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Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder

When to worry about FASD in your 2-year-old

FASD is a prenatal condition caused by alcohol exposure in the womb — not by anything after birth. At 2 years it is not diagnosed from one sign, but from the whole picture: known prenatal alcohol exposure, growth, facial features and development. If you know there was alcohol in pregnancy, that alone warrants a gentle clinical conversation. Only a Pinnacle clinician can assess, never an online form.

When to worry about FASD in your 2-year-old
FASD in a 2-Year-Old: When to Worry — Ask Pinnacle, the Child Development Kośa

If you drank alcohol during pregnancy — before you knew, or during a difficult time — and you're now watching your 2-year-old closely, that worry comes from a loving, responsible place.

In short

Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder (FASD, ICD-11 LD2F.00) is a prenatal condition — it begins before birth, from alcohol exposure in the womb, not from anything that happens after. At 2 years, it isn't "caught early" by spotting one sign; rather, a clinician looks at the whole picture together: known prenatal alcohol exposure, growth, certain facial features, and developmental progress. If you know there was alcohol exposure in pregnancy, that alone is reason enough to mention it gently to a clinician — you don't need to wait for a worrying sign.

What to observe at age 2

None of these confirm anything on their own — many have ordinary explanations. But when there was prenatal alcohol exposure, a clinician will want to look at:
  • Growth — being persistently small for height, weight or head size
  • Speech and language — very few words, not combining two words by around 24 months
  • Motor and play — delays in walking steadily, climbing, or pretend play
  • Attention and activity — extreme restlessness or difficulty settling beyond typical toddler energy
  • Sleep, feeding and self-soothing — ongoing difficulty regulating
  • Social connection — limited eye contact, joint attention or responding to name

FASD is a spectrum — some children show clear features, many show subtle ones that become clearer with age. Crucially, the developmental parts respond well to early, warm support whatever the eventual label.

When to act

Don't wait for certainty. Speak to a clinician now if: you know there was alcohol exposure in pregnancy; your child has noticeably few words or isn't combining words by age 2; or growth and milestones feel behind. Early support shapes outcomes — toddlerhood is a wonderful window for the developing brain.

The Pinnacle way

A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care — never from an online form or a checklist. Our team gathers the whole story — the pregnancy history you share in confidence, growth, communication and play — and builds a strengths-first plan. Where speech or language is the concern, gentle speech therapy helps; where development needs broader support, a developmental assessment maps the way forward.

Trusted sources

WHO ICD-11 (LD2F.00, fetal alcohol spectrum disorder); CDC guidance on FASD and prenatal alcohol exposure (cdc.gov); American Academy of Pediatrics developmental milestone guidance (healthychildren.org).

Next step — If there was alcohol exposure in pregnancy, or any milestone feels behind, the kindest move is a calm clinical conversation. Book a developmental check with a Pinnacle clinician.

This is general information, not a diagnosis — a clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre under qualified clinician care.

What to watch

When there was prenatal alcohol exposure, watch for persistently small growth, very few words or no two-word phrases by 24 months, delays in walking or pretend play, extreme restlessness, and limited eye contact or response to name. None confirms FASD alone — known exposure is itself reason to seek a clinical check.

Try this at home

Talk, sing and name things during everyday moments — bath time, mealtimes, walks. Short, repeated, face-to-face exchanges nourish a toddler's brain and language far more than screens, whatever the eventual picture.

Trusted sources

Developed by SETU Consortium · Pinnacle Blooms Network · Last reviewed 2026-06-10 · reviewed every 365 days

This is general information, not a diagnosis. A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care.

Frequently asked

Can FASD be caused by anything after my baby was born?

No. Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder is a prenatal condition — it comes only from alcohol exposure in the womb during pregnancy. Nothing in your parenting or your child's life after birth causes it.

I only drank a little before I knew I was pregnant. Should I worry?

Many parents share this exact concern. There is no need to carry guilt — instead, simply mention the exposure to a clinician so they can keep a gentle eye on growth and development. Early support, if ever needed, makes a real difference.

Can FASD be diagnosed at exactly 2 years old?

Some children show clear features by age 2, but for many the picture becomes clearer with age. A clinician assesses the whole story — exposure history, growth, certain facial features and development — rather than relying on a single sign or age.

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