Literature DB >> 12584483

Effects of women's stress-elicited physiological activity and chronic anxiety on fetal heart rate.

Catherine Monk1, Michael M Myers, Richard P Sloan, Lauren M Ellman, William P Fifer.   

Abstract

This study examined the effects of pregnant women's acute stress reactivity and chronic anxiety on fetal heart rate (HR). Thirty-two healthy third trimester pregnant women were instrumented to monitor continuous electrocardiography, blood pressure, respiration, and fetal HR. Subjects completed the trait anxiety subscale of the State Trait Anxiety Index, then rested quietly for a 5-minute baseline period, followed by a 5-minute Stroop color-word matching task and a 5-minute recovery period. Fetal HR changes during women's recovery from a stressful task were associated with the women's concurrently collected HR and blood pressure changes (r =.63, p <.05). Fetal HR changes during recovery, as well as during women's exposure to the Stroop task, were correlated with their mothers' trait anxiety scores (r =.39, p <.05 and r = -.52, p <.01, respectively). Finally, a combination of measures of women's cardiovascular activity during recovery and trait anxiety scores accounted for two thirds of the variance in fetal HR changes during the same recovery period (r =.69, p <.001). The results from this study link changes in fetal behavior with acute changes in women's cardiovascular activity after psychological stress and women's anxiety status. This indicates that variations in women's emotion-based physiological activity can affect the fetus and may be centrally important to fetal development.

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Year:  2003        PMID: 12584483     DOI: 10.1097/00004703-200302000-00008

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Dev Behav Pediatr        ISSN: 0196-206X            Impact factor:   2.225


  19 in total

1.  STUDIES IN FETAL BEHAVIOR: REVISITED, RENEWED, AND REIMAGINED.

Authors:  Janet A DiPietro; Kathleen A Costigan; Kristin M Voegtline
Journal:  Monogr Soc Res Child Dev       Date:  2015-09

2.  Dyadic Intervention during Pregnancy? Treating Pregnant Women and Possibly Reaching the Future Baby.

Authors:  Sharone Bergner; Catherine Monk; Elizabeth A Werner
Journal:  Infant Ment Health J       Date:  2008

Review 3.  Impact of maternal stress, depression and anxiety on fetal neurobehavioral development.

Authors:  Michael T Kinsella; Catherine Monk
Journal:  Clin Obstet Gynecol       Date:  2009-09       Impact factor: 2.190

Review 4.  Physiological reactivity to psychological stress in human pregnancy: current knowledge and future directions.

Authors:  Lisa M Christian
Journal:  Prog Neurobiol       Date:  2012-07-16       Impact factor: 11.685

5.  Pregnancy distress gets under fetal skin: Maternal ambulatory assessment & sex differences in prenatal development.

Authors:  Colleen Doyle; Elizabeth Werner; Tianshu Feng; Seonjoo Lee; Margaret Altemus; Joseph R Isler; Catherine Monk
Journal:  Dev Psychobiol       Date:  2015-05-06       Impact factor: 3.038

6.  MATERNAL ANXIETY SYMPTOMS AND MOTHER-INFANT SELF- AND INTERACTIVE CONTINGENCY.

Authors:  Beatrice Beebe; Miriam Steele; Joseph Jaffe; Karen A Buck; Henian Chen; Patricia Cohen; Marsha Kaitz; Sara Markese; Howard Andrews; Amy Margolis; Stanley Feldstein
Journal:  Infant Ment Health J       Date:  2011 Mar-Apr

7.  Intergenerational transmission of emotion dysregulation: Part II. Developmental origins of newborn neurobehavior.

Authors:  Brendan D Ostlund; Robert D Vlisides-Henry; Sheila E Crowell; K Lee Raby; Sarah Terrell; Mindy A Brown; Ruben Tinajero; Nila Shakiba; Catherine Monk; Julie H Shakib; Karen F Buchi; Elisabeth Conradt
Journal:  Dev Psychopathol       Date:  2019-05-06

8.  Stress and childhood asthma risk: overlapping evidence from animal studies and epidemiologic research.

Authors:  Rosalind J Wright
Journal:  Allergy Asthma Clin Immunol       Date:  2008-03-15       Impact factor: 3.406

9.  Low levels of corticotropin-releasing hormone during early pregnancy are associated with precocious maturation of the human fetus.

Authors:  Quetzal A Class; Claudia Buss; Elysia Poggi Davis; Matt Gierczak; Carol Pattillo; Aleksandra Chicz-DeMet; Curt A Sandman
Journal:  Dev Neurosci       Date:  2009-01-07       Impact factor: 2.984

Review 10.  Maternal Affective Illness in the Perinatal Period and Child Development: Findings on Developmental Timing, Mechanisms, and Intervention.

Authors:  Thomas G O'Connor; Catherine Monk; Anne S Burke
Journal:  Curr Psychiatry Rep       Date:  2016-03       Impact factor: 5.285

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