Drinking
moderate to large amounts of alcohol early in your pregnancy may damage
your placenta, the organ that sustains your developing baby until it is
born, researchers say.
In laboratory tests, investigators found
that amounts of alcohol equal to moderate or heavy drinking reduced cell
growth in the placenta. Low levels of alcohol had no effect, they
added.
For the study, moderate drinking was
roughly defined as two to three drinks a day, while four to six drinks a
day was considered heavy drinking.
The scientists also found that moderate
to heavy drinking reduced how much of an important amino acid called
taurine is delivered from the mother to the baby through the placenta,
according to the study published online in the journal PLoS One.
Taurine is crucial for a baby’s brain and
body development, so this finding may explain some of the behavioral
and physical problems seen in children born to alcoholic mothers, the
British researchers suggested.
“Placental growth is reduced in
comparison to non-exposed placentas, suggesting that in the long-term,
there could be consequences to how much support the infant receives from
the placenta during the rest of the pregnancy after this exposure,”
study author Sylvia Lui, from Tommy’s Maternal and Fetal Health Research
Centre at The University of Manchester, said in a university news
release.
And, John Aplin, a professor of
reproductive biomedicine at the center, added, “This research also
suggests that women who are trying to conceive should not drink, as the
damage caused by alcohol can happen very early on in pregnancy — perhaps
before a woman knows she is pregnant.”
Another expert agreed.
“It can often be a few weeks before a
woman discovers she’s pregnant, and this research shows that moderate
drinking during those vital first weeks can have a big impact on the
development of the baby,” Jane Brewin, chief executive of Tommy’s, a
group that funds research into pregnancy problems and provides
information to parents, said in the news release.
Culled from Punch
No comments:
Post a Comment