Foetal exposure to maternal depression predicts cortisol responses in infants: findings from rural South India
Foetal exposure to maternal depression predicts cortisol responses in infants: findings from rural South India
Background
Maternal depression during pregnancy is associated with an increased risk of adverse child outcomes. One potential mechanism is the influence of antenatal depression on the foetal hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis. This can be observed as disturbances in baseline cortisol secretion during childhood. The influence of antenatal depression on infant cortisol reactivity to a stressor may provide further insight into this association. In addition, the dose–response relationship between foetal exposure to antenatal depression and infant cortisol reactivity is unclear.
Methods
A consecutive sample of 133 pregnant women in their third trimester was recruited from an antenatal clinic in Karnataka, South India. Women were assessed for depression before and after birth on the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale (EPDS) and the Kessler 10 Scale. Salivary cortisol response to immunization was measured in 58 infants at 2 months of age. We aimed (i) to investigate the association between antenatal depression and infant cortisol reactivity to immunization and (ii) to explore whether the relationship is dose-dependent.
Results
Exposure to antenatal depression independently predicted elevated infant cortisol responses to immunization (β = 0.53, P = 0.04). The association was found to be U-shaped, for antenatal depression measured on the EPDS, with the infants exposed to the highest and lowest levels of maternal antenatal EPDS scores during intra-uterine life showing elevated cortisol responses to immunization (R2 = 0.20, P = 0.02). Infants exposed to moderate levels of maternal antenatal depression showed the lowest cortisol response to immunization.
Conclusions
These findings suggest that the association between antenatal depression and infant cortisol reactivity is dose-dependent and U-shaped, implying that infants exposed to both low and high levels of maternal depression showed greater reactivity. The study provides the first evidence of such an association from a low-income setting.
677-686
Fernandes, M.
16d62e60-ae8e-455f-88d3-88e778253b4a
Stein, A.
f6a13a48-78d3-471e-97d1-92e39bc109d3
Srinivasan, K.
a5367aa3-c40e-4c3c-825e-2d150a3e40c5
Menezes, G.
51dc105c-e3a8-44d9-84fc-925e5e7d3115
Ramchandani, P. G.
1fdd24f9-f9ab-402d-952a-043d92f579a1
15 August 2014
Fernandes, M.
16d62e60-ae8e-455f-88d3-88e778253b4a
Stein, A.
f6a13a48-78d3-471e-97d1-92e39bc109d3
Srinivasan, K.
a5367aa3-c40e-4c3c-825e-2d150a3e40c5
Menezes, G.
51dc105c-e3a8-44d9-84fc-925e5e7d3115
Ramchandani, P. G.
1fdd24f9-f9ab-402d-952a-043d92f579a1
Fernandes, M., Stein, A., Srinivasan, K., Menezes, G. and Ramchandani, P. G.
(2014)
Foetal exposure to maternal depression predicts cortisol responses in infants: findings from rural South India.
Child: Care, Health and Development, .
(doi:10.1111/cch.12186).
Abstract
Background
Maternal depression during pregnancy is associated with an increased risk of adverse child outcomes. One potential mechanism is the influence of antenatal depression on the foetal hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis. This can be observed as disturbances in baseline cortisol secretion during childhood. The influence of antenatal depression on infant cortisol reactivity to a stressor may provide further insight into this association. In addition, the dose–response relationship between foetal exposure to antenatal depression and infant cortisol reactivity is unclear.
Methods
A consecutive sample of 133 pregnant women in their third trimester was recruited from an antenatal clinic in Karnataka, South India. Women were assessed for depression before and after birth on the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale (EPDS) and the Kessler 10 Scale. Salivary cortisol response to immunization was measured in 58 infants at 2 months of age. We aimed (i) to investigate the association between antenatal depression and infant cortisol reactivity to immunization and (ii) to explore whether the relationship is dose-dependent.
Results
Exposure to antenatal depression independently predicted elevated infant cortisol responses to immunization (β = 0.53, P = 0.04). The association was found to be U-shaped, for antenatal depression measured on the EPDS, with the infants exposed to the highest and lowest levels of maternal antenatal EPDS scores during intra-uterine life showing elevated cortisol responses to immunization (R2 = 0.20, P = 0.02). Infants exposed to moderate levels of maternal antenatal depression showed the lowest cortisol response to immunization.
Conclusions
These findings suggest that the association between antenatal depression and infant cortisol reactivity is dose-dependent and U-shaped, implying that infants exposed to both low and high levels of maternal depression showed greater reactivity. The study provides the first evidence of such an association from a low-income setting.
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Published date: 15 August 2014
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Local EPrints ID: 457558
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/457558
ISSN: 0305-1862
PURE UUID: f88752ea-a908-468a-af80-e79da5aad6aa
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Date deposited: 13 Jun 2022 16:35
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:10
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Contributors
Author:
M. Fernandes
Author:
A. Stein
Author:
K. Srinivasan
Author:
G. Menezes
Author:
P. G. Ramchandani
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