20 results on '"Laplante, David P."'
Search Results
2. A Potential Psychological Mechanism Linking Disaster-Related Prenatal Maternal Stress with Child Cognitive and Motor Development at 16 Months: The QF2011 Queensland Flood Study
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Moss, Katrina M., Simcock, Gabrielle, Cobham, Vanessa, Kildea, Sue, Elgbeili, Guillaume, Laplante, David P., and King, Suzanne
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Fetal exposure to prenatal maternal stress can have lifelong consequences, with different types of maternal stress associated with different areas of child development. Fewer studies have focused on motor skills, even though they are strongly predictive of later development across a range of domains. Research on mechanisms of transmission has identified biological cascades of stress reactions, yet links between psychological stress reactions are rarely studied. This study investigates the relationship between different aspects of disaster-related prenatal maternal stress and child cognitive and motor development, and proposes a cascade of stress reactions as a potential mechanism of transmission. Mothers in the Queensland Flood Study (QF2011) exposed to a major flood during pregnancy completed questionnaires assessing flood exposure, symptoms of peritraumatic distress, dissociation, and posttraumatic stress (PTSD), and cognitive appraisal of the overall flood consequences. At 16 months post-partum, children's (N = 145) cognitive and motor development was assessed using the Bayley-III. Flood exposure predicted child cognitive development and maternal PTSD symptoms and negative cognitive appraisal were significantly negatively related to child motor development, with all relationships moderated by timing of exposure. Together, a cascade of stress reactions linked maternal flood exposure to poorer fine motor development. These findings suggest that the way stress reactions operate together is as important as the way they operate in isolation, and identifies a potential psychological mechanism of transmission for the effects of prenatal stress. Results have implications for conceptualizing prenatal stress research and optimizing child development in the wake of natural disasters.
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- 2017
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3. Functional Play at 2 Years of Age: Effects of Prenatal Maternal Stress
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Laplante, David P., Zelazo, Philip R., Brunet, Alain, and King, Suzanne
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Toddler toy play evolves in a predictable manner and provides a valid, nonverbal measure of cognitive function unbiased by social behaviors. Research on prenatal maternal stress (PNMS) indicates that exposure to stress in utero results in developmental deficits. We hypothesized that children exposed to high objective PNMS from a natural disaster early in pregnancy would exhibit higher rates of stereotypical play and lower rates of mature functional play than their low-stress counterparts would. We examined the functional play abilities of 52 2-year-olds exposed to low or high objective PNMS from a natural disaster within a nonstructured play session. Toddlers exposed to high objective PNMS, subjective PNMS, or both exhibited less functional and more stereotypical toy play, with less diversity, compared to toddlers exposed to low PNMS. PNMS appears to affect functional play development in toddlers negatively. These results replicate delays in language and intellectual functioning observed in these toddlers using the Bayley Scales. (Contains 3 tables and 2 figures.)
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- 2007
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4. Using Natural Disasters to Study Prenatal Maternal Stress in Humans
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King, Suzanne, Laplante, David P., and Antonelli, Marta C., editor
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- 2015
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5. Unexpected effects of expressive writing on post-disaster distress in the Hurricane Harvey Study: a randomized controlled trial in perinatal women.
