Abstract:
Abnormalities of the cerebellar vermis have been well documented
in animal models of fetal alcohol syndrome. At this point, it is not
known if the same brain region is affected in humans prenatally exposed
to alcohol. In this study, the area of the cerebellar vermis was
measured from brain magnetic resonance images of 9 children and young
adults with prenatal alcohol exposure and 24 control subjects in the
same age range. Six of the exposed children met standard criteria for
fetal alcohol syndrome. The remaining three subjects had significant
histories of prenatal exposure to alcohol, but did not have enough of
the classic facial features for the diagnosis. For each subject with a
suitable midsagittal section, three vermal areas were circumscribed:
anterior vermis (vermal lobules I-V), posterior vermis (vermal lobules
VI and VII), and the remaining vermal area (including lobules VIII-X).
Statistical analyses revealed that the anterior region of the vermis was
significantly smaller in subjects with prenatal alcohol exposure,
whereas the posterior region and the remaining vermal area did not
differ between groups. Previous findings from an animal model of
neonatal alcohol exposure have documented Purkinje cell loss in vermal
lobules I-V and IX-X, with notable sparing in lobules VI-VII. Thus, the
results of both studies indicate similar patterns of abnormal brain
development in the anterior vermal region, with apparent sparing in the
posterior vermal region. Our findings, for the first time, suggest that
regionally specific Purkinje cell death may also occur in humans
prenatally exposed to alcohol