Prenatal Drug Exposure and Mental Retardation

2004 
Publisher Summary This chapter discusses prenatal drug exposure and mental retardation. Prenatal exposure to cocaine is a behavioral teratogen. The early “rush to judgement” that occurred with crack cocaine can be replaced by sound research. As is evident from studies of cocaine exposure, even in cases where no birth defects are obvious, long-term follow-up may be needed to detect and ameliorate neurobehavioral effects. At both the individual and the societal levels, even in situations where etiology and pathogenesis are well-known, developmental disorders such as mental retardation do not emerge as a result of a single factor or at a single point in development. Neither a prenatal teratogenic environment nor a postnatal rearing environment model of development following prenatal cocaine exposure has total explanatory power. At each stage in development, the human brain is uniquely susceptible to exposure of teratogenic compounds. It is also readily apparent that prevention and treatment of conditions arising from exposure to teratogenic substances will be largely dictated by the stage or stages in which the exposure occurs. The chapter discusses several drawbacks of the traditional etiological classification of mental retardation—prenatal, perinatal, or postnatal.
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