Title: FAS The Silent Epidemic
1FASThe Silent Epidemic
- Dr. Irena Nulman
- The Motherisk Program
- Division of Clinical Pharmacology Toxicology
- Hospital for Sick Children, University of Toronto
2JR
- Learning problems
- Poor attention
- Problems with memory, writing, planning, concepts
of time. - Behavioral problem
- Poor anger control, unhappy
- Impaired attachment
- Physical examination
- Short palpebral fissure, flat midface, long
flattened philtrum, narrow upper lip, low set
ears - Head circumference, height, and weight 3
percentile - Psychiatric evaluation
- Dx ADHD, ODD
3JR
- Biological mother had mental illness and abused
alcohol in pregnancy - Age 3, apprehended by CAS for neglect
- 4 foster homes
- Age 7, adopted by Rs
JR - diagnosed with FAS
4MC
- Behavior Problems
- Oppositional
- Inattentive
- Needs constant stimulation
- Frequent explosive temper tantrums
- Social
- Lying, stealing
- Difficulties appreciating social context
- Learning Difficulties
- No physical sign of alcohol toxicity
- Abnormal involuntary movements
5MC
- Mother
- Receptionist
- Learning difficulties, slow
- Depression
- Severe NVP, PROM, prolonged labor
- 34 weeks, jaundice
- Father
- Salesman
- ADHD at school
- Often changes jobs?
- Family history of suicide in a first degree
relative - 12 beers in weekends
6MC
- Parents in a divorce process for 3 years
- Mother - denies drugs of abuse
- Father accusing mother of drinking in pregnancy
- MC - sharing custody, unstable home
7Test Results
- JR
- Reduced intelligence
- Nonverbal IQgtVerbal IQ
- Strengths
- Receptive language
- Story recall
- Rote memory
- Reading
- Deficits
- Visuomotor skills
- Attention impulsivity
- Spatial memory
- Math
- Executive planning, organization, flexibility
- MC
- Normal intelligence
- Nonverbal IQgtVerbal IQ
- Strengths
- Receptive language
- Story recall
- Verbal knowledge
- Rote memory
- Reading
- Visuospatial ability
- Deficits
- Visuomotor skills
- Attention impulsivity
- Math
- Executive planning, flexibility, organization
8ARND
-
- The label ARND was proposed for children who
exhibit neurodevelopment abnormalities - in isolation
9ARND
- Phenotypic, morphologic, cognitive and/or
behavioral markers of ARND have not been
established yet - The fetal/child dose effects of lesser
quantities of alcohol consumption have not been
elucidated - In gt 94 FASD is associated with later mental
health disorders
10- Are MCs problems due to assumed fetal alcohol
exposure? - Do we need to diagnose the ARND?
- Do we need a differential diagnosis?
- Should ARND be a diagnosis of exclusion?
- When ethanol is the cause and when it is a
confounder? - Do we need a comprehensive diagnostic approach to
put the puzzle together? -
11Do we need to diagnose ARND?
- Do we need a differential diagnosis?
- When ethanol is the cause and when
- it is a confounder?
- Do we need a comprehensive diagnostic approach to
put the puzzle together? - Should ARND be a diagnosis of
- exclusion?
12- Why a DD is Needed
- Lack of access to resources
- Lack of proper interventions
- Increased risk for secondary disabilities
- Specific learning disorders
- Mood and anxiety disorders
- Mislead research
-
13Secondary disabilities
- Appear later in life as a result of complications
from primary disabilities. - Mental health problems (94)
- Disruptive school experience (60)
- Trouble with law (60)
- Confinement (50)
- Inappropriate sexual behaviour (50)
- Alcohol/drug problems (30)
- Dependent living (80)
- Employment problems (80)
14Child Presentation
- Dont behave as expected
- ADHD
- Conduct and oppositional
- OCD
- Can not regulate emotions
- Worry
- Anxious-avoidant
- Sad
- Dont learn properly as expected for age
- Head trauma
- Inhibition
- Depression
- Do weird things
- Psychosis
- Tourette
15Comprehensive Diagnostic Approach
- The diagnosis should depend on a combination of
physiological, behavioral, and interactional
measures concordant with the clinical
presentation - Caregiver
- Teacher/School
- Child
16Caregivers
- Confirmation of any exposure
- Screening tests
- Family history
- mental health
- genetic and developmental disorders
- learning disabilities
- Head trauma
- Stability of caregivers environment
- History of head trauma
- Developmental history
- Description of behavior at home /social
situations - Consider childs age
17- Teacher
- Academic achievement
- Behavior in structured and non- structured
learning contexts - Child
- Physical examination
- Genetic evaluation
- Laboratory
- Psychiatric examination
- Psychological assessment
- Consider childs age
18The Mother
- Pregnancy
- Exposure during 1st, 2nd, 3d trimesters
- Maternal infections, medical care, NVP
- Unwonted, unplanned pregnancies
- Perinatal complications, labor duration, mode of
delivery forceps, vacuum - Fetal distress (O2 deprivation, cord around the
neck) - The Child
- Neonatal infections (meningitis)
- Neonatal jaundice - kernicterus
- Neonatal respiratory distress, meconium
aspiration, seizures - How many days in the hospital???
