PERINATAL RISK FACTORS FOR DISORDERS IN THE EMOTIONAL- VOLITIONAL SPHERE AND BEHAVIOR OF A CHILD


Cite item

Full Text

Open Access Open Access
Restricted Access Access granted
Restricted Access Subscription or Fee Access

Abstract

The paper considers an association between poor perinatal factors and risk for disorders in the emotional-volitional sphere and behavior. It discusses whether these disorders are affected by a pregnant woman’s hormonal changes or bad habits, a number of medications, intrauterine infections, or alimentary deficit. There are data on an association of risk for the above disorders with a baby’s cesarean birth, prematurity, and/or low birth weight, birth hypoxia or trauma, and maternal postpartum depression. The possible mechanisms underlying the found associations are discussed. Preventive approaches are outlined.

Full Text

Restricted Access

About the authors

I. Kelmanson

Raoul Wallenberg International University for Family and Child

Email: iakelmanson@hotmail.com
Professor, MD Institute of Special Pedagogics and Psychology Saint Petersburg

References

  1. Кельмансон И.А. Перинатология и перинатальная психология / СПб: Специальная литература, 2015; 343 с.
  2. Vermiglio F., Lo Presti V., Moleti M. et al. Attention deficit and hyperactivity disorders in the offspring of mothers exposed to mild-moderate iodine deficiency: a possible novel iodine deficiency disorder in developed countries // J. Clin. Endocrinol. Metab. - 2004; 89 (12): 6054-60.
  3. Roman G. Autism: transient in utero hypothyroxinemia related to maternal flavonoid ingestion during pregnancy and to other environmental antithyroid agents // J. Neurol. Sci. - 2007; 262 (1-2): 15-26.
  4. Owen D., Andrews M., Matthews S. Maternal adversity, glucocorticoids and programming of neuroendocrine function and behavior // Newroscience Behav. Rev. - 2005; 29: 209-26.
  5. Weinstock M. The potential influence of maternal stress hormones on development and mental health of the offspring // Brain Behav. Immunol. - 2005; 19: 296-308.
  6. Davis E., Snidman N., Wadhwa P. et al. Prenatal maternal anxiety and depression predict negative behavioral reactivity in infancy // Infancy. - 2004; 6: 319-31.
  7. Gutteling B., de Weerth C., Buitelaar J. Prenatal stress and children’s cortisol reaction to the first day of school // Psychoneuroendocrinology. - 2005; 30: 541-9.
  8. Buss C., Davis E., Muftuler L. et al. High pregnancy anxiety during midgestation is associated with decreased gray matter density in 6-9-year-old children // Psychoneuroendocrinology. - 2010; 35 (1): 141-53.
  9. Field T., Diego M., Hernandez-Reif M. et al. Pregnancy anxiety and comorbid depression and anger: effects on the fetus and neonate // Depress. Anxiety. - 2003; 17: 140-51.
  10. Kelmanson I., Erman L., Litvina S. Maternal smoking during pregnancy and behavioural characteristics in 2-4-month-old infants // Klin. Pädiatr. - 2002; 214 (6): 359-64.
  11. Kelmanson I. Perinatal predictors of sleep disturbances in young infants // Somnologie - Schlafforschung und Schlafmedizin. - 2011; 15 (1): 39-46.
  12. Fried P., Watkinson B. 36- and 48-month neurobehavioral follow-up of children prenatally exposed to marijuana, cigarettes, and alcohol // J. Dev. Behav. Pediatr. - 1990; 11 (2): 49-58.
  13. Orlebeke J., Knol D., Verhulst F. Child behavior problems increased by maternal smoking during pregnancy // Arch. Environ. Health. - 1999; 54 (1): 15-9.
  14. Свааб Д. Мы - это наш мозг: От матки до Альцгеймера. Пер. с нидерл. Д.В. Сильверстова / СПб: Изд-во Ивана Лимбаха, 2014; 544 c.
  15. Fried P., Watkinson B., Gray R. A follow-up study of attentional behavior in 6-year-old children exposed prenatally to marihuana, cigarettes, and alcohol // Neurotoxicol. Teratol. - 1992; 14 (5): 299-311.
