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Prenatal Alcohol Exposure and the Facial Phenotype in Adolescents: A Study Based on Meconium Ethyl Glucuronide

Authors :
Maschke, Janina
Roetner, Jakob
Goecke, Tamme W.
Fasching, Peter A.
Beckmann, Matthias W.
Kratz, Oliver
Moll, Gunther H.
Lenz, Bernd
Kornhuber, Johannes
Eichler, Anna
IMAC-Mind-Consortium, IMAC-Mind-Consortium
Source :
Brain Sciences, Vol 11, Iss 154, p 154 (2021), Brain Sciences, Volume 11, Issue 2
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
MDPI AG, 2021.

Abstract

Here, we explore the effects of prenatal alcohol exposure (PAE) in adolescence. We investigated associations between meconium ethyl glucoronide (EtG) and facial malformation. For 129 children (66/63 male/female<br />M = 13.3, SD = 0.32, 12–14 years), PAE was implemented by newborn meconium EtG and maternal self-reports during the third trimester. Cognitive development was operationalized by standardized scores (WISC V). The EtG cut-off values were set at ≥10 ng/g (n = 32, 24.8% EtG10+) and ≥112 ng/g (n = 20, 15.5% EtG112+). The craniofacial shape was measured using FAS Facial Photographic Analysis Software. EtG10+− and EtG112+-affected children exhibited a shorter palpebral fissure length (p = 0.031/p = 0.055). Lip circularity was smaller in EtG112+-affected children (p = 0.026). Maternal self-reports were not associated (p &gt<br />0.164). Lip circularity correlated with fluid reasoning (EtG10+ p = 0.031<br />EtG112+ p = 0.298) and working memory (EtG10+ p = 0.084<br />EtG112+ p = 0.144). The present study demonstrates visible effects of the facial phenotype in exposed adolescents. Facial malformation was associated with a child’s cognitive performance in the alcohol-exposed group. The EtG biomarker was a better predictor than maternal self-reports.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20763425
Volume :
11
Issue :
154
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Brain Sciences
Accession number :
edsair.pmid.dedup....ce0c5782ae1fb72296d8dc0b1058f277