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Paquin, Vincent, Bick, Johanna, Lipschutz, Rebecca, Elgbeili, Guillaume, Laplante, David P., Biekman, Brian, Brunet, Alain, King, Suzanne, and Olson, David
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TREATMENT of post-traumatic stress disorder ,NATURAL disasters & psychology ,PSYCHOLOGY of mothers ,PREGNANT women ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials ,COMPARATIVE studies ,PRE-tests & post-tests ,PREGNANCY complications ,PATHOLOGICAL psychology ,RESEARCH funding ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,WRITTEN communication ,METROPOLITAN areas ,STATISTICAL sampling ,ANXIETY ,PERINATAL period ,PSYCHOTHERAPY ,SADNESS ,EVALUATION - Abstract
Background: Expressive writing requires journaling stressor-related thoughts and feelings over four daily sessions of 15 min. Thirty years of research have popularized expressive writing as a brief intervention for fostering trauma-related resilience; however, its ability to surpass placebo remains unclear. This study aimed to determine the efficacy of expressive writing for improving post-traumatic stress symptoms in perinatal women who were living in the Houston area during major flooding caused by Hurricane Harvey. Methods: A total of 1090 women were randomly allocated (1:1:1) to expressive writing, neutral writing or no writing. Interventions were internet-based. Online questionnaires were completed before randomization and at 2 months post-intervention. The primary outcome was post-traumatic stress symptoms, measured with the Impact of Event Scale-Revised; secondary outcomes were affective symptoms, measured with the 40-item Inventory of Depression and Anxiety Scales. Feelings throughout the intervention were reported daily using tailored questionnaires. Results: In intention-to-treat analyses, no post-treatment between-group differences were found on the primary and secondary outcomes. Per-protocol analyses yielded similar results. A number of putative moderators were tested, but none interacted with expressive writing. Expressive writing produced greater feelings of anxiety and sadness during the intervention compared to neutral writing; further, overall experiences from the intervention mediated associations between expressive writing and greater post-traumatic stress at 2 months post-intervention. Conclusions: Among disaster-stricken perinatal women, expressive writing was ineffective in reducing levels of post-traumatic stress, and may have exacerbated these symptoms in some. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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6. Natural disaster-related prenatal maternal stress is associated with alterations in placental glucocorticoid system: The QF2011 Queensland Flood Study.
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St-Pierre, Joey, Laplante, David P., Elgbeili, Guillaume, Dawson, Paul A., Kildea, Sue, King, Suzanne, and Vaillancourt, Cathy
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NATURAL disasters & psychology , *PSYCHOLOGICAL stress , *GLUCOCORTICOIDS , *AUSTRALIA floods, 2010-2011 , *GLUCOSE transporters - Abstract
We investigated the effects of a natural disaster (a sudden flood) as a source of prenatal maternal stress (PNMS) on the placental glucocorticoid system and glucose transporters. Whether the gestational age at the time of the flood moderated these effects was also evaluated. Placental samples were collected from participants in the 2011 Queensland Flood Study (QF2011) who were pregnant in the first or second trimester at the onset of the flood. Detailed questionnaire results for objective hardship and composite subjective distress were obtained to assess stress levels. Subjective distress was significantly associated with a reduction in placental NR3C1-β mRNA levels for males only (β = −0.491, p = 0.005). In female placentas, objective hardship was marginally linked with lower SLC2A1 mRNA levels while subjective distress was a marginally significant predictor of higher placental SLC2A4 mRNA levels. Gestational age at the time of the flood was a significant moderator of the effect of subjective distress on placental mRNA levels for NR3C1-α ( p = 0.046) and HSD11B1 ( p = 0.049) in male placentas: if the flood occurred in mid-pregnancy, lower subjective distress predicted higher HSD11B1 while higher subjective distress predicted lower NR3C1-α placental mRNA level. While results did not show any PNMS effects on placental HSD11B2 mRNA and protein levels, and activity, we showed a reduction in placental NR3C1-β mRNA level in male placentas. Our results show evidence of distinct placental glucocorticoid and glucose systems adaptations to PNMS as a function of fetal sex and gestational timing of exposure, with high subjective PNMS in mid-pregnancy associated with lower levels of expression of glucocorticoid-promoting gene in males, leaving the fetus less protected against maternal stress. The exact mechanism by which natural disaster-related PNMS acts on the placenta and the impact on fetal programming requires further investigation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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7. The impact of maternal flood-related stress and social support on offspring weight in early childhood.
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Kroska, Emily B., O’Hara, Michael W., Elgbeili, Guillaume, Hart, Kimberly J., Laplante, David P., Dancause, Kelsey N., and King, Suzanne
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NATURAL disasters & psychology ,BIRTH weight ,BODY weight ,CHILD development ,COGNITION ,LONGITUDINAL method ,PREGNANCY & psychology ,SELF-evaluation ,PSYCHOLOGICAL stress ,SOCIAL support ,BODY mass index ,PREGNANCY - Abstract
The current study examined the moderating role of social support in the association between prenatal maternal stress (PNMS) and childhood body mass index (BMI) in the context of the Iowa floods of 2008. In addition, the mediating role of offspring birthweight was examined in the association between PNMS and childhood BMI. We recruited women from eastern Iowa who were pregnant in 2008 when disastrous floods occurred. Self-report measures of PNMS and cognitive appraisal of the flood’s consequences were obtained shortly after the disaster. Social support was assessed during pregnancy. Offspring anthropometric measures were collected at birth and 30 months. Moderated mediation results indicated that greater PNMS predicted greater BMI at age 30 months through effects on higher birthweight as a mediator, but only for participants with low social support. High social support (satisfaction or number) buffered the effect of PNMS or a negative appraisal of the flood on birthweight. The combination of high PNMS or a negative appraisal of the flood’s consequences and low social support resulted in higher offspring birthweight, which predicted greater BMI at 30 months. Providing strong social support to pregnant women following a stressor might buffer the effects of PNMS on offspring birthweight and later obesity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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8. DNA methylation mediates the effect of maternal cognitive appraisal of a disaster in pregnancy on the child’s C-peptide secretion in adolescence: Project Ice Storm.
