Eiden Rina D, Schuetze Pamela, Veira Yvette, Cox Elizabeth, Jarrett Thomas M, Johns Josephine M
Research Institute on Addictions, University at Buffalo, State University of New York Buffalo, NY, USA.
Front Psychiatry. 2011 May 31;2:31. doi: 10.3389/fpsyt.2011.00031. eCollection 2011.
This study examined the association between prenatal cocaine exposure and children's self-regulation at 3 years of child age. In addition to direct effects of prenatal cocaine exposure on children's self-regulation, we hypothesized there would be indirect associations between cocaine exposure and self-regulation via higher maternal harshness and poor autonomic regulation in infancy.
The sample consisted of 216 mother-infant dyads recruited at delivery from local area hospitals (116 cocaine-exposed, 100 non-exposed). Infant autonomic regulation was measured at 7 months of age during an anger/frustration task, maternal harshness was coded from observations of mother-toddler interactions at 2 years of age, and children's self-regulation was measured at 3 years of age using several laboratory paradigms.
Contrary to hypotheses, there were no direct associations between maternal cocaine use during pregnancy and children's self-regulation. However, results from testing our conceptual model including the indirect effects via maternal harshness or infant parasympathetic regulation indicated that this model fit the data well, χ(2) (23) = 34.36, p > 0.05, Comparative Fit Index = 0.95, RMSEA = 0.05. Cocaine using mothers displayed higher intensity of harshness toward their toddlers during lab interactions across a variety of tasks at 2 years of age (β = 0.23, p < 0.05), and higher intensity of harshness at 2 years was predictive of lower self-regulation at 3 years (β = -0.36, p < 0.01). Maternal cocaine use was also predictive of a non-adaptive increase in respiratory sinus arrhythmia (RSA) from baseline to the negative affect task, but RSA change in infancy was not predictive of self-regulation at 3 years.
RESULTS are supportive of animal models indicating higher aggression among cocaine treated dams, and indicate that higher maternal harshness among cocaine using mothers is predictive of child self-regulatory outcomes in the preschool period.
本研究考察了产前可卡因暴露与儿童3岁时自我调节能力之间的关联。除了产前可卡因暴露对儿童自我调节的直接影响外,我们还假设,可卡因暴露与自我调节之间会通过母亲更高的严厉程度以及婴儿期较差的自主调节产生间接关联。
样本包括从当地医院招募的216对母婴(116对暴露于可卡因组,100对非暴露组)。婴儿自主调节能力在7个月大时通过愤怒/沮丧任务进行测量,母亲的严厉程度根据2岁时母婴互动观察结果进行编码,儿童的自我调节能力在3岁时通过多种实验室范式进行测量。
与假设相反,孕期母亲使用可卡因与儿童自我调节之间没有直接关联。然而,对我们的概念模型进行检验的结果,包括通过母亲严厉程度或婴儿副交感神经调节的间接影响,表明该模型与数据拟合良好,χ(2)(自由度为23)= 34.36,p > 0.05,比较拟合指数= 0.95,近似误差均方根= 0.05。使用可卡因的母亲在2岁时与幼儿在各种任务的实验室互动中表现出更高强度的严厉程度(β = 0.23,p < 0.05),2岁时更高强度的严厉程度预示着3岁时更低的自我调节能力(β = -0.36,p < 0.01)。母亲使用可卡因还预示着从基线到消极情绪任务期间呼吸性窦性心律不齐(RSA)出现非适应性增加,但婴儿期RSA的变化并不能预测3岁时的自我调节能力。
结果支持动物模型研究结果,即经可卡因处理的母鼠攻击性更强,且表明使用可卡因的母亲更高的严厉程度预示着学龄前儿童的自我调节结果。