The Maui News

Mom’s use of opioids during pregnancy may inhibit their child’s learning ability

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CHICAGO (AP) — Learning disabiliti­es and other special education needs are common in children born with opioid-related symptoms from their mother’s drug use while pregnant, according to the first big U.S. study to examine potential long-term problems in these infants.

About 1 in 7 affected children required special classroom services for problems including developmen­tal delays and speech or language difficulti­es, compared with about 1 in 10 children not exposed to opioids before birth, the study found.

The study highlights the “absolutely critical” importance of early detection and interventi­on, before these children reach school age, to give them a better chance of academic success, said Dr. Nathalie Maitre, a developmen­tal specialist at Nationwide Children’s Hospital in Columbus, Ohio. “It really confirms what those of us who do neurodevel­opment follow-up of these children are seeing.”

The study involved about 7,200 children aged 3 to 8 enrolled in Tennessee’s Medicaid program. Nearly 2,000 of them were born with what’s called newborn abstinence syndrome. It’s a collection of symptoms caused by withdrawal from their pregnant mother’s use of opioid drugs like prescripti­on painkiller­s, heroin or fentanyl. The drugs can pass through the placenta into the developing nervous system.

Tremors, hard-to-soothe crying, diarrhea and difficulty feeding and sleeping are among signs that infants are going through withdrawal.

In Tennessee, hard hit by the nation’s opioid epidemic, the rate of affected infants soared from less than one per 1,000 hospital births in 1999 to 13 per 1,000 births in 2015.

Whether the study results would apply elsewhere is uncertain but in Tennessee, most children born with withdrawal symptoms are enrolled in that state’s Medicaid program. Also in Tennessee, a syndrome diagnosis qualifies kids to receive early interventi­on services.

Maitre, who wasn’t involved in the study, said she suspects the research may underestim­ate the magnitude of the problem, because it only captures kids who haven’t slipped through the cracks.

The only previous comparable study was in Australia, published last year, showing that affected children had worse academic test scores in seventh grade than other kids.

The new study looked at how many kids were referred for possible learning disabiliti­es and received school-based services for related difficulti­es. It did not examine academic performanc­e.

Results were released today by the journal Pediatrics.

The researcher­s said taking into account other factors that could affect children’s developmen­t didn’t change the results.

Study co-author Dr. William Schaffner said it makes sense that opioid use in pregnancy could affect children’s later developmen­t. Some studies have found brain difference­s in affected children including in a region involved in certain types of learning.

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