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Cao-Lei, Lei, Dancause, Kelsey N., Elgbeili, Guillaume, Laplante, David P., Szyf, Moshe, and King, Suzanne
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DNA methylation ,METHYLCYTOSINE ,PEPTIDES ,DIABETES in children ,JUVENILE diseases - Abstract
Animal and human studies suggest that prenatal exposure to stress is associated with adverse health outcomes such as type 2 diabetes. Epigenetic modification, such as DNA methylation, is considered one possible underlying mechanism. The 1998 Quebec ice storm provides a unique opportunity to study an independent prenatal stressor on child outcomes. C-peptide is the best measure of endogenous insulin secretion and is widely used in the clinical management of patients with diabetes. The objectives of this study are to determine 1) the extent to which prenatal exposure to disaster-related stress (maternal objective hardship and maternal cognitive appraisal) influences children’s C-peptide secretion, and 2) whether DNA methylation of diabetes-related genes mediates the effects of prenatal stress on C-peptide secretion. Children’s (n = 30) C-peptide secretion in response to an oral glucose tolerance test were assessed in blood at 13½ years. DNA methylation levels of selected type 1 and 2 diabetes-related genes were chosen based upon the genes associated with prenatal maternal objective hardship and/or cognitive appraisal levels. Bootstrapping analyses were performed to determine the mediation effect of DNA methylation. We found that children whose mothers experienced higher objective hardship exhibited higher C-peptide secretion. Cognitive appraisal was not directly associated with C-peptide secretion. DNA methylation of diabetes-related genes had a positive mediation effect of objective hardship on C-peptide secretion: higher objective hardship predicted higher C-peptide secretion through DNA methylation. Negative mediation effects of cognitive appraisal were observed: negative cognitive appraisal predicted higher C-peptide secretion through DNA methylation. However, only one gene, LTA, remained a significant mediator of cognitive appraisal on C-peptide secretion after the conservative Bonferroni multiple corrections. Our findings suggest that DNA methylation could act as an intervening variable between prenatal stress and metabolic outcomes, highlighting the importance of epigenetic mechanisms in response to environmental factors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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9. Prenatal and early postnatal stress exposure influences long bone length in adult rat offspring
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Dancause, Kelsey Needham, Cao, Xiu Jing, Veru, Franz, Xu, Susan, Long, Hong, Yu, Chunbo, Laplante, David P., Walker, Claire Dominique, and King, Suzanne
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Male ,Analysis of Variance ,Litter Size ,Tibia ,Article ,Rats ,Pregnancy Complications ,Rats, Sprague-Dawley ,Animals, Newborn ,Pregnancy ,Risk Factors ,Stress, Physiological ,Animals ,Female ,Femur - Abstract
Stress during the prenatal and early postnatal periods (perinatal stress, PS) is known to impact offspring cognitive, behavioral, and physical development, but effects on skeletal growth are not clear. Our objective was to analyze effects of variable, mild, daily PS exposure on adult offspring long bone length. Twelve pregnant rat dams were randomly assigned to receive variable stress from gestational days 14-21 (Prenatal group), postpartum days 2-9 (Postnatal), both periods (Pre-Post), or no stress (Control). Differences in adult offspring tibia and femur length were analyzed among treatment groups. Mean tibia length differed among groups for males (P = 0.016) and females (P = 0.009), and differences for femur length approached significance for males (P = 0.051). Long bone length was shorter among PS-exposed offspring, especially those exposed to postnatal stress (Postnatal and Pre-Post groups). Results persisted when controlling for nose-tail length. These differences might reflect early stunting that is maintained in adulthood, or delayed growth among PS-exposed offspring. This study suggests that PS results in shorter long bones in adulthood, independently of effects on overall body size. Stunting and growth retardation are major global health burdens. Our study adds to a growing body of evidence suggesting that PS is a risk factor for poor linear growth.
