There is no “safe dose” of alcohol that can be protective or otherwise. Studies have shown that women who drink more than 10 drinks a week are two times more at risk of having a baby with FAS than those who drink half that much. As many as 5-6 drinks per day throughout the pregnancy considerably increases the risk of a baby being born with the condition. The only guarantee against the disease is that no alcohol is consumed.
Drinking is also risky in the second half of pregnancy, when nerve cells form new branches (dendrites), consolidate and eliminate junctions (synapses), and grow the protective sheath known as myelin. Alcohol can distort all these processes and alter the general shape and size of the brain. It may also affect the capacity of the fetus to synthesise and break down neurotransmitters, the chemicals that carry impulses between nerve cells at the synapses. |
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