Fetal alcohol exposure: When placenta would help to the early diagnosis of child brain impairments

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Abstract

Alcohol consumption during pregnancy constitutes a major cause of neurodevelopmental and behavioral disabilities. Whereas it is possible for clinicians to establish a perinatal diagnosis of fetal alcohol syndrome, the more severe expression of fetal alcohol spectrum disorder (FASD), most FASD children are late or mis-diagnosed due to a lack of clear morphological and neurodevelopmental abnormalities. Several precious years of care are consequently lost. Recent data revealed a functional placenta-brain axis involved in the control of the fetal brain angiogenesis which is impaired by in utero alcohol exposure. Because in the developing fetal brain a correct angiogenesis is required for a correct neurodevelopment, these preclinical and clinical advances pave the way for a new generation of placental biomarkers for early diagnosis of FASD.

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Sautreuil, C., Laquerrière, A., Lecuyer, M., Brasse-Lagnel, C., Jégou, S., Bekri, S., … Gonzalez, B. J. (2019). Fetal alcohol exposure: When placenta would help to the early diagnosis of child brain impairments. Medecine/Sciences, 35(11), 859–865. https://doi.org/10.1051/medsci/2019167

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