DOHAD Flashcards
What is a birth defect defined as?
Structural or functional anomaly which is present at conception or occurs before the end of pregnancy and is either diagnosed in pregnancy or before 6 years of age.
What structural developmental anomalies can affect young foetuses?
Spina bifida
Congenital cardiac defects
Congenital dislocation of the hips
What functional developmental anomalies can affect young foetuses?
Cystic fibrosis
Haemophilia
What is the incidence of developmental anomalies in WA?
5% (1:20)
What is the job of the WARDA?
WARDA is the Western Australian Register for Developmental Anomalies. They collect data on developmental anomalies and cerebral palsy in WA.
WARDA collects data to guide research and investigation into causes, prevention, and management of developmental anomalies.
Notifications to WARDA are mandatory since 2011.
Each individual defect is coded according to the 5-digit British paediatric association ICD-9 system.
What are birth defects associated with?
Major cause of death.
Birth defect is present in 12.4% of still births and 28.9% of neonatal deaths.
Who are birth defects more common in?
Males and multiple pregnancies.
What are WARDAs diagnostic categories of birth defects? Which is most common?
Most common are musculoskeletal defects (in 2014)
Nervous system defects (4.2/1000 births annually)
Urogenital defects
Congenital abnormalities of the eye, ear, face, and neck
Congenital anomalies of the inegument
Cardiovascular defects (common)
Chromosome defects (common)
Respiratory system defects
GI defects
Other
What are the most common nervous system defects?
Neural tube defects (1.2/1000 births):
Anencephaly
Spina bifida
Encephalocele
Other nervous system defects:
Microcephaly (10 per year)
Congenital hydrocephalus (0.5/1000 births)
Congenital deafness (0.8/1000 births)
How does the neural tube close? What happens if there is a failure in this?
Begins in cervical area and spreads from there in the cranial and caudal directions.
Cranial end closes by day 24 and caudal end by day 26.
If the posterior neuropore does not close spina bifida occurs and if anterior neuropore closure fails to take place anencephaly results.
How are neural tube defects detected early on?
They can be seen via ultrasound.
What are the risk factors for neural tube defects?
Most cases of NTDs are multifactorial in origin
2 - 5% recurrence in subsequent pregnancies
Genetic influences (known genetic syndromes, familial clustering)
Multiple pregnancies
Environmental agents (hyperthermia)
Nutritional deficiencies (folate deficiency in particular)
What is folate important for?
It is a group B vitamin that is necessary for production and maintenance of new cells.
Folate is a coenzyme in one-carbon transfer during methylation cycle which form part of DNA and the neurotransmitters.
Methylation of homocysteine to produce methionine uses 5-MTHF as the methyl donor
What happens in folate deficiency?
Accumulation of homocysteine which results in associated cardiovascular disease risk.
How can folate and neural tube defects be prevented?
MTHFR gene mutation affects 8 - 35% of the population depending on ethnicity.
Reduced folate carrier gene (RFC1)