Detailed Information on Publication Record
2020
Maternal Depressive Symptoms During Pregnancy and Brain Age in Young Adult Offspring: Findings from a Prenatal Birth Cohort
MAREČKOVÁ, Klára, Radek MAREČEK, Lenka ANDRÝSKOVÁ, Milan BRÁZDIL, Y.S. NIKOLOVA et. al.Basic information
Original name
Maternal Depressive Symptoms During Pregnancy and Brain Age in Young Adult Offspring: Findings from a Prenatal Birth Cohort
Authors
MAREČKOVÁ, Klára (203 Czech Republic, guarantor, belonging to the institution), Radek MAREČEK (203 Czech Republic, belonging to the institution), Lenka ANDRÝSKOVÁ (203 Czech Republic, belonging to the institution), Milan BRÁZDIL (203 Czech Republic, belonging to the institution) and Y.S. NIKOLOVA
Edition
CEREBRAL CORTEX, CARY, OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC, 2020, 1047-3211
Other information
Language
English
Type of outcome
Článek v odborném periodiku
Field of Study
30103 Neurosciences
Country of publisher
United States of America
Confidentiality degree
není předmětem státního či obchodního tajemství
References:
Impact factor
Impact factor: 5.357
RIV identification code
RIV/00216224:14740/20:00117619
Organization unit
Central European Institute of Technology
UT WoS
000574296400010
Keywords in English
anxiety; brain age gap; dysregulated mood; magnetic resonance imaging; maternal depression during pregnancy
Tags
International impact, Reviewed
Změněno: 9/10/2024 12:53, Ing. Jana Kuchtová
Abstract
V originále
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.
Links
EF16_013/0001775, research and development project |
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LM2015051, research and development project |
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LQ1601, research and development project |
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90062, large research infrastructures |
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