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April 25, 2008Stress of Maternal Depression Results in Damage to Child's Brain, Shuts Down Stress HormonesRead more... Schizophrenia Causes, Risk Factors & Prevention
We've covered in the past how high levels of stress that a child experiences when they are in the womb and in young childhood can amplify the stress response system of the child's brain so that high levels of stress hormones are frequently released in the brain. When this happens for a long time - researchers now believe that it can damage the brain and increase the risk of many problems - including memory problems, cognitive functioning, and increased risk of serious mental illness. (read more here). Research is suggesting that many children who develop mental illness and experience either very high stress hormone levels, or artificially low stress hormone levels, have experienced high levels of stress at an early age. Now a new research study shows that the ongoing stress of having a mother who cannot respond to a child's needs due to serious depression - causes a great deal of stress for the child, and can damage the child's brain so that stress hormone levels are permanently set at very low levels. Postpartum depression is common around the world in women of all income brackets - in fact its estimated that postpartum depression is experienced by between 10% and 15% (or more) of women. In this new study of young children living in extreme poverty it was found that those whose mothers showed symptoms of depression had low levels of cortisol, a hormone activated during times of stress, compared with children whose mothers did not exhibit depressive symptoms. The researchers say the blunted cortisol levels they found in some children may indicate an adaptive response to chronic stress on the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) system, which is responsible for producing hormones that help our bodies respond to stressful situations. Cortisol is a corticosteroid hormone pumped out by the adrenal glands as part of a body's fight-or-flight response to stress. It raises blood pressure and blood sugar levels to help with quick bursts of energy, and is naturally found at higher levels in the early morning, declining to its lowest point at bedtime. "Many people assume that the only way the body responds to constant stress is to produce too much cortisol, but repeated stress can also cause the HPA system to shut down so that you are not producing cortisol when you normally should," said Lia Fernald, assistant professor of community health and human development at the University of California, Berkeley, and lead author of the study. The findings, appearing in the Spring 2008 issue of the journal Development and Psychopathology, highlight a biological effect in children who are facing not only economic deprivation, but also an added risk of possible depression in a key caregiver, the researchers said. "The unexpectedly low levels of cortisol we found are most likely an expression of chronic, intense, long-term stress on the HPA system," said Megan Gunnar, professor of child development at the University of Minnesota and co-author of the study. "Really high increases over a period of time end up driving the system to the ground." Awareness of hypo-cortisol levels has grown in the past five to 10 years, said Gunnar, a developmental psychobiologist. The researchers said that depressed levels of cortisol have been seen a few times before in young children, including in studies of neglected children in Romanian orphanages and preschoolers who experienced repeated bouts of foster care beginning in infancy. The few studies that have been done suggest a link between low cortisol levels in children and disruptive behavior disorders, including aggression. This new study is part of a larger project studying social welfare interventions for low-income families in Mexico. Researchers focused on children in some of Mexico's poorest regions, areas identified through a baseline census of families across the country. The study's sample of 639 children, ages 2.5 to 5, live in a region where the median per capita income is $730 per year, more than 14 times lower than the national figure in Mexico of approximately $10,000 per year. Approximately 40 percent of the children come from homes without electricity or running water, and many are from isolated indigenous communities. In 2003, a research team of health professionals paid unannounced visits to homes in the low-income regions, providing verbal explanations of the goals and risks of research to participants and obtaining informed consent from the mothers. The researchers conducted one-hour interviews with each mother that included a standard screening test used to assess symptoms of depression. Although the screening tool has not been extensively used in Mexico, it has been used in the United States, where a score of 16 or higher indicates that the respondent is at risk for clinical depression. More than 60 percent of the mothers in the study scored above 16, with 10 percent scoring above 35. At the same time the mother was being interviewed, the researchers selected one child, usually the eldest, to undergo cognitive tests. They also took three samples of saliva from the child throughout the hour to determine whether any significant changes in levels occurred during the visit, and they controlled for the time of day the sample was taken. The initial saliva sample, collected approximately five minutes after arrival in the home, represented baseline cortisol levels, since it takes more than five minutes for stress activations of the HPA system to raise cortisol concentrations in saliva. It takes about 20 to 25 minutes for the hormone's secretion to reach peak levels. The unexpected presence of strangers was used by researchers as a mild stressor for young children. The administration of standardized cognitive tasks to assess language and cognitive competence was a second mild stressor for the children. These are situations in which it would be normal for cortisol levels to increase moderately, said Fernald. The researchers found that for all children, higher maternal scores on the depression screening tool were linked to the youngsters' lower overall