- Developmental milestones
- Stages of Psychological Development( adjusted for
age and gender)
19-
- FASD Is a Diagnosis For Two
20ARND
- Alcohol is a CNS drug
- Parental psychopathology and psychosocial
adversity act as strong determinants of alcohol
abuse -
- Associated with polydrug use
- High risk of fetal exposure
21Mental health is a family affair
1 Ethanol is a treatment 2 Increased risk of
substance use
22Psychiatric Disorders in Children
- 12 15 children have a mental disorder
- 2.2 9.9
- Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder in
nonclinical settings - 1.5 5.5
- Conduct Disorder
- lt1 2.7
- Major Depressive Disorder in prepubescent
populations - 3.5 5.4
- Separation Anxiety
- 1 6
- Motor Skills disorders
- Communication Disorders
- Feeling and Elimination Disorders
- lt1
- Major Retardation
23ADHD
- Persistent symptoms of inattention,
hyperactivity, or impulsivity that are more
frequent and sever than what is typically
observed in other individuals at the same
developmental level - ADHD is the most common childhood diagnosis
- Boys are 3 times more likely than girls to be
diagnosed with ADHD - 50-70 of children with ADHD have other mental
disorders - 40-50 have Oppositional Defiant Disorder and
Conduct Disorder - 15-20 have Mood Disorders
- 25 have Anxiety Disorders
- 20 have Learning Disorders
- Symptoms tend to decrease with age
24Conduct Disorder
- A repetitive and persistent pattern of behavior
in which the basic rights of others or major
age-appropriate norms or rules are violated - Individuals with Conduct Disorder have little
empathy little concern for the feelings,
values, well-being of others - Onset of conduct Disorder
- May occur as early as 5-6 years of age
- Occurs more often in later childhood or early
adolescence - Rare after 16 years of age
- In adulthood - Antisocial Personality Disorder
criteria - Often associated with early onset of sexual
behavior, drinking, smoking, use of illegal
substances, reckless risk-taking acts - May lead to school suspension or expulsion,
problems in work adjustment, legal difficulties,
sexual transmitted diseases, unplanned pregnancy.
25Major Depressive Disorder
- Common recurrent
- 2 in children
- 5-8 in adolescents
- Higher rates in adolescent girls than in
adolescent boys - associated with morbidity mortality 1.5 5.5
- Children with depression have persistent
functional impairment (even after recovery) - 5-10 of depressed adolescents will complete
suicide within 15yrs of their initial episode of
MDD
26Mental Retardation
- Characteristics
- IQ 70 or below
- onset before 18 years of age
- deficits or impairments in adaptive functioning
- Predisposing factors
- Heredity (e.g., Tay-Sachs disease)
- Early alterations of embryonic development (e.g.,
prenatal damage due to toxins) - Pregnancy perinatal problems
- General medical conditions
- Environmental influences
- Individuals with Mental Retardation have 3 to 4
times greater prevalence of comorbid mental
disorders, than the general population - Mental Retardation is more commonly associated
with the following disorders (compared to the
general population) - ADHD
- Mood Disorders
- Pervasive Developmental Disorders
- Stereotypic Movement Disorder
27Anxiety Disorders
- Social Phobia Social Anxiety Disorder
- As children mature, rates of anxiety in social
situations tend to increase - Generalized Anxiety Disorder
- Exhibits high rates of comorbidity with other
anxiety disorders - Separation Anxiety Disorder
- Usually develops during middle childhood
- Age-related decline is present
- Panic Disorders
- Very rare before adolescence
- Specific Phobia
- Onset typically occurs during childhood
- Posttraumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)
28Disorders Associated with Academic Skills
- Learning Disorders
- 10-25 of individuals with ADHD, Conduct
Disorder, Oppositional Defiant Disorder,
Depressive Disorders also have Learning Disorders - Reading Disorders
- Mathematics Disorder
- Disorder of Written Expression
29Other Disorders in Childhood
- Autistic Disorder
- Infants exhibit failure to cuddle indifference
or aversion to affection of physical contact
lack of eye contact lack of facial
responsiveness lack of socially directed smiles
fail to respond to parental voices - Aspergers Disorder
- Qualitative impairment in social interaction,
accompanied by repetitive and stereotyped
behaviors, interests and activities that cause
clinically significant impairment in social or
occupational functioning - Reactive Attachment Disorder of Infancy or Early
Childhood - Markedly disturbed social relatedness, manifest
by either persistent failure to respond
appropriately to most social interactions or
diffuse attachments
30Parental Morbidity
- Individuals with stress-related anxiety
disorders, BD, depression may use drugs to
control their symptoms (self medication) /or
experience greater reward associated with drug
use - Adolescents with alcohol /or substance
dependence disorders are 6 to 21 times more
likely to have a physical /or sexual abuse
history - Depression is prior to substance abuse in women
- Depressed ? substance ? inherit FAS depression
31Fetal alcohol spectrum disorder Canadian
guidelines for diagnosis. CMAJ 2005172 (suppl)
S1-S21Identifying fetal alcohol spectrum
disorder in primary care. CMAJ 2005172
(5)628-630
32How Much is Too Much ?
