Literature
Baby's first stool can help predict future IQ score
New York, July 14
Analysis of a newborn's
first stool can alert doctors whether a child is at risk of problems
with intelligence and reasoning, new research shows.
In
particular, high levels of fatty acid ethyl esters (FAEE) found in the
meconium (a newborn's first stool) from a mother's alcohol use during
pregnancy can alert doctors that a child may develop cognitive problems
in teenage years, the findings showed.
"We wanted to see if there
was a connection between FAEE level and their cognitive development
during childhood and adolescence -- and there was," said one of the
researchers Meeyoung Min, research assistant professor at Case Western
Reserve University in the US.
"FAEE can serve as a marker for fetal alcohol exposure and developmental issues ahead," Min added.
"Detecting
prenatal exposure to alcohol at birth could lead to early interventions
that help reduce the effects later," Min said in the study published in
the Journal of Paediatrics.
The research is part of the ongoing
Project Newborn study, a longitudinal research project has studied
nearly 400 children for 20 years since their births in the mid-1990s.
For
this study, researchers analysed the meconium of 216 babies for levels
of FAEE. They then gave intelligence tests at ages nine, 11 and 15.
The researchers found a link between those with high levels of FAEE at birth and lower IQ scores.