Department of Psychology, University of Utah, USA.
Department of Psychology, University of Utah, USA.
Infant Behav Dev. 2023 Aug;72:101861. doi: 10.1016/j.infbeh.2023.101861. Epub 2023 Jul 1.
Separate literatures have demonstrated that mothers' experiences with trauma during childhood or pregnancy are associated with maternal prenatal health risks, adverse childbirth outcomes, and offspring internalizing and externalizing disorders. These literatures largely align with the intergenerational transmission or fetal programming frameworks, respectively. However, few studies have tested the effects of maternal childhood and prenatal trauma simultaneously on mothers' and infants' health outcomes, and no studies have examined these effects on newborn neurobehavioral outcomes. Thus, in the present study, we examined how the developmental timing of pregnant women's traumatic life experiences associated with their physical health and psychopathology (Aim 1) as well as their newborns' birth and neurodevelopmental outcomes (Aim 2; for pre-registered aims and hypotheses, see https://osf.io/ygnre/?view_only=cbe17d0ac7f24af5a4d3e37e24eebead). One hundred and fifty-two 3rd trimester pregnant women (M = 29 years; 17.1% Hispanic/Latina) completed measures of trauma history and psychopathology. Then, 24-48 h after birth, trained clinicians conducted newborn neurobehavioral exams (n = 118 newborns; 52.6% female). Results indicated that lifetime traumatic experiences associated with multiple prenatal maternal health outcomes, including depression, anxiety, emotion dysregulation, and pregnancy complications. Pregnant women's experiences with childhood trauma, but not adulthood or prenatal trauma, predicted higher neurobehavioral attention scores among female newborns. Our discussion highlights the importance of considering the developmental timing of maternal trauma on perinatal outcomes and contextualizes our findings within the intergenerational transmission and fetal programming literatures. DATA AVAILABILITY: Data pertaining to R01MH119070 (MPIs Crowell & Conradt) and that support these findings are uploaded to the NIMH repository.
已有文献表明,母亲在儿童期或孕期经历创伤与母亲产前健康风险、不良分娩结局以及后代内化和外化障碍有关。这些文献分别与代际传递或胎儿编程框架大体一致。然而,很少有研究同时测试母亲儿童期和孕期创伤对母亲和婴儿健康结果的影响,也没有研究检验这些影响对新生儿神经行为结果的影响。因此,在本研究中,我们检验了孕妇创伤性生活经历的发展时间如何与她们的身体健康和精神病理学相关(目的 1),以及与她们新生儿的出生和神经发育结果相关(目的 2;预先注册的目的和假设,见 https://osf.io/ygnre/?view_only=cbe17d0ac7f24af5a4d3e37e24eebead)。152 名孕晚期妇女(M = 29 岁;17.1%为西班牙裔/拉丁裔)完成了创伤史和精神病理学的测量。然后,在分娩后 24-48 小时,经过培训的临床医生对新生儿进行了神经行为检查(n = 118 名新生儿;52.6%为女性)。结果表明,一生中经历的创伤与多种产前母亲健康结局有关,包括抑郁、焦虑、情绪调节障碍和妊娠并发症。孕妇的儿童期创伤经历,但不是成年期或孕期创伤经历,预测了女性新生儿更高的神经行为注意力评分。我们的讨论强调了考虑母亲创伤的发展时间对围产期结局的重要性,并将我们的发现置于代际传递和胎儿编程文献的背景下。数据可用性:与 R01MH119070(MPIs Crowell & Conradt)相关的数据以及支持这些发现的数据已上传到 NIMH 存储库。