PRENATAL AND PERINATAL CONDITIONS CONTRIBUTING TO MENTAL-RETARDATION

Authors
Citation
Ra. Minns, PRENATAL AND PERINATAL CONDITIONS CONTRIBUTING TO MENTAL-RETARDATION, Current opinion in psychiatry, 10(5), 1997, pp. 354-359
Citations number
42
Categorie Soggetti
Psychiatry
ISSN journal
09517367
Volume
10
Issue
5
Year of publication
1997
Pages
354 - 359
Database
ISI
SICI code
0951-7367(1997)10:5<354:PAPCCT>2.0.ZU;2-B
Abstract
Recent research concerning the contribution of intrauterine factors to mental retardation has centered on two areas. The first area is fetal alcohol syndrome. Underdiagnosis has been suspected for some time lar gely because of the failure of paediatricians to always recognise the subtle dysmorphism. More accurate recogniton of this has been facilita ted by research in the past 12 months which should enhance the recogni tion and diagnosis and reduce the number and percentage of remaining u ndiagnosed cases of mental retardation. The second area is cerebral pa lsy. It is well known that cerebral palsy is frequently accompanied by learning difficulties and the same insult which causes the motor defi cit in cerebral palsy is also responsible for the learning difficulty. Recent research, particularly in the past 12 months, has recognised t hat up to 40% of term and 20% of preterm babies have prepart origin fo r their cerebral palsy and this represents another significant contrib ution of previously unrecognised intrauterine events to the causation of mental retardation.