Study shows that mothers’ psychosocial stress during pregnancy has negative associations with their children’s sleep that persist across childhood. Researchers also found that associations with sleep duration seem to attenuate with age.

Stress at the beginning of human life seems to be strongly associated with poor sleep from childhood to adulthood, with a high probability that the earliest determinants of child sleep disturbance can be found in utero. Several studies associate maternal symptoms of mental disorders during pregnancy, and in particular depressive and anxiety symptoms, with poorer sleep in children up to 3 years.

However, although most of the studies carried out to date indicate that childhood sleep is affected by a stressful prenatal environment, some important gaps remain, namely the lack of simultaneous assessment between the associations of prenatal stress with different aspects of children’s sleep (e.g. duration and quality) and at different periods of development or addressing any potential interaction between genetic predisposition and environmental effects in the association between prenatal stress and childhood sleep.

With the support of the BIAL Foundation, Desana Kocevska and team investigated the prenatal environment by quantifying stressors for mothers during pregnancy across multiple domains, including negative life events (e.g. death in the family), contextual stressors (e.g. poor housing conditions, financial difficulties), parental stressors (e.g. parental psychopathology, substance abuse) and interpersonal stressors (e.g. family relationship difficulties). Furthermore, they studied both qualitative aspects of sleep (insomnia-like problems) and sleep duration, in children between 2 months and 6 years of age, reported by the caregiver, and verified whether the genetic predisposition for poor sleep modifies the effect of prenatal stress on sleep across childhood.

In the article “A Longitudinal Study of Stress During Pregnancy, Children’s Sleep and Polygenic Risk for Poor Sleep in the General Pediatric Population”, published in July in the scientific journal Research on Child and Adolescent Psychopathology, the authors indicate that they obtained information from children and their caregivers from The Generation R Study, a population-based prospective cohort from fetal life onwards, which enrolled 9,778 pregnant mothers from Rotterdam, The Netherlands. Using this cohort, the impact of prenatal psychosocial stress on 4,930 children’s sleep at ages 2 months, 18 months, 2, 3, and 6 years was studied. The polygenic risk (joint effects of multiple genetic variants across the genome) scores for insomnia were also determined in a subsample of 2,063 children.

The results showed higher total prenatal stress associated with more sleep problems across all time points between 2 months and 6 years. However, the association with shorter sleep duration was more pronounced up to 2 years of age, appearing to attenuate with age.

According to the researchers from the Netherlands Institute for Neuroscience, the Erasmus University Medical Center, and the Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, this appears to be the first study to show that a stressful prenatal environment interacts with the polygenic risk for poor sleep to shape children’s sleep.

Interestingly, our results indicate that prenatal stress, and negative life events in particular, interact with the genetic liability for insomnia to exacerbate sleep problems at age 6 years, but not at earlier ages.”


Desana Kocevska

Source:

Journal reference:

Kocevska, D. (2023). A Longitudinal Study of Stress During Pregnancy, Children’s Sleep and Polygenic Risk for Poor Sleep in the General Pediatric Population. Research on Child and Adolescent Psychopathology. doi.org/10.1007/s10802-023-01097-2.



Source link

By Josh

A note to our visitors

This website has updated its privacy policy in compliance with changes to European Union data protection law, for all members globally. We’ve also updated our Privacy Policy to give you more information about your rights and responsibilities with respect to your privacy and personal information. Please read this to review the updates about which cookies we use and what information we collect on our site. By continuing to use this site, you are agreeing to our updated privacy policy.