4.6 Article

Testing a cascade model linking prenatal inflammation to child executive function

Journal

BEHAVIOURAL BRAIN RESEARCH
Volume 431, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.bbr.2022.113959

Keywords

Inflammation; Pregnancy; Neurodevelopment; Executive function; Infancy; Childhood

Funding

  1. NICHD [R21 HD077146, CTSA UL1TR002489]
  2. University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill's Department of Allied Health Sciences
  3. UNC School of Medicine's North Carolina Translational and Clinical Sciences Institute [CTSA ] [UL1TR002489]
  4. University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill's Nutrition Research Institute

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This study found that inflammation during pregnancy can have negative effects on infant neurodevelopment and may continue to impact preschool executive function.
Inflammation during pregnancy is beginning to be understood as a risk factor predicting poor infant health and neurodevelopmental outcomes. The long-term sequelae associated with exposure to prenatal inflammation are less well established. The current study examined associations between maternal inflammation during pregnancy, markers of infant neurodevelopment (general cognitive ability, negative affect, and sleep quality), and preschool executive function (EF) in a longitudinal sample of 40 African American mother-infant dyads. Mothers completed a blood draw in the third trimester of pregnancy to measure plasma levels of C-reactive protein (CRP) and pro-inflammatory cytokines (e.g., interleukin 6 [IL-6], tumor necrosis factor-alpha [TNF-alpha]). When infants were 6 months of age, we assessed general cognitive ability via the Bayley-III, negative affect via the Still-Face Paradigm, and sleep quality via actigraphy monitoring. When children were 4 years of age, we assessed their EF ability using four tasks from the EF Touch battery. Elevated levels of maternal CRP, IL-6, and TNF-alpha were associated with poorer infant general cognitive ability. Although there were no direct effects of prenatal inflammation on preschool EF, we observed an indirect relationship between IL-6 and preschool EF ability via infant general cognitive ability. Our findings suggest that prenatal inflammation may have long-lasting, cascading implications for child neurodevelopment. Implications of these findings for health disparities in women and children of color are discussed.

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