Luotonen Silja, Railo Henry, Acosta Henriette, Huotilainen Minna, Lavonius Maria, Karlsson Linnea, Karlsson Hasse, Tuulari Jetro J
FinnBrain Birth Cohort Study, Turku Brain and Mind Center, Department of Clinical Medicine, University of Turku, Turku, Finland.
Centre for Population Health Research, Turku University Hospital and University of Turku, Turku, Finland.
Hum Brain Mapp. 2025 Jan;46(1):e70130. doi: 10.1002/hbm.70130.
The brain develops most rapidly during pregnancy and early neonatal months. While prior electrophysiological studies have shown that aperiodic brain activity undergoes changes across infancy to adulthood, the role of gestational duration in aperiodic and periodic activity remains unknown. In this study, we aimed to bridge this gap by examining the associations between gestational duration and aperiodic and periodic activity in the EEG power spectrum in both neonates and toddlers. This cross-sectional study involved EEG data from 73 neonates (postnatal age 1-5 days, 40 females) and 56 toddlers (postnatal age of 2.9-3.2 years, 28 females) from the FinnBrain Birth Cohort Study. EEG power spectra were parameterized to aperiodic and periodic components using the SpecParam tool. We tested the associations between gestational duration as well as postnatal age and SpecParam parameters in neonates and toddlers while including birth weight and child sex as covariates. For neonates, multilevel models were employed, considering different data acquisitions (sleep and auditory paradigm + sleep), while in toddlers, regression models were used as only data from the auditory paradigm was available. We found that longer gestational duration was associated with a steeper power spectrum across EEG frequencies both in neonates and toddlers. Effect was especially strong in toddlers (β = 0.45, p = 0.004), while in neonates, it remained nearly statistically significant (p = 0.061). In neonates, a quadratic association between gestational duration and beta center frequency (12.5-30 Hz) was found. In toddlers, beta center frequencies were overall higher in females compared to males. Offset (calculated as the power of the aperiodic curve at 2.5 Hz) and theta center frequency had negative associations with postnatal age in neonates, but not in toddlers. Our results suggest that gestational duration may have significant and relatively long-lasting effects on brain physiology. The possible behavioral and cognitive consequences of these changes are enticing topics for future research.
大脑在孕期和新生儿早期发育最为迅速。虽然先前的电生理研究表明,非周期性脑活动在从婴儿期到成年期的过程中会发生变化,但妊娠期在非周期性和周期性活动中的作用仍然未知。在本研究中,我们旨在通过检查妊娠期与新生儿和幼儿脑电图功率谱中的非周期性和周期性活动之间的关联来弥合这一差距。这项横断面研究涉及来自芬兰大脑出生队列研究的73名新生儿(出生后1 - 5天,40名女性)和56名幼儿(出生后2.9 - 3.2岁,28名女性)的脑电图数据。使用SpecParam工具将脑电图功率谱参数化为非周期性和周期性成分。我们测试了妊娠期以及出生后年龄与新生儿和幼儿的SpecParam参数之间的关联,同时将出生体重和儿童性别作为协变量纳入。对于新生儿,采用了多层次模型,考虑了不同的数据采集方式(睡眠和听觉范式 + 睡眠),而对于幼儿,由于只有听觉范式的数据可用,因此使用了回归模型。我们发现,较长的妊娠期与新生儿和幼儿整个脑电图频率范围内更陡峭的功率谱相关。这种效应在幼儿中尤为明显(β = 0.45,p = 0.004),而在新生儿中,几乎具有统计学意义(p = 0.061)。在新生儿中,发现妊娠期与β中心频率(12.5 - 30 Hz)之间存在二次关联。在幼儿中,女性的β中心频率总体上高于男性。偏移量(计算为非周期性曲线在2.5 Hz处的功率)和θ中心频率与新生儿的出生后年龄呈负相关,但在幼儿中并非如此。我们的结果表明,妊娠期可能对大脑生理产生显著且相对持久的影响。这些变化可能产生的行为和认知后果是未来研究的诱人课题。