AI Article Synopsis

  • Birthweight is influenced by maternal psychological stress during pregnancy, but the effects may differ based on the infant's sex.
  • A study analyzed 5,702 mother-newborn pairs, comparing those whose mothers reported high stress against those with lower stress levels, specifically examining the impact on male and female infants.
  • Results showed that male infants exposed to high stress had higher birthweights, while female infants had lower birthweights, suggesting different adaptive strategies to maternal stress based on the infant's sex.

Article Abstract

Birthweight is an important predictor of newborn health and has been linked to maternal psychological stress during pregnancy. However, it is unclear whether prenatal stress affects birthweight similarly for both male and female infants. We used a well-established pregnancy cohort to investigate the impact of high maternal psychological stress during pregnancy on birthweight as a function of infant sex. Overall, 5702 mother-newborn pairs were analysed. Of these, 198 mothers reported high levels of stress using the Psychological Stress Measure (nine-items version; PSM-9). Maternal psychological stress was assessed between the 24th and 28th week of gestation and analyses were performed jointly and independently as a function of neonatal sex (separate analyses for male and female infants). Newborns exposed to high maternal psychological stress during pregnancy (a score above 26 measured using the PSM-9 questionnaire, corresponding to >97.5th percentile) were compared to newborns of mothers who reported lower stress. ANCOVAs revealed that high levels of maternal stress during pregnancy were linked to infant birthweight as a function of infant sex. Male infants of mothers who reported high levels of stress had a greater birthweight whereas female infants had a lower birthweight under the same conditions, in comparison to mothers who did not report greater levels of stress. Although the effect size is small, these results underline the possibility that male and female fetuses may use different strategies when adapting to maternal adversity and highlight the need to consider infant sex as a moderator of the association between maternal psychological stress during pregnancy and infant birthweight.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8775189PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0262641PLOS

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