Child Study Center, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, CT, 06520, United States.
Child Study Center, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, CT, 06520, United States; Department of Psychiatry, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, CT, 06510, United States.
Drug Alcohol Depend. 2020 Feb 1;207:107805. doi: 10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2019.107805. Epub 2019 Dec 16.
Maternal substance use and addiction has been associated with negative consequences for parenting and may increase addiction vulnerability in the developing child. Neuroimaging research suggests that substance use may decrease the reward of caring for infants and heighten stress reactivity to affective infant cues.
Thirty-two substance-using mothers and twenty-two non-substance-using mothers were presented with emotional face and cry stimuli generated from their own and a demographically matched unknown infant during fMRI scanning. Between-group differences in neural activity during task performance were assessed using whole-brain, mixed-effects models corrected for multiple comparisons (voxel-level p < 0.001, pFWE<0.05).
Relative to non-substance-using mothers, substance-using mothers exhibited greater activation when viewing their own infant's face as compared to an unknown infant's face across multiple brain regions, including superior medial frontal, inferior parietal, and middle temporal regions. Substance-using mothers also had a decreased response to sad infant faces in the ventral striatum relative to the non-substance-using mothers. Neural responses to own vs. unknown infant cries did not significantly differ between substance-using and non-substance-using mothers.
Findings suggest overlapping cortical and subcortical brain regions implicated in responding to infant faces, with activation differences related to infant familiarity, emotional expression, and maternal substance use. While prior work has focused on attenuated neural responses to infant cues, greater attention is needed toward understanding the increased reactivity to affective infant cues observed in substance-using mothers.
母体物质使用和成瘾与育儿的负面后果有关,并可能增加发育中儿童的成瘾易感性。神经影像学研究表明,物质使用可能会降低照顾婴儿的奖励,并增加对婴儿情感线索的应激反应。
32 名物质使用的母亲和 22 名非物质使用的母亲在 fMRI 扫描期间接受了来自自己和一个人口统计学匹配的未知婴儿的情绪面孔和哭泣刺激。使用全脑、混合效应模型在组间比较中校正多重比较(体素水平 p<0.001,pFWE<0.05)评估任务表现期间的神经活动差异。
与非物质使用的母亲相比,物质使用的母亲在观看自己婴儿的面孔时,相对于观看未知婴儿的面孔,在多个大脑区域表现出更大的激活,包括额上内侧、顶下和颞中区域。物质使用的母亲在腹侧纹状体对悲伤婴儿面孔的反应也低于非物质使用的母亲。物质使用的母亲和非物质使用的母亲对自己的婴儿哭声和未知婴儿哭声的神经反应没有显著差异。
研究结果表明,与婴儿面孔反应相关的重叠皮层和皮层下脑区,激活差异与婴儿的熟悉程度、情绪表达和母亲的物质使用有关。虽然之前的工作集中在对婴儿线索的反应减弱的神经反应上,但需要更多地关注理解物质使用的母亲中观察到的对婴儿情感线索的反应增加。