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- 2012
10. Failure of Saliva Sampling in the QF2011 Queensland Flood Study Examining the Effects of Prenatal Maternal Stress on Neonatal Stress Reactivity.
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Simcock, Gabrielle, Stapleton, Helen, Kildea, Sue, Shoo, Laura, Laplante, David P., and King, Suzanne
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NATURAL disasters & psychology ,FISHER exact test ,HYDROCORTISONE ,INFANT psychology ,PAIN ,PRENATAL care ,SALIVA ,PHYSIOLOGICAL stress ,PSYCHOLOGICAL stress ,THERAPEUTICS ,FETAL development ,PREGNANCY - Abstract
The study was designed to investigate the impact of disaster-related prenatal maternal stress on neonates' reactivity to the routinely administered, painful, newborn screen procedure (heelstick or heel prick). We hypothesized that pregnancy exposure to a flood stressor would affect fetal developmental pathways and subsequently neonatal responses to other stressful events, including the newborn screen. The pregnant women we recruited were affected by sudden onset floods in Queensland, Australia in 2011. Using methods similar to those described in the literature, we collected neonatal saliva immediately prior to the newborn screen and 120 and 140 min afterwards. Saliva sampling was halted after failed saliva collection attempts by trained research staff on 17 newborns. This article discusses reasons for our failure, including the influence of bioethical concerns and the requirement that research activities are compliant with hospital policies as well as the necessity of publishing studies that fail to replicate prior research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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11. A prospective study of effects of prenatal maternal stress on later eating-disorder manifestations in affected offspring: Preliminary indications based on the project ice storm cohort.
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St‐Hilaire, Annie, Steiger, Howard, Liu, Aihua, Laplante, David P., Thaler, Lea, Magill, Tara, and King, Suzanne
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EATING disorders ,THIRD trimester of pregnancy ,FOOD habits ,ANTHROPOMETRY ,LONGITUDINAL method ,NATURAL disasters ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,RESEARCH funding ,PSYCHOLOGICAL stress ,SAMPLE size (Statistics) ,MULTIPLE regression analysis ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,BODY mass index ,RELATIVE medical risk ,PRENATAL exposure delayed effects ,PREGNANCY ,PSYCHOLOGY ,DISEASE risk factors - Abstract
ABSTRACT Background Research associates maternal stress exposures (especially when occurring late in gestation) with heightened risk of subsequent emotional and behavioral problems in affected offspring. However, as yet, no study has examined the association between prenatal maternal stress (PNMS) and affected children's risk of anorexia- or bulimia-type eating disturbances. Objective To study the influences of PNMS on later disordered eating in exposed offspring. Method We used the Eating Attitudes Test (EAT)-26 to measure eating attitudes and behaviors in 54 thirteen-year olds whose mothers had been exposed, while pregnant with these children, to the 1998 Quebec Ice Storm-a natural disaster regarded as a model of exposure to severe environmental stress. Mothers' stress was measured shortly after exposure to the storm using established indices of objective and subjective stress. Results Hierarchical multiple linear regression analyses indicated that once variance owing to children's body mass index and sex was accounted for, stress exposures during the third trimester of pregnancy predicted elevated EAT-26 scores in affected children-perhaps even more so when levels of objective stress were high. Discussion Third trimester exposure to PNMS, especially when objectively severe, seems to be associated with increased eating-disorder-linked manifestations in affected early adolescents. © 2015 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. (Int J Eat Disord 2015; 48:512-516) [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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12. QF2011: a protocol to study the effects of the Queensland flood on pregnant women, their pregnancies, and their children's early development.
