| Literature DB >> 29484210 |
Raquel González-Ochoa1,2, Elly N Sánchez-Rodríguez1, Anahi Chavarría3, Gabriel Gutiérrez-Ospina4, Tania Romo-González1.
Abstract
Gestational stress is believed to increase the risk of pregnancy failure and perinatal and adult morbidity and mortality in both the mother and her child or children. However, some contradictions might arise from methodological issues or even from differences in the philosophical grounds that guide the studies on gestational stress. Biased perspectives could lead us to use and/or design inadequate/incomplete panels of biochemical determinations and/or psychological instruments to diagnose it accurately during pregnancy, a psychoneuroimmune-endocrine state in which allostatic loads may be significant. Here, we review these notions and propose a model to evaluate and diagnose stress during pregnancy.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29484210 PMCID: PMC5816839 DOI: 10.1155/2018/4857065
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Pregnancy ISSN: 2090-2727
Stress during pregnancy, cortisol levels, and its association with pregnancy outcome. Adverse outcome of stress for the pregnancy was reviewed in the latest bibliography in order to know the type of association that stress causes on pregnancy and the type of mood disorder (anxiety and depression) which were the tools applied to assess stress during pregnancy. In italics the adverse outcomes related to stress and depression are shown, while in bold those adverse outcomes among anxiety or the combination of the mood disorders are shown. On the psychometric test column the double asterisks (∗∗) show those studies in which an inventory of stress was used. From [12–17] those researches used on animal models to study the prenatal stress long term effects on the offspring are obtained. Besides this table shows the studies assessing physiological stress with cortisol measurements; different tools were found along the studies and different trimester of gestation.
| Reference | Stress and adverse pregnancy outcome | Association with cortisol | Type of adverse outcome | Mood variables | Tools assessing stress | Gestational age | Studies with human or animal | ||
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Figure 1Biopsychosocial stress in nonpregnant and pregnant women. H: hypothalamus; P: pituitary; A: adrenal; PL: placenta; m, p, or f cortisol: maternal, placental, or fetal cortisol; p CRH: placental CRH; +: positive feedback loop; −: negative feedback loop.
Figure 2Models to assess stress. (a) An integrated model of stress. This layered model depicts the levels of organization, organic systems, and factors that might interact with one another within a multidimensional framework to sustain stress responses. In this context, if a handful of the elements depicted are acutely challenged (e.g., thirst stress response), the organism will only require a homeostatic response while keeping the set points of the parameters involved in such a response relatively unchanging. In contrast, if most body systems are acutely, subacutely, or chronically challenged (e.g., normal pregnancy), the organism would be forced to develop an allostatic response. This circumstance would provoke shifts in the set points of the parameters involved in such a response. Finally, if the entire body is acutely, subacutely, or chronically challenged (e.g., true gestational stress), the organism would be forced to mount a pantostatic stress response falling into a state of deregulation and disease. (b) Protocol to evaluate stress in the pregnant woman. This layered model of diagnosis, backed up by the model of stress, described above, aims to protocolize the psychological, clinical, and biochemical tests that must be used to effectively diagnose stress during pregnancy, assuming this as an allostatic challenge to the mother embedded into the multidimensional framework that sustains stress.
Figure 3Schemes that illustrate the hypothetical process underlying the transgenerational epigenetic inheritance of stress susceptibility and stress-related diseases via the paternal lineage. (a) When an “unstressed healthy couple” decides to become pregnant, the “biological future” of their child (and indeed of their lineage) might be deeply influenced by the circumstances that surround their pregnancy. In the case where the pregnant mother (F0) experiences stress, the ontogenetic trajectory of the fetus may deviate his/her phenotype to an alternative form that renders the child, and later the adult, susceptible to develop degenerative diseases (see Figure 2) and altered HPA axis physiology (see Figure 1), respectively. The alternative phenotype, however, features increased susceptibility to develop not only stress-related diseases and “stress hypersensitivity” but also spermatogonia that kept a record of the prenatal stress episode in their genome through epigenetic memories. (b) When the spermatozoids derived from the stress-modified precursors of the F1 male fertilize the oocyte of a “naïve” woman, even if the pregnancy proceeds under “no-stress conditions,” the conceived child (F2) inherits the “stressful phenotype” due to the permanence of the F-1 stress-related, gametic epigenetic memory. (c) A similar process takes place in subsequent generations. There is information supporting that this may happens for at least five generations. Epigenetic gametic inheritance can also applied to the maternal lineage, and it is possible that if both members of the couple were exposed to stress during fetal life, their gametes could “double the dosage” of the stress-related epigenetic memories passed on to their descendants making them much more stress prone and stress susceptible throughout their lives.