(Ivanhoe Newswire) -- During pregnancy, a new mom is conscious of
her eating, drinking, exercise and exposure to cigarette smoke for the
health of her unborn child. But a less obvious behavior can also have
lifelong effects on children. Mom’s stress during pregnancy raises a
child’s risk for asthma.
A pregnant woman’s stress can affect a developing immune system. And,
although genetics play a role in a baby’s predisposition for asthma,
there are other factors. According to researchers from Harvard Medical
School, exposure to allergens during pregnancy is one. The other is the
mother’s prenatal stress level.
The team tested for a combination of allergen exposure and stress by
analyzing blood from the umbilical cord. Even when the level of dust
mite contact was low during pregnancy, if the mother had been overly
stressed, the baby’s immune response was magnified from birth, raising
the risk for asthma. The outcome was the same regardless of the mother’s
race, class, education or smoking history.
“This research adds to a growing body of evidence that links maternal stress
such as that precipitated by financial problems or relationship issues to
changes in children’s developing immune systems during pregnancy,” Rosalind
Write, M.D., M.P.H., an assistant professor of medicine at Brigham and
Women’s Hospital and Harvard Medical School in Boston, was quoted as saying.
“Stress can be considered a ‘social pollutant’ that, when breathed into the
body, may influence the body’s immune response similar to the effects of
physical pollutants.”
The team noted the women tested were part of an urban population that is
often at higher risk for combined exposure to stress and indoor allergens,
but they believe the results support the view that “maternal psychological
well being” as well as other environmental factors should be part of
prenatal health programs.
SOURCE: American Thoracic Society’s 2008 International Conference in
Toronto, May 18, 2008