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King, Suzanne, Kildea, Sue, Austin, Marie-Paule, Brunet, Alain, Cobham, Vanessa E., Dawson, Paul A., Harris, Mark, Hurrion, Elizabeth M., Laplante, David P., McDermott, Brett M., McIntyre, H. David, O'Hara, Michael W., Schmitz, Norbert, Stapleton, Helen, Tracy, Sally K., Vaillancourt, Cathy, Dancause, Kelsey N., Kruske, Sue, Reilly, Nicole, and Shoo, Laura
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CHILD development research ,FETAL development ,NATURAL disasters ,PRENATAL care ,PREGNANCY complications ,DIAGNOSIS of post-traumatic stress disorder ,MANAGEMENT - Abstract
Background: Retrospective studies suggest that maternal exposure to a severe stressor during pregnancy increases the fetus' risk for a variety of disorders in adulthood. Animal studies testing the fetal programming hypothesis find that maternal glucocorticoids pass through the placenta and alter fetal brain development, particularly the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis. However, there are no prospective studies of pregnant women exposed to a sudden-onset independent stressor that elucidate the biopsychosocial mechanisms responsible for the wide variety of consequences of prenatal stress seen in human offspring. The aim of the QF2011 Queensland Flood Study is to fill this gap, and to test the buffering effects of Midwifery Group Practice, a form of continuity of maternity care. Methods/design: In January 2011 Queensland, Australia had its worst flooding in 30 years. Simultaneously, researchers in Brisbane were collecting psychosocial data on pregnant women for a randomized control trial (the M@NGO Trial) comparing Midwifery Group Practice to standard care. We invited these and other pregnant women to participate in a prospective, longitudinal study of the effects of prenatal maternal stress from the floods on maternal, perinatal and early childhood outcomes. Data collection included assessment of objective hardship and subjective distress from the floods at recruitment and again 12 months post-flood. Biological samples included maternal bloods at 36 weeks pregnancy, umbilical cord, cord blood, and placental tissues at birth. Questionnaires assessing maternal and child outcomes were sent to women at 6 weeks and 6 months postpartum. The protocol includes assessments at 16 months, 2½ and 4 years. Outcomes include maternal psychopathology, and the child's cognitive, behavioral, motor and physical development. Additional biological samples include maternal and child DNA, as well as child testosterone, diurnal and reactive cortisol. Discussion: This prenatal stress study is the first of its kind, and will fill important gaps in the literature. Analyses will determine the extent to which flood exposure influences the maternal biological stress response which may then affect the maternal-placental-fetal axis at the biological, biochemical, and molecular levels, altering fetal development and influencing outcomes in the offspring. The role of Midwifery Group Practice in moderating effects of maternal stress will be tested. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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13. Prenatal maternal stress predicts autism traits in 61/2 year-old children: Project Ice Storm.
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Walder, Deborah J., Laplante, David P., Sousa-Pires, Alexandra, Veru, Franz, Brunet, Alain, and King, Suzanne
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PSYCHOLOGICAL stress , *PREGNANCY & psychology , *AUTISM risk factors , *INFANT diseases , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *NEURAL development - Abstract
Research implicates prenatal maternal stress (PNMS) as a risk factor for neurodevelopmental disorders; however few studies report PNMS effects on autism risk in offspring. We examined, prospectively, the degree to which objective and subjective elements of PNMS explained variance in autism-like traits among offspring, and tested moderating effects of sex and PNMS timing in utero. Subjects were 89 (46F/43M) children who were in utero during the 1998 Quebec Ice Storm. Soon after the storm, mothers completed questionnaires on objective exposure and subjective distress, and completed the Autism Spectrum Screening Questionnaire (ASSQ) for their children at age 61/2. ASSQ scores were higher among boys than girls. Greater objective and subjective PNMS predicted higher ASSQ independent of potential confounds. An objective-by-subjective interaction suggested that when subjective PNMS was high, objective PNMS had little effect; whereas when subjective PNMS was low, objective PNMS strongly affected ASSQ scores. A timing-by-objective stress interaction suggested objective stress significantly affected ASSQ in first-trimester exposed children, though less so with later exposure. The final regression explained 43% of variance in ASSQ scores; the main effect of sex and the sex-by-PNMS interactions were not significant. Findings may help elucidate neurodevelopmental origins of non-clinical autism-like traits from a dimensional perspective. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2014
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14. DNA Methylation Signatures Triggered by Prenatal Maternal Stress Exposure to a Natural Disaster: Project Ice Storm.
