Abstract

Prenatal exposure to recreational drugs impairs motor and cognitive development; however it is currently unknown whether visual brain areas are affected. To address this question, we investigated the effect of prenatal drug exposure on global motion perception, a behavioural measure of processing within the dorsal extrastriate visual cortex that is thought to be particularly vulnerable to abnormal neurodevelopment. Global motion perception was measured in one hundred and forty-five 4.5-year-old children who had been exposed to different combinations of methamphetamine, alcohol, nicotine and marijuana prior to birth and 25 unexposed children. Self-reported drug use by the mothers was verified by meconium analysis. We found that global motion perception was impaired by prenatal exposure to alcohol and improved significantly by exposure to marijuana. Exposure to both drugs prenatally had no effect. Other visual functions such as habitual visual acuity and stereoacuity were not affected by drug exposure. Prenatal exposure to methamphetamine did not influence visual function. Our results demonstrate that prenatal drug exposure can influence a behavioural measure of visual development, but that the effects are dependent on the specific drugs used during pregnancy.

Highlights

  • Prenatal exposure to recreational drugs impairs motor and cognitive development; it is currently unknown whether visual brain areas are affected

  • Our results indicate that 1) global motion perception, a behavioural measure of extrastriate visual function, is susceptible to the effects of prenatal drug exposure, and 2) interaction effects occur when children are exposed to multiple drugs

  • These effects were dependant on the frequency and amount of prenatal marijuana or alcohol exposure. These effects appeared to cancel one another whereby prenatal exposure to both drugs resulted in no effect on global motion perception

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Summary

Introduction

Prenatal exposure to recreational drugs impairs motor and cognitive development; it is currently unknown whether visual brain areas are affected. To address this question, we investigated the effect of prenatal drug exposure on global motion perception, a behavioural measure of processing within the dorsal extrastriate visual cortex that is thought to be vulnerable to abnormal neurodevelopment. The effects of prenatal exposure to amphetamine-type stimulants such as methamphetamine have been investigated because of the high prevalence of users, within Australasia[6,7] Such studies include the Infant Development, Environment and Lifestyle (IDEAL) study which has reported impaired motor development in young children exposed prenatally to methamphetamine[6,8]. Abnormal visual cortex responses have been reported in a small group of children with prenatal exposure to amphetamine[11]

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