1. Do Pregnancy-Induced Brain Changes Reverse? The Brain of a Mother Six Years after Parturition
- Author
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Anna Massó-Rodriguez, Alberto Fernández-Pena, Elena Belmonte-Padilla, Susanna Carmona, Marisol Picado, Magdalena Martínez-García, Agustín Ballesteros, Erika Barba-Müller, Romina Cortizo, Luis Marcos-Vidal, María Paternina-Die, Daniel Martín de Blas, Manuel Desco, Oscar Vilarroya, Elseline Hoekzema, Laura Beumala, Cristina Pozzobon, Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades (España), Instituto de Salud Carlos III - ISCIII, European Regional Development Fund (ERDF/FEDER), Horizon 2020, Comunidad de Madrid, Fundación La Caixa, Fundación ProCNIC, Instituto de Salud Carlos III, Unión Europea. Fondo Europeo de Desarrollo Regional (FEDER/ERDF), Unión Europea. Comisión Europea. H2020, Comunidad de Madrid (España), and European Commission
- Subjects
Maternal attachment ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Medicina ,neuroplasticity ,Article ,lcsh:RC321-571 ,Aeronáutica ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Neuroimaging ,Neuroplasticity ,medicine ,magnetic resonance imaging ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,050102 behavioral science & comparative psychology ,postpartum ,lcsh:Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,Biología y Biomedicina ,Pregnancy ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Obstetrics ,business.industry ,General Neuroscience ,05 social sciences ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,medicine.disease ,Psicología ,maternal brain ,Pregnancy induced ,pregnancy ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Neuroimaging researchers commonly assume that the brain of a mother is comparable to that of a nulliparous woman. However, pregnancy leads to pronounced gray matter volume reductions in the mother&rsquo, s brain, which have been associated with maternal attachment towards the baby. Beyond two years postpartum, no study has explored whether these brain changes are maintained or instead return to pre-pregnancy levels. The present study tested whether gray matter volume reductions detected in primiparous women are still present six years after parturition. Using data from a unique, prospective neuroimaging study, we compared the gray matter volume of 25 primiparous and 22 nulliparous women across three sessions: before conception (n = 25/22), during the first months of postpartum (n = 25/21), and at six years after parturition (n = 7/5). We found that most of the pregnancy-induced gray matter volume reductions persist six years after parturition (classifying women as having been pregnant or not with 91.67% of total accuracy). We also found that brain changes at six years postpartum are associated with measures of mother-to-infant attachment. These findings open the possibility that pregnancy-induced brain changes are permanent and encourage neuroimaging studies to routinely include pregnancy-related information as a relevant demographic variable.
- Published
- 2020