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Cao-Lei, Lei, Massart, Renaud, Suderman, Matthew J., Machnes, Ziv, Elgbeili, Guillaume, Laplante, David P., Szyf, Moshe, and King, Suzanne
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DNA methylation ,NATURAL disasters ,T cells ,EPIGENETICS ,PREGNANCY ,PSYCHOLOGICAL stress ,MEDICAL care - Abstract
Background: Prenatal maternal stress (PNMS) predicts a wide variety of behavioral and physical outcomes in the offspring. Although epigenetic processes may be responsible for PNMS effects, human research is hampered by the lack of experimental methods that parallel controlled animal studies. Disasters, however, provide natural experiments that can provide models of prenatal stress. Methods: Five months after the 1998 Quebec ice storm we recruited women who had been pregnant during the disaster and assessed their degrees of objective hardship and subjective distress. Thirteen years later, we investigated DNA methylation profiling in T cells obtained from 36 of the children, and compared selected results with those from saliva samples obtained from the same children at age 8. Results: Prenatal maternal objective hardship was correlated with DNA methylation levels in 1675 CGs affiliated with 957 genes predominantly related to immune function; maternal subjective distress was uncorrelated. DNA methylation changes in SCG5 and LTA, both highly correlated with maternal objective stress, were comparable in T cells, peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) and saliva cells. Conclusions: These data provide first evidence in humans supporting the conclusion that PNMS results in a lasting, broad, and functionally organized DNA methylation signature in several tissues in offspring. By using a natural disaster model, we can infer that the epigenetic effects found in Project Ice Storm are due to objective levels of hardship experienced by the pregnant woman rather than to her level of sustained distress. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2014
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15. Brief communication: Prenatal and early postnatal stress exposure influences long bone length in adult rat offspring.
- Author
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Dancause, Kelsey Needham, Cao, Xiu Jing, Veru, Franz, Xu, Susan, Long, Hong, Yu, Chunbo, Laplante, David P., Walker, Claire Dominique, and King, Suzanne
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POSTPARTUM depression ,BONE lengthening (Orthopedics) ,LABORATORY rats ,GESTATIONAL age ,FEMUR head ,BONE abnormalities ,SKELETAL abnormalities - Abstract
Stress during the prenatal and early postnatal periods (perinatal stress, PS) is known to impact offspring cognitive, behavioral, and physical development, but effects on skeletal growth are not clear. Our objective was to analyze effects of variable, mild, daily PS exposure on adult offspring long bone length. Twelve pregnant rat dams were randomly assigned to receive variable stress from gestational days 14-21 (Prenatal group), postpartum days 2-9 (Postnatal), both periods (Pre-Post), or no stress (Control). Differences in adult offspring tibia and femur length were analyzed among treatment groups. Mean tibia length differed among groups for males ( P = 0.016) and females ( P = 0.009), and differences for femur length approached significance for males ( P = 0.051). Long bone length was shorter among PS-exposed offspring, especially those exposed to postnatal stress (Postnatal and Pre-Post groups). Results persisted when controlling for nose-tail length. These differences might reflect early stunting that is maintained in adulthood, or delayed growth among PS-exposed offspring. This study suggests that PS results in shorter long bones in adulthood, independently of effects on overall body size. Stunting and growth retardation are major global health burdens. Our study adds to a growing body of evidence suggesting that PS is a risk factor for poor linear growth. Am J Phys Anthropol 149:307-311, 2012. © 2012 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2012
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16. Disaster-related prenatal maternal stress influences birth outcomes: Project Ice Storm
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Dancause, Kelsey N., Laplante, David P., Oremus, Carolina, Fraser, Sarah, Brunet, Alain, and King, Suzanne
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PREGNANCY complications , *FETAL development , *HEALTH outcome assessment , *SOCIAL status , *BIRTH weight , *GESTATIONAL age - Abstract
Abstract: Background: Previous research suggests that prenatal maternal stress (PNMS) impacts birth outcomes, but many human studies cannot distinguish between the effects of different types of stressors or examine effects of exposure timing on outcomes. Objectives: Our goal was to determine how timing and severity of exposure during pregnancy to objective and subjective stress due to a natural disaster influenced gestation length and fetal growth patterns. Methods: We assessed objective and subjective PNMS levels among 172 women exposed to an ice storm during or shortly before pregnancy. We analyzed associations between PNMS levels and outcomes (gestation length, birth weight, birth length, head circumference, and growth ratios), controlling for other variables such as age, obstetric complications, socioeconomic status, and trait anxiety. Results: Gestation lengths and predicted birth weights were shorter among participants exposed to the ice storm during early to mid pregnancy, compared to 3rd trimester and pre-pregnancy exposure. Birth lengths were shorter in the sample compared to population references, and predicted values were shorter among participants with a “discrepancy” between their objective and subjective PNMS levels. High objective PNMS levels predicted smaller head circumferences in early pregnancy, but we also observed patterns in predicted values of head circumference to birth length ratios suggesting the sparing of brain development relative to birth length among boys in early pregnancy. These sparing effects decreased in later pregnancy. Conclusions: Exposure to stressful events during pregnancy influences birth outcomes independently of other factors. Exposure timing, newborn sex, and the type of stressor influence the effects observed. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2011
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17. Positive cognitive appraisal "buffers" the long-term effect of peritraumatic distress on maternal anxiety: The Queensland Flood Study.
