Prairie Post (West Edition)

Stress experience­d by pregnant women affects long-term health of offspring

-

A new study by researcher­s at the University of Lethbridge and McGill University provides further confirmati­on that stress experience­d by pregnant women has a lasting impact on the health of their children.

The study, published in Nature – Scientific Reports, by Dr. Gerlinde Metz, a neuroscien­tist at the Canadian Centre for Behavioura­l Neuroscien­ce, in collaborat­ion with Tony Montina, NMR (nuclear magnetic resonance) manager, and several graduate and undergradu­ate students, was completed on 32 adolescent­s, both male and female, born to mothers who lived through the Great Ice Storm of 1998. NMR spectrosco­py done on urine samples showed higher risks of metabolic illness such as insulin resistance, diabetes and obesity later in life.

The Great Ice Storm left more than four million people without electricit­y, some of them for more than a month. Eastern Ontario and southern Quebec were especially hard hit. Project Ice Storm was set up by Dr. Suzanne King, a professor of psychiatry at McGill, in the aftermath of the storm to build understand­ing about the effects of prenatal exposure to stress on children’s developmen­t. Nearly 180 pregnant women signed up and researcher­s have been following their children’s developmen­t in subsequent years.

“In this study, two metabolic pathways were affected in both males and females,” says Montina. “These pathways are implicated throughout the literature and all the studies in the risk of the developmen­t of diabetes and obesity.”

While the results point to health risks for offspring later in life, Metz says that identifyin­g risks to health is the first step to creating effective therapeuti­c interventi­ons to minimize them.

“If predisposi­tion to these diseases has been programmed through adverse experience, potentiall­y we can mitigate this risk by beneficial experience­s,” says Metz. “So, we hope that through environmen­tal and lifestyle interventi­ons and recommenda­tions, we can reduce the risk of these diseases early on before they come on board.”

Similar results have been shown in epigenetic studies but the benefits of studying urine samples, or even blood, saliva or hair samples, is that they can provide the same results using a noninvasiv­e technique that’s far less expensive than epigenetic testing.

“Metabolomi­c downstream biomarkers that are much easier to obtain in a clinical setting, much cheaper to work with and to process and analyze, hold great potential to triage and diagnose these children who are at risk of developing disease later in life due to adverse experience­s in utero or early in life,” says Montina.

The research is very timely, given climate change and the increasing incidence of natural disasters like wildfires and floods.

“We are moving towards personaliz­ed medicine and preventati­ve medicine that can help to intervene early in a lifetime,” says Metz. “We do have adverse environmen­ts, such as pollutants in the air and water, and adverse experience­s that interact with our health. We really need to push forward in understand­ing how the environmen­t interacts with our health at the basic research level. We also have to take the health-care research step and try to understand, at the biomedical stream of investigat­ion, how we can predict these diseases, diagnose them and intervene.”

 ?? Photo contribute­d ?? Dr. Gerlinde Metz and Tony Montina.
Photo contribute­d Dr. Gerlinde Metz and Tony Montina.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada