Lipton L R, Brunst K J, Kannan S, Ni Y-M, Ganguri H B, Wright R J, Bosquet Enlow M
1Department of Pediatrics,Kravis Children's Hospital,Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai,New York City,NY,USA.
2Department of Human Nutrition and Dietetics,College of Agricultural Sciences,Southern Illinois University,Carbondale,IL,USA.
J Dev Orig Health Dis. 2017 Dec;8(6):638-648. doi: 10.1017/S2040174417000411. Epub 2017 Jun 27.
Prenatal stress and prenatal nutrition each have demonstrable impact on fetal development, with implications for child neurodevelopment and behavior. However, few studies have examined their joint influences despite evidence of potential interactive effects. We examined associations among prenatal stress, prenatal antioxidant intakes, and child temperament in a sociodemographically diverse pregnancy cohort (N=137 mother-child dyads). In mid-pregnancy, mothers completed an assessment of recent negative life events as a measure of prenatal stress and an assessment of prenatal diet. When the children were 30 months of age, mothers completed the Early Childhood Behavior Questionnaire-Very Short form, which provides scores on child Negative Affectivity, Effortful Control, and Surgency/Extraversion. Linear regressions tested associations between maternal prenatal negative life events and child temperament, and effect modification by maternal prenatal antioxidant intakes (vitamins A, C, and E, magnesium, zinc, selenium, β-carotene). Analyses revealed that increased maternal prenatal negative life events were associated with higher child Negative Affectivity (β=0.08, P=0.009) but not with child Effortful Control (β=-0.03, P=0.39) or Surgency/Extraversion (β=0.04, P=0.14). Prenatal intakes of zinc and selenium modified this effect: Maternal exposure to prenatal negative life events was associated with higher child Negative Affectivity in the presence of lower intakes of zinc and selenium. Modification effects approached significance for vitamins A and C. The results suggest that the combination of elevated stress exposures and lower antioxidant intakes in pregnancy increases the likelihood of heightened child temperamental negative affectivity. Increased antioxidant intakes during pregnancy may protect against influences of prenatal stress on child temperament.
产前压力和产前营养各自对胎儿发育都有显著影响,这关乎儿童神经发育和行为。然而,尽管有证据表明存在潜在的交互作用,但很少有研究考察它们的联合影响。我们在一个社会人口统计学特征多样的妊娠队列(N = 137对母婴)中,研究了产前压力、产前抗氧化剂摄入量与儿童气质之间的关联。在妊娠中期,母亲们完成了一项关于近期负面生活事件的评估,以此作为产前压力的衡量指标,同时还完成了一项产前饮食评估。当孩子30个月大时,母亲们完成了《幼儿行为问卷简版》,该问卷提供了儿童消极情绪性、努力控制和外向性/外倾性的得分。线性回归检验了母亲产前负面生活事件与儿童气质之间的关联,以及母亲产前抗氧化剂摄入量(维生素A、C和E、镁、锌、硒、β-胡萝卜素)的效应修正作用。分析表明,母亲产前负面生活事件增加与儿童较高的消极情绪性相关(β = 0.08,P = 0.009),但与儿童努力控制能力(β = -0.03,P = 0.39)或外向性/外倾性(β = 0.04,P = 0.14)无关。锌和硒的产前摄入量改变了这种效应:在锌和硒摄入量较低的情况下,母亲暴露于产前负面生活事件与儿童较高的消极情绪性相关。维生素A和C的修正效应接近显著水平。结果表明,孕期压力增加与抗氧化剂摄入量降低相结合,会增加儿童气质消极情绪性增强的可能性。孕期增加抗氧化剂摄入量可能会抵御产前压力对儿童气质的影响。