Stress During Pregnancy Associated With Schizophrenia Of Children
(February 7, 2007) -- A recent article in the Archives of General
Psychiatry reports that women who undergo an extremely stressful event
during the first three months of pregnancy have an
increased risk of having
children who develop
schizophrenia.
Researcher Ali S. Khashan of the University of Machester, England and
colleagues note that there is some consensus that a mother's psychological
state influences her unborn baby. "Severe life events during pregnancy are
consistently associated with an elevated risk of low birth weight and
prematurity."
Schizophrenia is a disabling condition associated with
abnormal brain structure and function, and it is believed to begin in early
brain development. Risk of the condition is influenced by susceptibility
genes that can interact with environmental factors that occur during
pregnancy.
The data are drawn from 1.38 million Danish births occurring between 1973
and 1995. A national registry linked mothers to close family members, and
the registry informed researchers if mothers experienced stressful events
during pregnancy such as a family member dying or receiving diagnosis of
cancer, heart attack, or stroke. The data allowed the research team to
follow children from their 10th birthday through June 30, 2005 or until they
died, left the country, or received a
schizophrenia diagnosis. During the
study period, 21,987 mothers were exposed to the death of a relative during
pregnancy, 14,206 were exposed to serious illness of a relative during
pregnancy, and 7,331 of the offspring developed schizophrenia.
One result suggests a 67 percent greater risk of schizophrenia or related
disorders among the children of women who experienced the death of a
relative during the first trimester of pregnancy. The researchers note that
if the death of a relative occurred up to six months before conception or
any other time during pregnancy, the event was not associated with a risk
for schizophrenia. In addition, a mother's exposure to a relative's serious
illness is also not linked to schizophrenia.
Only for individuals without a family history (parents, grandparents or
siblings) of mental illness was there a significant association between a
family death and risk of schizophrenia.
The authors conclude that "risk associated with exposure to a
well-defined, objective stressful event confined to the first trimester of
pregnancy suggests a number of possible mechanisms." They suggest a possible
effect on the fetus' brain of chemicals released by the mother's brain when
she experiences stress. During early pregnancy, the protective barriers
between the mother and fetus are not fully constructed, and the effects may
be strongest.
Higher Risk of Offspring Schizophrenia Following Antenatal Maternal
Exposure to Severe Adverse Life Events
Ali S. Khashan,Kathryn M. Abel, Roseanne McNamee, Marianne G. Pedersen,Roger
T. Webb, Philip N. Baker, Louise C. Kenny; Preben Bo Mortensen Archives of
General Psychiatry, Volume 65, No. 2, pp146-152, February 2008
Click Here to See Abstract Online.
By: Peter M Crosta
Source: Medical News Today
Last updated: 02/08
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