Iran Daily

Maternal stress at conception linked to children’s stress response at age 11

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Anew study published in the Journal of Developmen­tal Origins of Health and Disease ¿nds that mothers’ stress levels at the moment they conceive their children are linked to the way children respond to life challenges at age 11. SFU health sciences professor Pablo Nepomnasch­y led an interdisci­plinary research team on this ¿rst cohort study.

Researcher­s measured cortisol levels from mothers-to-be starting before pregnancy and continuing through the ¿rst eight weeks of gestation, and then years later from their children. Their goal is to understand the associatio­ns between maternal biological stress around the time of conception and the developmen­t of their children’s stress physiology, according to medicalxpr­ess.com.

Using urine samples to measure reproducti­ve hormones, the researcher­s identi¿ed the day children were conceived, as well as the moms’ cortisol levels, a biomarker of physiologi­cal stress, during the ¿rst eight weeks after conception.

Twelve years later, they studied how these children reacted to the start of a new school year (a well known ‘natural’ stressor) and to a publicspea­king challenge (a frequently used ‘experiment­al’ stressor).

Maternal cortisol following conception was associated with different facets of the children’s cortisol responses to those challenges, and many of these associatio­ns differed between boys and girls.

Study lead author Cindy Barha, who worked under Nepomnasch­y as a doctoral student, reported that sons of mothers who had higher cortisol in gestationa­l week two had higher cortisol reactions to the experiment­al public-speaking challenge, but this associatio­n was not observed in daughters. In contrast, mothers with higher cortisol in gestationa­l week ¿ve had daughters with higher ‘basal’ cortisol before the start of a new school term, but not sons.

However, both sons and daughters had higher cortisol responses to the start of a new school term, and in response to the experiment­al public speaking challenge, if their mothers had higher cortisol during gestationa­l week ¿ve. The biological mechanisms mediating these associatio­ns are not yet known, but are likely to involve genetics and epigenetic­s as well as environmen­tal and cultural factors shared by moms and their children.

“Stress plays a critical role not only in children’s ability to respond to social and academic challenges, but also in their developmen­t and health as adults,” said Nepomnasch­y. The researcher­s will continue their investigat­ions into the connection between maternal and child stress from the moment of conception onwards. The ¿ndings will help to develop successful programs and interventi­ons that prepare children to live healthy and ful¿lling lives and realize their full potential.

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