Pregnancy Stress, Schizophrenia Linked?
Severe Stress In First Trimester Could Increase Schizophrenia Risk For
Offspring, Study Shows
(February 04,2008) -- Children born to women who suffer the
death of a loved one during
their first trimester of pregnancy may be at
increased risk for developing
schizophrenia, new research shows.
The study is not the first to suggest that a mother's psychological state
can influence her unborn child's brain development, but it is the largest,
involving nearly 1.4 million Danish children followed for decades.
The
schizophrenia risk was still quite small in the children of women who
experienced the death of a family member early in pregnancy, and the
findings need to be confirmed.
But researchers say the study adds to the evidence that severe stress
early in pregnancy -- in this case the death of a parent, sibling, spouse,
or child -- may negatively impact fetal brain development.
"We did not see this association in the months before pregnancy, or after
the first trimester," says study co-author Kathryn M. Abel, PhD, of the
University of Manchester.
Stress and Schizophrenia
Abel and colleagues from the University's Center for Women's Mental
Health Research examined data from a comprehensive, nationwide Danish health
registry, which recorded about 1.38 million births in the country between
1973 and 1995.
The same registry was used to determine if mothers who gave birth during
this time had first-degree relatives who died, received a diagnosis of
cancer , or had a heart attack or stroke during their pregnancies.
Roughly 22,000 women experienced the death of a close relative during
pregnancy, and about 14,000 had a relative treated for a life-threatening
illness.
A total of 7,331 schizophrenia cases were identified among Danes born
between 1973 and 1995 over at least two decades of follow-up.
Being born to a mother who had a close relative die during her first
trimester was found to be associated with a 67% increased risk for
schizophrenia.
But a similar death up to six months before conception or at any other
time during pregnancy did not appear to elevate risk, nor did having a
seriously ill relative during pregnancy.
Abel tells WebMD that the research team plans to repeat the study using
the Swedish health registry, which is more than twice the size of the Danish
one.
The newly published study appears in the February issue of the journal
Archives of General Psychiatry.
"We also want to expand the research to look for other mental health
outcomes," Abel says. "I think it is highly likely that if we look at a
broader spectrum of psychiatric disorders we will find that those are
increased as well."
Some Stress May Be Good
Developmental psychologist Janet DiPietro, PhD, who also studies the
impact of maternal stress on fetal brain development, says even if major
traumatic events such as the death of a loved one do influence schizophrenia
risk, the risk is still very small.
Having a
family history of schizophrenia or another
mental illness was
associated with a much larger risk, in this study and in others.
DiPietro says much of the research linking pregnancy stress to negative
outcomes has focused on early child development and relied on mothers'
perceptions of their children's behavior.
"The problem is that mothers who are more anxious and stressed are more
likely to view their child as having
behavioral problems," she says.
In her own 2006 study, in which child behavior was independently
assessed, moderate stress during pregnancy was actually associated with a
good outcome -- advanced development at age 2.
One possible reason for this is that the chemicals the body produces in
response to stress also play a role in fetal maturation, she tells WebMD.
DiPietro is associate dean for research and a professor at Baltimore's
Johns Hopkins School of Public Health.
"The knee-jerk reaction is to think that all stress is bad, but this may
not be so in pregnancy, she says. "The fetus is not as vulnerable as we may
think to the day-to-day stresses women deal with, like working and meeting
deadlines."
By: Salynn Boyles
Source: WebMD
Last updated: 02/08
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