| Literature DB >> 28756574 |
Isabell Ann-Cathrin Wolf1, Maria Gilles1, Verena Peus1, Barbara Scharnholz1, Julia Seibert2, Christine Jennen-Steinmetz3, Bertram Krumm3, Michael Deuschle1, Manfred Laucht4,5.
Abstract
Prenatal stress (PS) is an established risk factor in the etiology of mental disorders. Although mother-child interaction is the infant's first important training in dealing with stress, little is yet known about the impact of PS on mother-infant dyadic behavior. The current study aimed to elucidate the prospective influence of psychological and physiological stresses during pregnancy on mother-infant dyadic behavior. Mother-infant interactions were videotaped at 6-month postpartum and coded into three dyadic patterns: (1) both positive; (2) infant protesting-mother positive; and (3) infant protesting-mother negative, using the infant and caregiver engagement phases. Exposure to PS was assessed during pregnancy using psychological (i.e., psychopathological, perceived, and psychosocial PS; n = 164) and physiological stress measures (i.e., maternal cortisol; n = 134). Group comparisons showed that psychosocial PS was predictive of mother-infant behavior at 6-month postpartum, indicating that dyads of prenatally high-stressed mothers exhibited significantly more positive interaction patterns (i.e., infant positive-mother positive) as compared to the prenatally low-stressed group. Physiological PS was unrelated to mother-infant behavior. These results suggest that mild psychosocial PS may be advantageous for positive mother-infant dyadic behavior, which is in accordance with the stress-inoculation model that assumes a beneficial effect of PS.Entities:
Keywords: Cortisol; Mother–infant behavior; Pregnancy; Prenatal stress; Stress inoculation
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28756574 DOI: 10.1007/s00702-017-1770-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neural Transm (Vienna) ISSN: 0300-9564 Impact factor: 3.575