cortisol levels. The baseline values for salivary cortisol in the children averaged 2.78 nanomoles per liter; about two to 2.5 times lower than what a typical middle class child in the United States would be showing at the same time of day. "This study speaks to the fact that maternal depression, particularly when it goes along with poverty, really needs to be addressed," said Fernald. "Public health interventions typically focus on physical health, such as promoting immunizations and preventing malnutrition. However, we are seeing that a mother's mental health could be a critical factor influencing the physiology of their kids." Moreover, the researchers found a greater impact of maternal depression symptoms on girls than on boys. Girls whose mothers had a greater number of depressive symptoms had the lowest baseline levels of cortisol. "It is unclear why a larger effect was seen among girls, but I would suspect that it would be necessary to go beyond biology for an explanation," said Gunnar. "It may be related to the unique relationship between mothers and daughters, and the possibility that daughters often spend more time in the home." "Maternal depression is very tough on little kids because it interferes with the mother's capacity to be responsive and supportive," added Gunnar. "On the flip side of that is that a mother who can provide supportive care can buffer her children from a lot of adversity. Other studies have shown that. But of course, it's hard to be sensitive and supportive to the demands of young children when you are struggling emotionally and physically with trying to live in extremely impoverished conditions." The study was also co-authored by Heather Burke, assistant adjunct professor of psychiatry at UC San Francisco. Source Journal Article: Salivary cortisol levels in children of low-income women with high depressive symptomatology Related Reading: New Moms at Increased Risk for Mental Illness, Should be Screened After Childbirth How To Lower the Stress Your Baby Experiences, and Lower the Risk of Mental Illness Treat depression during pregnancy, researchers urge Schizophrenia Prevention - Risk Reduction Approaches Posted by szadmin at April 25, 2008 04:28 PM
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Long term stress, including from illness, school environment (esp when combined with LDs), work, allergies, malnutrition, etc can cause adrenal fatigue which lowers cortisol level. Books are being written about adrenal fatigue (such as by James L. Wilson, and Mary Shomon talks about it in her books as well) and as this article stated, it is finally becoming more well-known and hopefully doctors will be more aware. The stress of symptoms can be horrendous and doctors need to pay more attention to the biomedical aspects of this illness and test for these problems.
Because the study said, "Unexpected" low cortisol, does that mean that it was the adrenal gland affected and just low cortisol, rather than a global lowering of hormones from a hypofunctioning of the pituitary, in which case the low cortisol would not be "unexpected"?
Also, did they verify cause/effect with cortrosyn (ACTH) stimulation tests?
Since hereditary and nutritional problems can be contributing to both the depression, stress response and cortisol levels in both mother and children, did they study that possibility as well?
Posted by: Jeanie at April 28, 2008 06:01 AM
Parents get depressed when the child is born with all these problems. I would not wish a brain disabled child on anyone. Autism is more.I'd like to see them study the heavy metals and toxins messing up all these families.
Posted by: jes at April 28, 2008 12:16 PM
The girls are not stressed because of the depressed mothers. The same thing that depressed the mothers is the stress for the girls. The researchers must have been men. Immature men to not see what is in front of their eyes.
The culture devalues women. Society makes their life so hard. The tremendous stress from living as second-class citizens, usually in poverty and subjugation eventually causes adrenal fatigue in the mothers resulting in depression.
Their daughters are experiencing the same social environment. They are now in the same stages of adrenal fatigue as generations of women experienced at their age. Eventually, many of those girls will also succumb to depression.
I should know. I was one of those girls. My mother did not cause my stress. She tried to protect me, but society is harsh.
Posted by: Maria at May 1, 2008 12:41 PM
It is amazing to me that basically this article is advancing assumptions that were made years ago by European and American psychoanalysts, but were rejected by many people for complex reasons that appear in part in the comment above.
I am in the third generation of a family whose members, on the paternal and maternal side, were profoundly and advertly affected by mental illness which, for subtle reasons, has not been diagnosed. I suffered from my own mother's depression, just as my daughter has suffered considerably from my disguised depression.
It is not surprising to me that many people "deny" the role of maternal depression so strenuously : I myself would like to be able to continue denying the role of my own depression in the mental health of my children, but at this point, it is no longer possible.
That I am responsible, to a very great extent, for the shaky image of herself that my daughter has does not make me "guilty", as though she were a simple "object" to repair by administering gene therapy, medication, or other.
Freud said basically that we must learn to do what we can with what we inherited from our parents (and this inheritance is not limited to a set of genes ; it is also to be found in the education and the care-giving we received from our parents, and others in our environment).
I perceive this goal as worthy for all people with varying degrees of mental illness.
One last point : current economic policies which punish single women with children are extremely counterproductive, as this article shows.
Two proverbs come to mind : "You catch more flies with honey than with vinegar" and, more appropriately : "What goes around comes around".
Someone should show this article to our presidential hopefuls.
Posted by: Debra at May 3, 2008 02:43 AM