Pierce LJ, Thompson BL, Gharib A, Schlueter L, Reilly E,
Valdes V, Roberts S, Conroy K, Levitt P, Nelson CA. Association of Perceived
Maternal Stress During the Perinatal Period With Electroencephalography Patterns in
2-Month-Old Infants. JAMA Pediatr. 2019 Apr 8. doi:
10.1001/jamapediatrics.2019.0492. [Epub ahead of print]
Abstract
IMPORTANCE:
Variation in child responses to adversity creates a clinical
challenge to identify children most resilient or susceptible to later risk for
disturbances in cognition and health. Advances in establishing scalable
biomarkers can lead to early identification and mechanistic understanding of
the association of early adversity with neurodevelopment.
OBJECTIVES:
To examine whether maternal reports of stress are associated
with patterns in resting electroencephalography at 2 months of age and whether
unique electroencephalographic profiles associated with risk and resiliency
factors can be identified.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS:
For this cohort study, a population-based sample of 113
mother-infant dyads was recruited from January 1, 2016, to March 1, 2018,
during regularly scheduled pediatric visits before infants were 2 months of age
from 2 primary care clinics in Boston, Massachusetts, and Los Angeles,
California, that predominantly serve families from low-income backgrounds. Data
are reported from a single time point, when infants were aged 2 months, of an
ongoing cohort study longitudinally following the mother-infant dyads.
EXPOSURES:
Maternal reported exposure to stressful life events and
perceived stress.
MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES:
Spectral power (absolute and relative) in different
frequency bands (Δ, θ, low and high α, β, and γ) from infant resting
electroencephalography (EEG) and EEG profiles across frequency bands determined
by latent profile analysis.
RESULTS:
Of 113 enrolled infants, 70 (mean [SD] age, 2.42 [0.37]
months; 35 girls [50%]) provided usable EEG data. In multivariable hierarchical
linear regressions, maternal perceived stress was significantly and negatively
associated with absolute β (β = -0.007; 95% CI, -0.01 to -0.001; semipartial
r = -0.25) and γ power (β = -0.008; 95% CI, -0.01 to -0.002; semipartial
r = -0.28). Maternal educational level was significantly and positively
associated with power in high α, β, and γ bands after adjusting for covariates
(high school: γ: β = 0.108; 95% CI, 0.014-0.203; semipartial r = -0.236;
associate's degree or higher: high α: β = 0.133; 95% CI, 0.018-0.248;
semipartial r = 0.241; β: β = 0.167; 95% CI, 0.055-0.279; semipartial
r = 0.309; and γ: β = 0.183; 95% CI, 0.066-0.299; semipartial r = 0.323).
Latent profile analysis identified 2 unique profiles for absolute and relative
power. Maternal perceived stress (β = 0.13; 95% CI, 0.01-0.25; adjusted odds
ratio [AOR], 1.14; 95% CI, 1.01-1.28) and maternal educational level (high
school: β = 3.00; 95% CI, 0.35-5.65; AOR, 20.09; 95% CI, 1.42-283.16;
associate's degree or higher: β = 4.12; 95% CI, 1.45-6.79; AOR, 61.56; 95% CI,
4.28-885.01) were each associated with unique profile membership.
CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE:
These findings suggest that unique contributions of
caregiver stress and maternal educational level on infant neurodevelopment are
detectable at 2 months; EEG might be a promising tool to identify infants most
susceptible to parental stress and to reveal mechanisms by which neurodevelopment
is associated with adversity. Additional studies validating subgroups across
larger cohorts with different stressors and at different ages are required
before use at the individual level in clinical settings.
Courtesy of: https://www.mdlinx.com/journal-summaries/electroencephalography-stress-educational-level-neurodevelopment-infants/2019/06/06/7568701?spec=neurology
No comments:
Post a Comment