AI Article Synopsis

  • Ethanol consumption during pregnancy is known to harm fetuses, and while there are guidelines suggesting avoiding alcohol during lactation, the effects of low-dose ethanol exposure from topical products like hand sanitizers on infants are less understood.
  • Current research lacks substantial evidence on any neurodevelopmental risks associated with breastfeeding mothers using alcohol-based hand sanitizers, showing limited epidemiological studies on this topic.
  • Computational predictions indicate that blood ethanol concentrations from typical to intense use of hand sanitizers in breastfeeding women are significantly lower than levels linked to adverse developmental effects, suggesting minimal risk to infants.

Article Abstract

Ingestion of ethanol during pregnancy is known to have detrimental effects on the fetus. Although the potential developmental effects of maternal ethanol intake during lactation are less well characterized, public health guidelines recommend avoidance of alcohol or, if alcohol is consumed, to allow for 1-2 h to pass before nursing. A proposal to classify ethanol as potentially harmful to breast-fed children warrants an investigation of the potential adverse neurodevelopmental effects of low-dose ethanol exposure during lactation. There currently are no studies that have examined neurodevelopmental outcomes from lactational exposure to ethanol from the use of topical products that contain ethanol, such as alcohol-based hand sanitizers (ABHS). Furthermore, the epidemiological literature of lactational ethanol exposures from maternal alcohol consumption is limited in design, provides equivocal evidence of neurological effects in infants, and is insufficient to characterize a dose-response relationship for developmental effects. Toxicological studies that observed neurodevelopmental effects in pups from ethanol via lactation did so at exceedingly high doses that also caused maternal toxicity. In this investigation, blood ethanol concentrations (BECs) of breastfeeding women following typical-to-intense ABHS use were computationally predicted and compared to health benchmarks to quantify the risk for developmental outcomes. Margins of 2.2 to 1000 exist between BECs associated with ABHS use compared to BECs associated with neurotoxicity adverse effect levels in the toxicology literature or oral ethanol intake per public health guidelines. Neurodevelopmental effects are not likely to occur in infants due to ABHS use by breastfeeding women, even when ABHSs are used at intense frequencies.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9543418PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jat.4284DOI Listing

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