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ribbit1019
08-18-2005, 10:12 AM
I think he might be trying to tell me something?
Oh well informative!

High levels of anxiety during a woman's pregnancy increases child risk of disease and disorder
Women's Health News
Published: Friday, 16-Jul-2004


The idea that a woman's emotional state during pregnancy affects her unborn child has persisted for centuries and has, in recent years, been supported by science.
Called the "fetal programming hypothesis," it theorizes that certain disturbing factors occurring during certain sensitive periods of development in utero can "program" set points in a variety of biological systems in the unborn child. This, then, affects the ability of those biological systems to change later in life, resulting in difficulties adapting physiologically and ultimately predisposing a child to disease and disorder.

We decided to investigate the affect of high levels of anxiety during a woman's pregnancy on her child's susceptibility for attention deficits, hyperactivity, acting out and anxiety disorders in childhood. We also wanted to learn whether there are specific vulnerable periods during the pregnancy in which this anxiety "programs" the child's biological system, thus increasing the fetus' susceptibility for such disorders.

We evaluated data collected on 71 normal mothers and their 72 first-born children during pregnancy and when their children were 8 or 9. The mothers completed questionnaires to measure their anxiety levels throughout their pregnancy. When the children were 8 or 9, the mothers, a teacher, and an impartial observer completed questionnaires to measure the child's attention and hyperactivity, acting-out behavior and anxiety level.

Our results suggest that the period between 12 and 22 weeks of the pregnancy is a particularly vulnerable period; only maternal anxiety during this period predicted childhood disorders at age 8 and 9. Importantly, the effect of anxiety affected the fetus more than any other factor, including smoking during pregnancy, low birthweight, or anxiety of the mother when the child is 8 or 9.

The results provide some of the strongest indirect evidence available today that a woman's anxiety during pregnancy may program some set point in the early developing brain of the fetus, thus enhancing the child's susceptibility for childhood disorders such as attention deficit, hyperactivity, acting-out and anxiety problems. Clearly, many questions on exactly how fetal programming works in humans, and how the timing, kind and duration of environmental disturbances are related to altered neurobehavioral development, are still unresolved.

Evidence from this and other studies, however, provide an impetus for developing prevention, intervention and support programs for highly anxious pregnant women. These programs could include stress reduction instructions as well as treatments to reduce anxiety and neuroendocrine reactions to stress throughout the pregnancy, or even before conception. They may benefit not only the mother but also the developing child.

Christy
Maddy born 06/09/04
http://lilypie.com/baby2/040609/3/4/0/-5/.png
Little Peanut due 03/02/05
http://lilypie.com/days/060301/4/0/0/-5/.png

proggoddess
08-18-2005, 12:05 PM
I read a book called Tomorrow's Baby that says the same exact thing. Here's a description of the book:

http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/0684872145/qid=1124384570/sr=8-1/ref=pd_bbs_1/104-8136213-2508759?v=glance&s=books&n=507846

Anyway, I don't belive some of the book (such as children having their parents' private memories) but it's true that the balance of hormones affects a fetus' development and I believe that stress can change this balance for the worse.

jesseandgrace
08-18-2005, 12:29 PM
Well, I've certainly wondered about this since when I was 2 months pregnant with dd my dad died suddenly from a heart attack, and then the AFP test came back high risk for downs right before the holidays, and we had to wait forever for a level II ultrasound to give us some peace of mind. It was a terribly stressful time and even though I tried to relax, it was a rollercoaster. When dd was born she was MUCH more serious than ds when he was a baby. It was much harder to get her to smile, etc. However, now she is very happy go lucky and smiley, but it took tons of love and attention during that first year. So, I tend to agree, but I think that you can change things after birth. For me the stressors that caused the trouble during pregnancy were gone, and I think she was able to adjust, but I'm sure for others it might be that the kids continue in a stressful environment, and that might have more influence on the behavior at 8 and 9. I seriously would not believe that the smiley singing 2 year old was such a serious baby (well, at least compared to ds, you couldn't wipe the smile off his face for the first year, it was so cute :)).