| Literature DB >> 28169393 |
Dominic T Cheng1, Ernesta M Meintjes2, Mark E Stanton3, Neil C Dodge4, Mariska Pienaar2, Christopher M R Warton2, John E Desmond1, Christopher D Molteno2, Bradley S Peterson5, Joseph L Jacobson2,4, Sandra W Jacobson2,4.
Abstract
Prenatal alcohol exposure has been linked to a broad range of developmental deficits, with eyeblink classical conditioning (EBC) among the most sensitive endpoints. This fMRI study compared EBC-related brain activity in 47 children with fetal alcohol syndrome (FAS), partial FAS (PFAS), heavily exposed (HE) non-syndromal children, and healthy controls. All of the children had previously participated in two EBC studies conducted as part of our longitudinal study of fetal alcohol spectrum disorders. Although learning-related behavioral differences were seen in all groups during the scans, controls showed more conditioned responses (CR) than the alcohol-exposed groups. Despite lower conditioning levels relative to controls, the exposed groups exhibited extensive cerebellar activations. Specifically, children with FAS/PFAS showed increased activation of cerebellar lobule VI in session 2, while HE children showed increased activation in session 1. Continuous measures of prenatal alcohol use correlated with learning-related activations in cerebellum and frontal cortices. Only controls showed significant cerebellar activation-CR correlations in the deep nuclei and lateral lobule VI, suggesting that these key regions supporting EBC may be functionally disorganized in alcohol-exposed children. These findings are the first to characterize abnormalities in brain function associated with the behavioral conditioning deficits seen in children with prenatal alcohol exposure.Entities:
Keywords: cerebellar volume; cerebellum; fetal alcohol syndrome; gray matter volume; learning; prenatal alcohol exposure; white matter volume
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28169393 PMCID: PMC6075216 DOI: 10.1093/cercor/bhw273
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cereb Cortex ISSN: 1047-3211 Impact factor: 5.357