Connecticut Post (Sunday)

Is there really such a thing as ‘mommy brain’?

Since giving birth to my year-old daughter, I’ve had countless moments like this. I have trouble recalling words, forget to respond to text messages, and even missed an appointmen­t. What I’m experienci­ng is often called “mommy brain” — the forgetful, fogg

- By Jamie Friedlande­r Serrano

My dad was planning a trip to Cannon Beach, a small coastal town in Oregon that I love. Yet when I sat down to email him some recommenda­tions, I drew a blank. I couldn’t remember the name of the state park we visited or the breakfast spot we adored. Even the name of the hotel we stayed at eluded me.

Since giving birth to my year-old daughter, I’ve had countless moments like this. I have trouble recalling words, forget to respond to text messages, and even missed an appointmen­t. What I’m experienci­ng is often called “mommy brain” — the forgetful, foggy and scatterbra­ined feeling many pregnant women and new mothers experience.

But is mommy brain real?

Anecdotall­y, yes. Ask any new mom if she has felt the above, and she’ll likely say she has — as many as 80percent of new moms report feelings of mommy brain. Scientific­ally, it also appears the answer is yes: A growing body of research supports the argument that moms’ brains change during pregnancy and after giving birth. A clear explanatio­n for the phenomenon still remains somewhat elusive, however.

There are countless variables that experts say contribute to mommy brain, such as fluctuatin­g hormones postpartum, sleep deprivatio­n in dealing with a new baby, anxiety over new parenthood, elevated stress levels, and a general reprioriti­zation of lives that having a baby forces.

Put together, it’s only natural that changes in mental processing would occur, says Moriah Thomason, Barakett associate professor of child and adolescent psychiatry at New York University School of Medicine. When our brain needs to make space for a new priority — keeping a baby alive — rememberin­g a grocery list takes a back seat.

“Does it mean that you literally cannot do those things that you used to do as well? Probably not,” she says. “It’s just not the most important thing for you to be accessing.”

Several small studies have come out in the past few years that support the existence of mommy brain. Abigail Tucker, author of “Mom Genes: Inside the New Science of Our Ancient Maternal Instinct,” says that a meta analysis of all these studies concluded that women experience cognitive changes like forgetfuln­ess and trouble with verbal recall in the immediate months and years after giving birth.

Many Americans expect women to be on the ball again just six weeks after giving birth, Tucker says. They chalk mommy brain up to sleep deprivatio­n when that’s really just the tip of the iceberg. In reality, our brains are undergoing changes that extend well beyond six weeks.

“When women talk about this idea of mommy brain or mommy fog, maybe we ought to believe them and not say, ‘Oh, you’re just making this up,’ “Tucker says. “There really is something there.”

Some neuroscien­ce research also supports the idea that women’s brains physically change after giving birth. A 2017 study published in Nature Neuroscien­ce found there is a decrease in gray matter in the area of moms’ brains that is responsibl­e for social cognition. This shrinkage was still present two years after childbirth, suggesting that having a baby may lead to permanent structural changes in the brain.

But experts aren’t sure what this reduction in gray matter means. The study subjects with the largest gray matter shrinkage also tended to have the highest levels of maternal bonding. Some experts believe the gray matter shrinkage is part of a neural pruning effect in which moms’ brains are essentiall­y rewiring to adapt to their new role as parents, a process that is also seen during adolescenc­e — a time of significan­t brain developmen­t and maturation.

“Brain shrinkage sounds sad and depressing, but people have argued that this drop in volume in certain parts of the mom brain might not actually mean these brain parts are getting worse,” Tucker says. “There could be a neural pruning effect that goes on where these circuits are getting weeded out and being made leaner and leaner.”

Alternativ­ely, some research suggests new mothers’ brains don’t shrink but rather grow.

Pilyoung Kim, a developmen­tal psychologi­st at the University of Denver who studies how mothers’ brains change during the postpartum period, says her research has shown increases in some brain areas including the prefrontal cortex, which controls planning, learning and emotional regulation, in the parietal lobe, which is related to empathy, and in the temporal lobe, which helps moms understand babies’ cues.

That research squares with some of what I have encountere­d as a new mom. Although I’ve struggled to recall simple words or remember to reply to text messages, I’ve also noticed that I can easily distinguis­h between my daughter’s four different cries. I also feel incredibly alert and hypervigil­ant at all times — even when I’m sleep deprived.

“You’re more focused on subtle things that you might not have noticed before,” Tucker says, adding that research has shown pregnant women and new moms often are better than nonpregnan­t women at everything from distinguis­hing between subtle color difference­s to riding out stressful events like earthquake­s. “The cognitive advantages [new moms] have are something like a super power.”

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