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Paquin, Vincent, Elgbeili, Guillaume, Laplante, David P., Kildea, Sue, and King, Suzanne
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ANXIETY , *MENTAL depression , *MOTHERS , *BONFERRONI correction , *FLOODS , *COGNITION , *PRENATAL exposure delayed effects , *NATURAL disasters , *LONGITUDINAL method , *PSYCHOLOGICAL stress - Abstract
Background: Limited research has evaluated distinct aspects of disaster experience as predictors of affective symptoms. In this study, we examined the extent to which maternal depression and anxiety over time were predicted by (1) objective hardship from a flood during pregnancy, (2) peritraumatic distress and (3) cognitive appraisal of the flood's consequences.Methods: Data were drawn from the 2011 Queensland Flood Study, a prospective, longitudinal study of pregnancy (n = 183). Mothers' disaster experience was measured within 1 year after the flood. Their levels of depression, anxiety and stress were measured at 16 months, 30 months, 4 years and 6 years after childbirth. Linear mixed models were employed to evaluate symptom trajectories.Results: There were no time-dependent effects of disaster-related variables. Objective hardship did not predict outcomes. Peritraumatic distress significantly predicted depression and anxiety symptoms when cognitive appraisal was negative. Conversely, when cognitive appraisal was neutral or positive, the effect of peritraumatic distress was "buffered". For anxiety, but not depression, this interaction survived Bonferroni correction. Neutral/positive cognitive appraisal similarly moderated the effect of peritraumatic dissociation.Limitations: The generalizability of our findings is limited by overall low levels of depression and anxiety, along with a predominantly Caucasian, higher socioeconomic status sample. Potential confounders such as pre-disaster anxiety were not controlled for.Conclusion: In line with previous evidence, this study supports the predictive validity of peritraumatic distress for post-disaster depression and anxiety. Our findings suggest that cognitive appraisal could be a relevant target for interventions aimed at fostering maternal resilience. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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18. Dietary change mediates relationships between stress during pregnancy and infant head circumference measures: the QF2011 study.
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Dancause, Kelsey N., Mutran, Dima, Elgbeili, Guillaume, Laplante, David P., Kildea, Sue, Stapleton, Helen, McIntyre, David, and King, Suzanne
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ANTHROPOMETRY ,CEPHALOMETRY ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,DATABASES ,DIET ,DIETARY supplements ,FOOD habits ,GESTATIONAL age ,EVALUATION of medical care ,NATURAL disasters ,DURATION of pregnancy ,PROBABILITY theory ,PSYCHOLOGICAL tests ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,RESEARCH funding ,SCALE analysis (Psychology) ,STATISTICS ,PSYCHOLOGICAL stress ,T-test (Statistics) ,DATA analysis ,MULTIPLE regression analysis ,EDINBURGH Postnatal Depression Scale ,BODY mass index ,DATA analysis software ,STATE-Trait Anxiety Inventory ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,IMPACT of Event Scale ,PREGNANCY - Abstract
Prenatal maternal stress can adversely affect birth outcomes, likely reflecting effects of maternal stress hormones on fetal development. Maternal stress might also induce behavioural changes, such as dietary change, that might influence fetal development. Few studies have documented relationships between stress and dietary change in pregnancy. We analysed stress and dietary change among 222 pregnant women exposed to the 2011 Queensland Floods. We assessed women's objective hardship, subjective distress and cognitive appraisal of the disaster; changes in their diets and their associations with infants' gestational age, weight, length and head circumference at birth, head circumference to birth length ratio (HC/BL) and ponderal index. Greater objective hardship was correlated with more negative dietary change, skipped meals and skipped multivitamins. There were no direct effects of stress or dietary change on birth outcomes. However, we observed an interactive effect of dietary change and exposure timing on head circumference for gestational age (HC for GA) ( p = 0.010) and a similar trend for HC/BL ( p = 0.064). HC for GA and HC/BL were larger among children whose mothers experienced negative changes to their diet in early pregnancy compared with later pregnancy, consistent with a 'head-sparing' response with early gestation exposure. Further analyses indicated that dietary change mediates the relationship between objective hardship because of the floods and these outcomes. This is the first report of relationships among an independent stressor, dietary change and birth outcomes. It highlights another possible mechanism in the relationship between prenatal maternal stress and child development that could guide future research and interventions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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19. Moderating effects of maternal emotional availability on language and cognitive development in toddlers of mothers exposed to a natural disaster in pregnancy: The QF2011 Queensland Flood Study.
