MAJOR STRESS DURING PREGNANCY LINKED TO AUTISM
COLUMBUS, Ohio - Women who have had a major stressful event -
death of a spouse, job loss, or a long-distance move - midway
through their pregnancy may have a greater chance of having an
autistic child than do their unstressed counterparts say researchers
at The Ohio State University
Medical Center.
In a presentation at the annual meeting of the
Society for Neuroscience in San
Diego, Dr. David Beversdorf, a neurologist at OSU Medical Center and
principal investigator of the study, reported on a study of 188
women who had delivered autistic children. The research showed that
these women were more likely to have experienced a major stressor
the 24th through 28th weeks of their pregnancy.
Stress levels for the mothers of
autistic children were nearly twice those of other
mothers in the study.
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"Researchers have been examining the genetic component of the
disease for years, but there is now evidence through this study that
autism is also linked to external factors, such as prenatal stress,"
he said.
Beversdorf and his collegues asked mothers to document their
stress levels when stressful events occurred during their
pregnancies. The study included the mothers of autistic children,
212 women who had normal births and 92 women who had children with
Down's syndrome - a genetically caused neurological disorder caused
by chromosomal abnormality.
The researchers then used a standard psychological measure - The
Social Readjustment Rating Scale - to gauge the impact at
four-week intervals that those stressors had on the women.
For the study, a "major stressor" was defined as a life-altering
event in the woman's life, such a loss of a loved one or losing a
job.
He noted that the numbers of women experiencing major stress
during any certain four-week period in their pregnancies remained
fairly constant during the study for normal and Down's syndrome
pregnancies. Stress levels for the mothers of autistic children were
nearly twice those of other mothers in the study.
"We expected that a woman who has had an autistic child or a
child with Down's syndrome would tend to remember these life
stressors more easily than a woman who has had a normal birth," he
said.
"What we were looking for was this rise in the numbers of who had
a major stressor during this time period (before 32 weeks) and that
these women also had autistic children."
Beversdorf and his colleagues believe their research supports
earlier animal studies that suggest stress during specific periods
in the pregnancy may lead to structural changes in the brain that
have been linked to autism.
The timing of the stressful events recorded for the study seem to
mesh well, timewise, with the periods of development of the fetal
cerebellum - a key portion of the brain that is structurally
different in autistic children.
Autism is a neurological disorder that tends to appear early in a
child's life, typically before age 3. These children have problems
interacting and communicating with others, have a language delay,
and develop a narrow and repetitive pattern of behaviors.
These behaviors typically stay with the child throughout his or
her life.
"With this information there will be other studies that can
hopefully determine what are the causes and influences of autism in
children," said Beversdorf.
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Contact: Jill Boatman, Medical Center
Communications, 614-293-3737, or
boatman-2@medctr.osu.edu
Written by Jill Boatman. |