Oberlander Tim F, Reebye Pratibha, Misri Shaila, Papsdorf Michael, Kim John, Grunau Ruth E
Department of Pediatrics, Human Early Experience Unit, Centre for Community Child Health Research, Research Institute for Children's and Women's Health, University of British Columbia, 4480 Oak Street, Vancouver, BC, Canada V6 3V4.
Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med. 2007 Jan;161(1):22-9. doi: 10.1001/archpedi.161.1.22.
To evaluate attentional and activity behaviors in 4-year-olds following prenatal selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor (SSRI) exposure.
Prospective cohort design.
Tertiary care center.
Twenty-two 4-year-olds with prolonged prenatal SSRI medication exposure and 14 children without prenatal exposure.
Prenatal SSRI exposure.
Group differences in externalizing behaviors (according to the Child Behavior Checklist) and direct observations of child attention, activity, and impulsiveness in a laboratory setting using the procedure by Crowell and colleagues were compared, including measures of the duration of prenatal SSRI exposure, umbilical cord drug levels, a history of poor neonatal adaptation, and maternal mood.
Externalizing behaviors did not differ between groups. Maternal depression and anxiety at the 4-year follow-up were associated with increased reports of externalizing behaviors. Increased externalizing behaviors were associated with increased umbilical cord drug levels (F(1,34) = 6.3; P = .02), but when controlling for maternal depressed mood at the 4-year follow-up, such levels only accounted for 11.2% of the behavioral outcomes (P>.05). On direct observation, the persistence score for child behavior was significantly lower in the exposed group. Increased aggressiveness scores were associated with a history of poor neonatal adaptation, even when parental report of stress was added to the model (F(1,34) = 4.0; P = .03); however, neither parental report of stress nor poor neonatal adaptation were significant (both P = .09), suggesting that both are important, if not unique, predictors of child behavior.
These findings suggest that the best predictors of externalizing behaviors at age 4 years are current maternal mood and parental stress, regardless of prenatal depressed mood and SSRI treatment during pregnancy. It remains uncertain whether poor neonatal adaptation can be excluded as a possible predictor of externalizing behaviors.
评估产前暴露于选择性5-羟色胺再摄取抑制剂(SSRI)的4岁儿童的注意力和活动行为。
前瞻性队列研究设计。
三级医疗中心。
22名产前长期暴露于SSRI药物的4岁儿童和14名未产前暴露的儿童。
产前SSRI暴露。
比较两组在外化行为方面的差异(根据儿童行为检查表),并使用Crowell及其同事的方法在实验室环境中直接观察儿童的注意力、活动和冲动性,包括产前SSRI暴露持续时间、脐带药物水平、新生儿适应不良史和母亲情绪等指标。
两组在外化行为方面无差异。4年随访时母亲的抑郁和焦虑与外化行为报告增加有关。外化行为增加与脐带药物水平升高相关(F(1,34) = 6.3;P = .02),但在控制4年随访时母亲的抑郁情绪后,这种水平仅占行为结果的11.2%(P>.05)。在直接观察中,暴露组儿童行为的坚持性得分显著较低。攻击性得分增加与新生儿适应不良史相关,即使在模型中加入父母对压力的报告后也是如此(F(1,34) = 4.0;P = .03);然而,父母对压力的报告和新生儿适应不良均无统计学意义(均P = .09),这表明两者都是儿童行为的重要预测因素,即使不是唯一的。
这些发现表明,无论孕期母亲是否有抑郁情绪以及是否接受SSRI治疗,4岁儿童外化行为的最佳预测因素是当前母亲的情绪和父母的压力。新生儿适应不良能否被排除作为外化行为的可能预测因素仍不确定。