- No one knows how much is safe
- Where FAS is concerned, we can be reasonably
confident alcohol abuse is involved, and
even more confident moderate drinking is
not - E. Abel, 1998.
- Threshold or linear response?
33Canadian FASD Diagnostic Guidelines
34ARND
- Phenotypic, morphologic, cognitive and/or
behavioral markers of ARND have not been
established yet - The fetal/child dose effects of lesser
quantities of alcohol consumption have not been
elucidated - In gt 90 FASD is associated with later mental
health disorders
35Developing DD for ARND
- Diverse forms of brain insult (e.g., trauma,
toxic, genetic, metabolic, etc) may result in
clinical presentations where differentiation from
ARND is unattainable - In addition to alcohol use genetic (psychiatric
disorders), environmental, and interpersonal
factors influence the offsprings
neurodevelopmental trajectories
36Developing DD for ARND
- Ethanol is only one of the factors in this
multifactorial gene-environment-pharmacologic
disorder - We may question the validity of this clinical
picture as an exclusive end result of gestational
exposure to ethanol - A multifactorial model where, in addition to
alcohol, other genetic, toxic and environmental
influences are considered
37No specific treatment available
- Do we need to diagnose ARND?
- Do we need a differential diagnosis?
- When ethanol is the cause and when it is a
confounder? - Do we need a comprehensive diagnostic approach to
put the puzzle together? - Should ARND be a diagnosis of exclusion?
38Why a DD is Needed
- Lack of access to resources
- Lack of proper interventions
- Increased risk for secondary disabilities
- Specific learning disorders
- Mood and anxiety disorders
- Mislead research
39FASD, What is new ?
- Ethanol is a drug (maternal co morbidity)
- CNS- the specific pattern of effects
- ARND (sensitive, not specific)
- FAS is a marker for maternal alcohol abuse
- Maternal and neonatal markers available
40Confounding Variables
- Mothers age
- Psychiatric disorders
- Polydrug use
- Drinking patterns during pregnancy
- Time of exposure
- STD
- Poor medical care
- Poor nutrition
- Mode of delivery, labor
- Home environment
- SES
- Infant health
41Methodological Differences
- Methods of recruitment, time of exposure
- Sample size
- Diagnostic criteria of FAS/ARND
- Childs age at testing
- Controls
- Polydrug use
- Pattern of drinking
- Reporting bias
- Measurement bias
- Maternal health
- Specific sensitivity to alcohol
- Additional exposure, breastfeeding
42-
- FASD Is a Diagnosis For Two
43More Research Needed
- To determine dose effects
- Threshold?
- Continuum effect?
- To separate alcohol effects from other
etiological factors - To determine alcohol-related mental health
problem? - To develop optimal interventions
44Maternal Biological Markers
- FAS
- GGT (g-Glutamyl transpeptidase) gt 0.50 mkat/L
(reflects liver damage) - MCV (Mean red blood cell volume) gt98 fL
- CDT (Carbohydrate-deficient transferrin)
positive result is above 99th percentile - WBAA (Whole blood-associated acetaldehyde) gt9.0
mmol/L - Hair
45Neonatal Biological Markers
- Hair
- Meconium
- FAEEs such as ethyl linoleate, laurate, stearate
in the meconium of newborns - Testing is available through the Motherisk
Program at The Hospital for Sick Children
46Developing Differential Diagnosis for Alcohol
Related Neurodevelopmental Disorder
- Ethanol is only one of the factors in this
multifactorial gene-environment-pharmacologic
disorder. - We question the validity of a clinical picture as
an exclusive end result of gestational exposure
to ethanol - We propose an expanded multifactorial model
where, in addition to alcohol, other genetic,
toxic and environmental influences are
considered. - Informed by this multifactorial context, a
suggest a comprehensive model of assessment and
treatment, that recognizes the contribution of
different diverse pathophysiological dimensions.