MSN Home  |  My MSN  |  Hotmail
Sign in to Windows Live ID Web Search:   
go to MSNGroups 
Free Forum Hosting
 
Important Announcement Important Announcement
The MSN Groups service will close in February 2009. You can move your group to Multiply, MSN’s partner for online groups. Learn More
RSD Support From Ones Who Care[email protected] 
  
What's New
  
  Welcome ....................... �?/A>  
  All Messages ................. �?/A>  
  General  
  - Who Am I  
  Rules-Signed  
  Permissions  
  Pain Care "Bill of RIghts"  
  A Letter to Normals  
  I Resolve...  
  Lifestyle Adjustment  
  Lifestyle Adjustment 2  
  People in PAIN  
  KJ's Kids  
  School  
  KJsJokes  
  Our Pets  
  Award Evaluation  
  ï¿½?Ask the Expert  
  Â§ Stress Relief  
  ï¿½? Coping Ideas  
  ï¿½? Closer Look  
  ï¿½? Diabetes  
  ï¿½? In the News  
  ï¿½?Medicine  
  ï¿½? Research  
  ï¿½?Fibromyalgia  
  ï¿½?DDD-Arthritis  
  ï¿½?Lupus  
  ï¿½?Migraine  
  ï¿½?MS  
  ï¿½?RSD/CRPS  
  ï¿½?HCV  
  ï¿½? Depression  
  â‰¡Â·Surf Safe  
  Basic Comp TUT's  
  The Mind's Eye  
  *¤* Appetizers  
  *¤* Beverages  
  *¤* Breads  
  *¤* Breakfasts  
  *¤* Candy  
  *¤* Desserts  
  *¤* Ethnic  
  *¤* Holiday  
  *¤* Lo-Cal  
  *¤* Lunches  
  *¤* Main Dishes  
  *¤* No-Bake  
  *¤* Salads  
  *¤* Sauces  
  *¤* Side Dishes  
  *¤* Soup  
  ï¿½?Grafitti Wall  
  AromaTherapy  
  Myths & Misconceptions ..  
  Crisis Information .......... �?/A>  
  
  
  Tools  
 
�? Depression : Smaller Babies More Prone to Depression, Anxiety Later On
Choose another message board
 
     
Reply
 Message 1 of 1 in Discussion 
From: MSN NicknameSummerlove113  (Original Message)Sent: 12/18/2007 2:14 AM
Source: University of Alberta               Released: Thu 06-Dec-2007, 08:40 ET 
         Printer-friendly Version 

Smaller Babies More Prone to Depression, Anxiety Later On

Libraries
Medical News
  Keywords
PRENATAL, DEPRESSION, ANXIETY, MOOD DISORDER, NEURODEVELOPMENT, BIRTH WEIGHT, POPULATION HEALTH, PUBLIC HEALTH

Contact Information

Available for logged-in reporters only

Description

Turns out there might be some truth to the popular wisdom that plump babies are happy babies. A landmark public health study has found that people who had a low birth weight are more likely to experience depression and anxiety later in life. “Being born small isn’t necessarily a problem. It is a problem if you were born small because of adverse conditions in the womb," says lead author, Ian Colman.

Newswise �?Turns out there might be some truth to the popular wisdom that plump babies are happy babies. A landmark public health study has found that people who had a low birth weight are more likely to experience depression and anxiety later in life.

“We found that even people who had just mild or moderate symptoms of depression or anxiety over their life course were smaller babies than those who had better mental health,�?says lead author Ian Colman of the University of Alberta’s School of Public Health. “It suggests a dose-response relationship. As birth weight progressively decreases, it’s more likely that an individual will suffer from mood disorders later in life.�?/FONT>

The study, published in the December 2007 issue of Biological Psychiatry, analyzes information drawn from the Medical Research Council National Survey of Health and Development, one of the longest-running cohort studies in the world. The survey tracked more than 4,600 people born in Great Britain in 1946 for symptoms of anxiety and depression over a 40-year period. The results represent an important chapter in the “nature versus nurture�?debate, supporting the theory that conditions in the womb do indeed have an effect on our future development.

The connection between birth weight and mental health isn’t the only fascinating find made by Colman and colleagues at the University of Cambridge and University College London in England. “One of the surprising findings from our research was that people who had worse mental health throughout their lives had also reached developmental milestones—like standing and walking for the first time—later in life than those who had better mental health,�?says Colman.

The researchers emphasize that they are not saying that all small babies will experience poor mental health in the future. They also say that this study is not about babies born full-term versus babies born premature, since the data collected back in 1946 made no mention of gestational age at birth.

“Being born small isn’t necessarily a problem. It is a problem if you were born small because of adverse conditions in the womb—and low birth weight is what we looked at in this study because it is considered a marker of stress in the womb. When a mother is really stressed, blood flow to the uterus is restricted and the fetus gets fewer nutrients, which tends to lead to lower birth weight,�?explains Colman.

At the same time, because the mother is stressed, stress hormones are passing through the placenta to the fetus and may affect the fetus’s neurodevelopment and stress response. “Under these conditions, the part of the child’s brain that deals with stress could be programmed incorrectly in utero—the brain doesn’t develop as it would under ideal circumstances. If this theory is correct, you would find that when stressful events occur, the people who were smaller babies would be more likely to become depressed or anxious,�?says Colman. Site Meter

Notable strengths of this study include the nationally representative sample, the sample size, and the long follow-up with the members of the 1946 cohort, whose anxious and depressive symptoms were measured at 13, 15, 36, 43 and 53 years of age.

“The idea that things that are happening in the womb might predict your health much later on in life is absolutely fascinating. And the public health implications of that are huge,�?says Colman. “I have been asked by many people what the ‘take-home message�?of this study is, and I would say that, in the simplest terms, it is ‘We should take better care of pregnant women.�?The kind of stress that pregnant mothers are under has a significant long-term effect on the developing fetus.�?/FONT>

Source: University of Alberta, Office of Public Affairs


© 2007 Newswise All Rights Reserved.


First  Previous  No Replies  Next  Last