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Maternal Obesity, Overweight and Gestational Diabetes Affect the Offspring Neurodevelopment at 6 and 18 Months of Age – A Follow Up from the PREOBE Cohort

Authors :
Iryna Rusanova
Ahmad Agil
CRISTINA CAMPOY
Tania Anjos
Signe Altmäe
Luz María García Valdés
JOSE A. LORENTE
Gernot Desoye
Cristina Martínez-Zaldívar Moreno
Olaf Uhl
Maria Teresa Miranda Leon
Juan Carlos Álvarez Merino
Daniel Campos Consuegra
Miguel Perez-Garcia
Maria Teresa Segura
Andres Catena
Source :
PLoS ONE, Vol 10, Iss 7, p e0133010 (2015), Digibug. Repositorio Institucional de la Universidad de Granada, instname, PLoS ONE
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
Public Library of Science (PLOS), 2015.

Abstract

The study was registered at www.ClinicalTrials.gov, identifier:NCT01634464).<br />Background: Brain development in fetal life and early infancy is critical to determine lifelong performance in various neuropsychological domains. Metabolic pathologies such as overweight, obesity, and gestational diabetes in pregnant women are prevalent and increasing risk factors that may adversely affect long-term brain development in their offspring.<br />Objective: The objective of this research was to investigate the influence of maternal metabolic pathologies on the neurodevelopment of the offspring at 6 and 18 months of life.<br />Design: This was a prospective case-control study of 331 mother- and child pairs from Granada, Spain. The mothers were included during pregnancy into four groups according to their pre-gestational body mass index and their gestational diabetes status; overweight (n:56), obese (n:64), gestational diabetic (n:79), and healthy normal weight controls (n:132). At 6 months and 18 months we assessed the children with the Bayley III scales of neurodevelopment.<br />Results: At 6 months (n=215), we found significant group differences in cognition composite language, and expressive language. Post hoc test revealed unexpectedly higher scores in the obese group compared to the normal weight group and a similar trend in overweight and diabetic group. The effects on language remained significant after adjusting for confounders with an adjusted odds ratio for a value above median in composite language score of 3.3 (95% CI: 1.1, 10.0; p=0.035) for children of obese mothers. At 18 month (n=197), the offspring born to obese mothers had lost five points in language composite scores and the previous differences in language and cognition was replaced by a suggestive trend of lower gross motor scores in the overweight, obese, and diabetic groups.<br />Conclusions: Infants of obese mothers had a temporary accelerated development of cognition and language, followed by a rapid deceleration until 18 months of age, particularly of language scores. This novel observation prompts further confirmative studies to explore possible placental and neurodevelopmental mechanisms involved.<br />This study was funded by Spanish Ministry of Innovation and Science. Junta de Andalucía: Excellence Projects (P06-CTS-02341); Spanish Ministry of Education (Grant no. SB2010-0025); Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness (BFU2012-40254-C03-01); Further support was received by Abbott Laboratories, Granada, Spain.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
PLoS ONE, Vol 10, Iss 7, p e0133010 (2015), Digibug. Repositorio Institucional de la Universidad de Granada, instname, PLoS ONE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....32fd95462b94d572b2db63c2dddefadd