Maternal Depressive Symptoms During Pregnancy and Brain Age in Young Adult Offspring: Findings from a Prenatal Birth Cohort
Language English Country United States Media print
Document type Journal Article, Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
PubMed
32108225
DOI
10.1093/cercor/bhaa014
PII: 5763075
Knihovny.cz E-resources
- Keywords
- anxiety, brain age gap, dysregulated mood, magnetic resonance imaging, maternal depression during pregnancy,
- MeSH
- Depression * MeSH
- Child MeSH
- Adult MeSH
- Pregnancy Complications * MeSH
- Middle Aged MeSH
- Humans MeSH
- Magnetic Resonance Imaging MeSH
- Adolescent MeSH
- Young Adult MeSH
- Brain diagnostic imaging MeSH
- Mood Disorders diagnostic imaging psychology MeSH
- Aged, 80 and over MeSH
- Aged MeSH
- Aging * MeSH
- Pregnancy MeSH
- Brain Cortical Thickness MeSH
- Anxiety diagnostic imaging psychology MeSH
- Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects diagnostic imaging psychology MeSH
- Check Tag
- Child MeSH
- Adult MeSH
- Middle Aged MeSH
- Humans MeSH
- Adolescent MeSH
- Young Adult MeSH
- Male MeSH
- Aged, 80 and over MeSH
- Aged MeSH
- Pregnancy MeSH
- Female MeSH
- Publication type
- Journal Article MeSH
- Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't MeSH
Maternal depression during pregnancy is associated with elevated risk of anxiety and depression in offspring, but the mechanisms are incompletely understood. Here we conducted a neuroimaging follow-up of a prenatal birth cohort from the European Longitudinal Study of Pregnancy and Childhood (n = 131; 53% women, age 23-24) to test whether deviations from age-normative structural brain development in young adulthood may partially underlie this link. Structural brain age was calculated based on previously published neuroanatomical age prediction models using cortical thickness maps from healthy controls aged 6-89. Brain age gap was computed as the difference between chronological and structural brain age. Participants also completed self-report measures of anxiety and mood dysregulation. Further, mothers of a subset of participants (n = 103, 54% women) answered a self-report questionnaire in 1990-1992 about depressive symptoms during pregnancy. Higher exposure to maternal depressive symptoms in utero showed a linear relationship with elevated brain age gap, which showed a quadratic relationship with anxiety and mood dysregulation in the young adult offspring. Our findings suggest that exposure to maternal depressive symptoms in utero may be associated with accelerated brain maturation and that deviations from age-normative structural brain development in either direction predict more anxiety and dysregulated mood in young adulthood.
Department of Psychiatry University of Toronto Toronto ON M5T 1R8 Canada
RECETOX Faculty of Science Masaryk University Brno 62500 Czech Republic
References provided by Crossref.org
Maturation of Hippocampal Subfields in Young Adulthood and Its Relationship With Cognition
Accelerated Epigenetic Aging and Its Role in Brain Dynamics and Cognition in Young Adulthood
Mitochondrial DNA variants and their impact on epigenetic and biological aging in young adulthood
Socioeconomic and cognitive roots of trait anxiety in young adults