AI Article Synopsis

  • The maternal brain shows changes in structure and function during pregnancy and after childbirth, but little is known about these changes beyond caregiving scenarios and their long-term effects.
  • Research indicates that parenthood may offer some protection against aging, yet the impact on brain function in older age is still unclear.
  • In a study of older males and females, only women exhibited a notable decrease in functional connectivity with an increasing number of children, suggesting that motherhood might positively influence brain function in later life, countering typical cognitive decline patterns.

Article Abstract

The maternal brain undergoes structural and functional plasticity during pregnancy and the postpartum period. Little is known about functional plasticity outside caregiving-specific contexts and whether changes persist across the lifespan. Structural neuroimaging studies suggest that parenthood may confer a protective effect against the aging process; however, it is unknown whether parenthood is associated with functional brain differences in late life. We examined the relationship between resting-state functional connectivity and number of children parented in 220 healthy older females (73.82 ± 3.53 years) and 252 healthy older males (73.95 ± 3.50 years). We compared the patterns of resting-state functional connectivity with 3 different models of age-related functional change to assess whether these effects may be functionally neuroprotective for the aging human parental brain. No relationship between functional connectivity and number of children was obtained for males. For females, we found widespread decreasing functional connectivity with increasing number of children parented, with increased segregation between networks, decreased connectivity between hemispheres, and decreased connectivity between anterior and posterior regions. The patterns of functional connectivity related to the number of children an older woman has parented were in the opposite direction to those usually associated with age-related cognitive decline, suggesting that motherhood may be beneficial for brain function in late life.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7906778PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/cercor/bhaa293DOI Listing

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