  16. Brown A., Begg M., Gravenstein S. et al. Serologic evidence of prenatal influenza in the etiology of schizophrenia // Arch. Gen. Psychiatry. - 2004; 61 (8): 774-80.
  17. Mortensen P., Norgaard-Pedersen B., Waltoft B. et al. Early infections of Toxoplasma gondii and the later development of schizophrenia // Schizophr. Bull. - 2007; 33 (3): 741-4.
  18. Buka S., Tsuang M., Torrey E. et al. Maternal infections and subsequent psychosis among offspring // Arch. Gen. Psychiatry. - 2001; 58 (11): 1032-7.
  19. Babulas V., Factor-Litvak P., Goetz R. Prenatal exposure to maternal genital and reproductive infections and adult schizophrenia // Am. J. Psychiatry. - 2006; 163 (5): 927-9.
  20. Sorensen H., Mortensen E., Reinisch J. et al. Association between prenatal exposure to bacterial infection and risk of schizophrenia // Schizophr. Bull. - 2009; 35 (3): 631-7.
  21. Ciaranello A., Ciaranello R. The neurobiology of infantile autism // Annu. Rev. Neurosci. - 1995; 18: 101-28.
  22. Balschun D., Wetzel W., Del Rey A. et al. Interleukin-6: a cytokine to forget // FASEB J. - 2004; 18 (14): 1788-90.
  23. Raison C., Capuron L., Miller A. Cytokines sing the blues: inflammation and the pathogenesis of depression // Trends Immunol. - 2006; 27 (1): 24-31.
  24. Vargas D., Nascimbene C., Krishnan C. et al. Neuroglial activation and neuroinflammation in the brain of patients with autism // Ann. Neurol. - 2005; 57 (1): 67-81.
  25. Moore V., Davies M., Willson K. et al. Dietary composition of pregnant women is related to size of the baby at birth // J. Nutr. - 2004; 134 (7): 1820-6.
  26. Cannell J. On the aetiology of autism // Acta Paediatr. - 2010; 99 (8): 1128-30.
  27. Tamura T., Goldenberg R., Hou J. et al. Cord serum ferritin concentrations and mental and psychomotor development of children at five years of age // J. Pediatr. - 2002; 140 (2): 165-70.
  28. Lagercrantz H., Slotkin T. The «stress» of being born // Sci. Am. - 1986; 254 (4): 100-7.
  29. Kelmanson I. Emotional and behavioural features of preschool children born by Caesarean deliveries at maternal request // Eur. J. Dev. Psychol. - 2013; 10 (6): 676-90.
  30. Kapellou O. Effect of caesarean section on brain maturation // Acta Paediatrica. - 2011; 100 (11): 1416-22.
  31. Schlinzig T., Johansson S., Gunnar A. et al. Epigenetic modulation at birth - altered DNA-methylation in white blood cells after Caesarean section // Acta Paediatr. - 2009; 98 (7): 1096-9.
  32. Carter C. Developmental consequences of oxytocin // Physiol. Behav. -2003; 79 (3): 383-97.
  33. Juarez I., Gratton A., Flores G. Ontogeny of altered dendritic morphology in the rat prefrontal cortex, hippocampus, and nucleus accumbens following Cesarean delivery and birth anoxia // J. Comparat. Neurol. - 2008; 507 (5): 1734-47.
  34. Kesler S., Ment L., Vohr B. et al. Volumetric analysis of regional cerebral development in preterm children // Pediatr. Neurol. - 2004; 31 (5): 318-25.
  35. Peterson B., Anderson A., Ehrenkranz R. et al. Regional brain volumes and their later neurodevelopmental correlates in term and preterm infants // Pediatrics. - 2003; 111 (5 Pt. 1): 939-48.
  36. Allin M., Walshe M., Fern A. et al. Cognitive maturation in preterm and term born adolescents // J. Neurol. Neurosurg. Psychiatry. - 2008; 79 (4): 381-6.
  37. Nosarti C., Al-Asady M., Frangou S. et al. Adolescents who were born very preterm have decreased brain volumes // Brain. - 2002; 125 (Pt. 7): 1616-23.
  38. Allin M., Matsumoto H., Santhouse A. et al. Cognitive and motor function and the size of the cerebellum in adolescents born very pre-term // Brain. - 2001; 124 (Pt. 1): 60-6.
  39. Narberhaus A., Segarra D., Caldu X. et al. Corpus callosum and prefrontal functions in adolescents with history of very preterm birth // Neuropsychologia. -2008; 46 (1): 111-6.