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Austin, Marie-Paule, Reilly, Nicole, Yin, Carolyn, Christl, Bettina, McMahon, Cathy, Kildea, Sue, Simcock, Gabrielle, Elgbeili, Guillaume, Laplante, David P., and King, Suzanne
- Subjects
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MOTHER-infant relationship , *PRENATAL influences , *PREGNANCY , *NATURAL disasters , *TODDLERS , *COGNITIVE development , *LANGUAGE acquisition , *PSYCHOLOGY , *PRENATAL exposure delayed effects , *CHILD development , *EMOTIONS , *PSYCHOLOGY of mothers , *RESEARCH funding , *PSYCHOLOGICAL stress , *TIME , *VERBAL behavior , *PSYCHOLOGICAL factors - Abstract
Background: Prenatal maternal stress exposure has been linked to sub-optimal developmental outcomes in toddlers, while maternal emotional availability is associated with better cognitive and language abilities. It is less clear whether early care-giving relationships can moderate the impact of prenatal stress on child development. The current study investigates the impact of stress during pregnancy resulting from the Queensland Floods in 2011 on toddlers' cognitive and language development, and examines how maternal emotional availability is associated with these outcomes.Methods: Data were available from 131 families. Measures of prenatal stress (objective hardship, cognitive appraisal, and three measures of maternal subjective stress) were collected within one year of the 2011 Queensland floods. Maternal emotional availability was rated from video-taped mother-child play sessions at 16 months: sensitivity (e.g., affective connection, responsiveness to signals) and structuring (e.g., scaffolding, guidance, limit-setting). The toddlers' cognitive and language development was assessed at 30 months. Interactions were tested to determine whether maternal emotional availability moderated the relationship between prenatal maternal stress and toddler cognitive and language functioning.Results: Prenatal stress was not correlated with toddlers' cognitive and language development at 30 months. Overall, the higher the maternal structuring and sensitivity, the better the toddlers' cognitive outcomes. However, significant interactions showed that the effects of maternal structuring on toddler language abilities depended on the degree of prenatal maternal subjective stress: when maternal subjective stress was above fairly low levels, the greater the maternal structuring, the higher the child vocabulary level.Conclusion: The current study highlights the importance of maternal emotional availability, especially structuring, for cognitive and language development in young children. Findings suggest that toddlers exposed to higher levels of prenatal maternal stress in utero may benefit from high maternal structuring for their language development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
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20. Prenatal stress due to a natural disaster predicts insulin secretion in adolescence.
- Author
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Dancause, Kelsey N., Veru, Franz, Andersen, Ross E., Laplante, David P., and King, Suzanne
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PRENATAL depression , *NATURAL disasters , *INSULIN , *STRESS in adolescence , *HEART metabolism disorders , *GLUCOSE tolerance tests - Abstract
Abstract: Prenatal stress might increase cardiometabolic disease risk. We measured prenatal stress due to an ice storm in 1998, and measured glucose tolerance among a subsample of 32 exposed adolescents in 2011. Severity of stress was positively associated with insulin secretion, suggesting that prenatal stress independently predicts metabolic outcomes in adolescence. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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