The Addicted Newborn



The Addicted Newborn


Daniel Rauch MD



INTRODUCTION

Drug abuse, a well-documented problem found in all socioeconomic groups, knows no cultural boundaries. It does not spare pregnant women; in fact, pregnancy magnifies drug problems because both mother and child experience the consequences. Pregnant women are vulnerable physiologically and psychologically, while the fetus suffers both directly from the drug and indirectly from comorbid effects of the mother’s drug use. The long-term outcomes are just now coming to light, and effects on the infant clearly can be lifelong. Identifying those at risk is not easy, and options that are available once identification has been made are not ideal.

The “addicted newborn” is not an agreed-upon clinical term. It is used to refer to infants who exhibit some behavioral changes during the newborn period and who test positive for drugs of abuse. The term’s true meaning is that providers are able to recognize some infants who have been exposed to drugs of abuse. It does not include exposed infants who are not detected in the newborn period or whose mothers, for medical reasons, used prescription drugs, the effects of which may not be known. A useful reference about the safety and potential effects of most prescription drugs in pregnancy and breastfeeding is Drugs in Pregnancy and Lactation (Briggs, Freeman, & Yaffe, 1998).


ANATOMY, PHYSIOLOGY, AND PATHOLOGY

Although not all primary care providers are involved in obstetric care, an understanding of pregnancy can help them to comprehend the effects of drug abuse on the mother and unborn child. Intoxication, a well-described risk factor for unprotected sex and therefore pregnancy, may affect the woman’s response to a resulting pregnancy for which she was unprepared. While the psychological effects on the woman cannot be underestimated, the conceptus is spared any direct physiologic effects because no transfer of toxins occurs before implantation in the uterus. Once the conceptus has implanted in the uterus, all subsequent nourishment comes from the placenta. The growing fetus then is exposed to the same things as the mother. The degree of exposure depends highly on the substance. The mother rapidly metabolizes some drugs, so the fetus is relatively spared. The placenta may easily transfer drugs with a longer half-life, with effects concentrating in the fetus. The fetus has certain capabilities, which vary according to fetal age and level of exposure, to metabolize and clear drugs. Pregnancy is a huge metabolic demand on the mother; when combined with drug use and poverty, it often results in poor maternal nutrition. Further, maternal drug use clearly is associated with sexually transmitted infections (STIs), many of which can infect and damage the fetus.


Physiologic Effects of Teratogens

The effects of any teratogen, including drugs of abuse, are more pronounced in the early stages of pregnancy when the vital organs are developing. Understanding the critical role of timing is essential, because the fetus is most at risk during the time when many women are still unaware that they are pregnant. Therefore, even “recreational” drug use can profoundly affect the fetus.

Cigarette and marijuana use creates an abnormally high carboxyhemoglobin level in the mother, which can induce a chronic mild fetal hypoxia. The most visible outcome is the small-for-gestational age baby born secondary to placental insufficiency. Less obvious effects are late cognitive deficits as a result of hypoxia in the developing central nervous system (CNS). Cocaine also may produce hypoxic damage by causing vasospasm with resultant decrease in blood flow to the affected area. These infarctions can happen in the brain or any other end organ. Placental infarctions can cause premature labor, exposing the infant to the additional risks of prematurity. Infants of opiate-using mothers have earlier lung maturation, possibly secondary to chronic fetal distress.

Jones and Smith (1973) coined the term fetal alcohol syndrome (FAS) to describe a constellation of signs and symptoms seen in children born to alcohol-abusing mothers:



  • Growth retardation


  • Dysfunction of the CNS, most often mental retardation, but also learning disabilities, attention deficit, hyperactivity, poor impulse control, and others


  • Facial anomalies, including short palpebral fissure, flat midface, short nose, indistinct philtrum, and thin upper lip

The child with full FAS exhibits symptoms of all three categories. Less affected children are described as having fetal alcohol effect. Estimates are that 5000 cases of FAS (1 in 750 births) occur each year. According to the most recent data, FAS is the leading known etiology of mental retardation (Abel & Sokol, 1987; Barone, 1996).


Neurobehavioral and Cognitive Effects of Teratogens

Subtler neurobehavioral or cognitive effects may take much longer to reveal themselves. Clearly, gross mental retardation and developmental delay become apparent within the first year of life; less profound effects may take longer to appear. Significant controversy exists over the long-term effects of drug exposure. During the crack cocaine epidemic in the early 1990s, many studies of “crack” babies described infants with much the same CNS involvement as children with FAS. Anonymous screening of pregnant mothers at delivery, however, indicates that incidence of maternal exposure to crack was much higher than was the number of “crack” babies. Thus, some babies were not exhibiting this
“crack syndrome.” Later studies have not found any consistent deficits in these babies as they grow up, after confounding for effects such as poverty and prematurity. Other studies have demonstrated a relationship with the amount of exposure. This is only to say that the effects are not predictable at birth (Datta-Bhutada et al., 1998; Richardson & Day, 1994). Recent studies on children of smoking mothers have demonstrated lasting behavioral consequences (Williams et al., 1998).


Economic Impact of Drug Addiction in Newborns

The cost to society of maternal drug abuse is staggering. Increased length of stay and additional tests for these babies increase medical costs. Added to these costs are the need for social work and other services. If the child is removed from the mother, foster care and associated legal and bureaucratic expenses are incurred. When the mother is allowed to keep the baby, it is usually with the aid of additional services, such as a visiting nurse to check on the child. Later costs include long-term management and treatment of children who have behavioral or cognitive deficits. Lifelong costs can be tremendous, with estimates of an annual expenditure of over $300 million for children with FAS alone (Abel & Sokol, 1987; Streissguth et al., 1991).


EPIDEMIOLOGY

Estimates of the numbers of pregnant women who abuse drugs are unclear and vary according to the study method used. Self-reported use during prenatal care is considered accurate for those who report drug abuse. Self-reporting measures do not provide data about pregnant women who choose not to report or deny drug use or who are lost to reporting measures because they do not receive prenatal care. Other reports represent results of toxicology screening at delivery, which is an accurate indicator of drug use immediately preceding delivery but is inaccurate about drug use that may have occurred earlier in the pregnancy. Data from the most recent national survey of pregnancy and health (National Institutes of Health, 1992) suggest that 10% of pregnant women smoke cigarettes, 10% drink alcohol, and 5% use illegal drugs. Rates of illegal drug use were higher among unmarried, uneducated, and unemployed women and among women on public assistance. The problem exists, however, in all socioeconomic, ethnic, and geographic groups. The most common illegal drug used was marijuana, followed by cocaine (National Institutes of Health, 1996). At least 12% of babies born in the United States are exposed perinatally to drugs of abuse. Even if one added up the frequency of all the different diseases routinely screened for in the newborn period, from metabolic diseases to hearing loss, the total would not come close to the incidence of perinatal drug exposure.

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Aug 24, 2016 | Posted by in CRITICAL CARE | Comments Off on The Addicted Newborn

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