  40. Abernethy L., Palaniappan M., Cooke R. Quantitative magnetic resonance imaging of the brain in survivors of very low birth weight // Arch. Dis. Child. - 2002; 87 (4): 279-83.
  41. Gimenez M., Junque C., Narberhaus A. et al. White matter volume and concentration reductions in adolescents with history of very preterm birth: a voxelbased morphometry study // Neuroimage. - 2006; 32 (4): 1485-98.
  42. Thomas M., Karmiloff-Smith A. Are developmental disorders like cases of adult brain damage? Implications from connectionist modelling // Behav. Brain Sci. - 2002; 25 (6): 727-50.
  43. Botting N., Powls A., Cooke R. et al. Attention deficit hyperactivity disorders and other psychiatric outcomes in very low birthweight children at 12 years // J. Child Psychol. Psychiatry. - 1997; 38 (8): 931-41.
  44. Limperopoulos C., Bassan H., Sullivan N. et al. Positive screening for autism in ex-preterm infants: prevalence and risk factors // Pediatrics. - 2008; 121 (4): 758-65.
  45. Gale C., Martyn C. Birth weight and later risk of depression in a national birth cohort // Br. J. Psychiatry. - 2004; 184: 28-33.
  46. Patton G., Coffey C., Carlin J. et al. Prematurity at birth and adolescent depressive disorder // Br. J. Psychiatry. - 2004; 184: 446-7.
  47. Monfils Gustafsson W., Josefsson A., Ekholm Selling K. et al. Preterm birth or foetal growth impairment and psychiatric hospitalization in adolescence and early adulthood in a Swedish population-based birth cohort // Acta Psychiatr. Scand. - 2009; 119 (1): 54-61.
  48. Cannon M., Jones P., Murray R. Obstetric complications and schizophrenia: historical and meta-analytic review // Am. J. Psychiatry. - 2002; 159 (7): 1080-92.
  49. Cnattingius S., Hultman C., Dahl M. et al. Very preterm birth, birth trauma, and the risk of anorexia nervosa among girls // Arch. Gen. Psychiatry. - 1999; 56 (7): 634-8.
  50. Woodward L., Edgin J., Thompson D. et al. Object working memory deficits predicted by early brain injury and development in the preterm infant // Brain. -2005; 128 (Pt. 11): 2578-87.
  51. Taylor H., Minich N., Klein N. et al. Longitudinal outcomes of very low birth weight: neuropsychological findings // J. Int. Neuropsychol. Soc. - 2004; 10 (2): 149-63.
  52. Taylor D., Pirianov G., Edwards A. et al. Hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy. In: H. Lagercrantz, M. Hanson, L. Ment, D. Peebles, editors. The Newborn Brain: Neuroscience and Clinical Applications / Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2010; p. 261-80.
  53. Guralnick M. Effectiveness of early intervention for vulnerable children: a developmental perspective // Am. J. Mental Retardation. - 1998; 102 (4): 319-45.
  54. Woodward L., Anderson P., Austin N. et al. Neonatal MRI to predict neurodevelopmental outcomes in preterm infants // N. Engl. J. Med. - 2006; 355 (7): 685-94.
  55. Als H., Lawhon G., Brown E. et al. Individualized behavioral and environmental care for the very low birth weight preterm infant at high risk for bronchopulmonary dysplasia: neonatal intensive care unit and developmental outcome // Pediatrics. - 1986; 78 (6): 1123-32.
  56. Murray L., Sinclair D., Cooper P. et al. The socioemotional development of 5-year-old children of postnatally depressed mothers // J. Child Psychol. Psychiatry. - 1999; 40 (8): 1259-71.
  57. Hay D., Pawlby S., Sharp D. et al. Intellectual problems shown by 11-year-old children whose mothers had postnatal depression // J. Child Psychol. Psychiatry. - 2001; 42 (7): 871-89.
  58. Beck C. The effects of postpartum depression on child development: a metaanalysis // Arch. Psychiatr. Nurs. - 1998; 12 (1): 12-20.

Supplementary files

Supplementary Files
Action
1. JATS XML

This website uses cookies

You consent to our cookies if you continue to use our website.

About Cookies