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Fetal Alcohol Syndrome

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Fetal Alcohol Syndrome

Fetal Alcohol Syndrome

Fetal Alcohol Syndrome (FAS) was found, named and treated in the late 1960's. The term "Fetal Alcohol Syndrome" is used to describe a lifelong set of physical, mental and neurobehavioral birth defects associated with alcohol consumption during pregnancy.

Most women are not aware of the many complications that can occur during pregnancy. Many pregnant women continue drinking right throughout their pregnancy, ignoring the fact that they could damage, and pose problems to themselves and well as there fetus. According to many physicians FAS is a leading cause of mental retardation and birth defects. In the United States, one in 500 children reported are diagnosed with FAS. On the Indian reservations the numbers are much higher, they are one in 99 children. Approximately one-half of the cases of Fetal Alcohol Syndrome go unrecognized. FAS affects more newborns every year than Down syndrome, cystic fibrosis, spina bifida, and Sudden Infant Death Syndrome combined. This completely preventable birth defect is found in all ethnic groups and socioeconomic classes around the world, however it does occur 30 times more in Native Americans than it does in whites, and is six times more common in blacks.

Alcohol is a teratogen, a substance capable of producing fetal abnormalities. When a pregnant woman drinks, so does her baby; through the blood vessels in the placenta, the mother's blood supplies the developing baby with nourishment and oxygen. In the fetus, the metabolism

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