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According to Jones and Smith (1973) the potential adverse effect of
maternal alcoholism on the development of the offspring has been
referred to in early Greek and Roman mythology. In a Carthaginian
ritual, the bridal couple was forbidden to drink wine on their
wedding night in order that defective children might not be
conceived (Haggard and Jellinek 1942). Also, according to lones and
Smith (1973,1975), the British House of Commons indicated in 1834,
in a report by a select committee investigating drunk enness, that
infants born to alcoholic mothers sometimes had a starved,
shrivelled and imperfect look. According to Librizzi (1982) the
first documented observations appeared in 1849 with the publication
of the essay by Carpenter entitled "The Use and Abuse of Alcoholic
Liquors in Health and Disease." He stated that habitual
intemperance is the most potent of all causes of insanity because
it aggravates the operation in other causes. Sullivan (1990)
recorded increased abortion and stillbirth rates among chronically
al coholic mothers in a Liverpool prison and an increased incidence
of epilepsy in their surviving offspring. Various investigators
including Ladraque (1901), Roe (1944). Le comte (1950), Christiaens
et al. (1960) and Lemoine et al. (1967) have since then reported
increased incidence of abnormalities and decreased weight of
surviving children born to chronic alcoholic mothers."
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