alcohol is safe?

Researchers have not been able to determine a safe level for alcohol consumption for pregnant women. However, they do know that damage to the foetus varies due to the volume of alcohol ingested, timing during pregnancy, peak blood alcohol levels, genetic factors and environmental factors.

Alcohol can damage the foetus throughout the pregnancy. It crosses the placenta freely and produces equivalent concentrations in foetal circulation to that in the mother. Studies conclude that the developing brain can be injured even at low alcohol exposure levels.

To avoid damage to your unborn baby, the safest advice is “no alcohol if trying to conceive, during pregnancy and while breastfeeding”

Please don’t be alarmed if you are already pregnant and have been drinking alcohol - it is never too late in a pregnancy to stop drinking.

Diagnosis & Prognosis

FAS/FAE/ARND/ARBD is a lifetime disability. It is not curable, however early diagnosis and appropriate intervention can make an enormous difference to the life/prognosis of the person with the disability.

If there is documented or anecdotal evidence of alcohol use by a mother during her pregnancy then the possibility that her child has FAS/FAE/ARND/ARBD MUST be considered. An individual who receives a correct diagnosis is in a much better position to benefit from intervention than one who is not diagnosed or mis-diagnosed and receives only partial treatment. Lack of diagnosis means the adoption of inappropriate and ineffective traditional interventions that can lead to the development of secondary disabilities.

Primary Characteristics

Toddlers/PreSchoolers

Irregular sleep patterns -

Failure to thrive - height and weight growth deficiency

Lack of ability to make and keep friends on their own

Lacking in normal abilities to distinguish friend from enemy

Difficult to manage out in public

Danger to self and others because they do not grasp the universal laws of cause and effect

Deficient in the normal sequential learning abilities in reasoning, judgement and memory

Highly manipulative

Sometimes medically fragile

Children

Impulsive, unpredicatable and mischievous, creating ongoing safety hazards, e.g. setting fires and running away.

Uneven sleep patterns

Innately skilled in manipulative tactics

Desperate for stimulation and excitement to keep them happy

Emotionally volatile and often exhibit wide mood swings throughout the day

Often disconnected from their own feelings and are unable to identify or express logical reasons behind their volatile outbursts or behaviour

Void of natural empathy for others

Often isolated and lonely because the desire to be included remains intact while the reasoning skill to figure out why they are excluded is lacking

May struggle to master basic skills in literacy and numeracy, money concepts and time

Deficits in memory, reasoning and judgement

Adolescents

Still in need of limits and protection because of their deficits in reasoning, judgement and memory

At high risk of being drawn into anti-social behaviour such as lying, stealing and addicition to legal and illegal drugs

Unable to easily distinguish between friends and enemies

Often obsessed by primal impulses such as sexual activity and fire setting

Able to recover from emotional crises VERY quickly

Judgement and reasoning skills seriously impaired

Safety menace to themselves and others

Unaware or negligent of normal hygiene responsibilities

Extremely vulnerable to suggestions in movies, videos, advertisements etc.

Unable, not unwilling to take responsibility for their actions

Volatility - rage and strong emotions

Secondary Disabilities

Without the correct diagnosis and interventions individuals with FAS/FAE/ARND/ARBD experience a high prevalence of secondary disabilities such as:

Mental health problems

Early school dropout

Homelessness

Confinement in a residential treatment or correctional facility

Inappropriate sexual behaviour

Alcohol & Drug problems

Employment problems

May be unable to handle independent living

*Source: National Organisation for Foetal Alcohol Syndrome And Related Disorders (NOFASARD)

 

Written by dnw on Friday, April 4, 2008
Tagged: Foetal Alcohol Syndrome

 

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