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Anxiety During Pregnancy Increases ADHD Risk

Study Links Exposure in the Womb to Developmental Problems Years Later
By Salynn Boyles
WebMD Health News

July 16, 2004 -- For most women, stress and anxiety come with the territory during pregnancy. Added to the stresses of daily life is a mother-to-be's fears for her unborn baby.

While a certain amount of anxiety during pregnancy may be inevitable, there is growing evidence that high levels can affect children long after birth.

A newly published study shows a strong link between maternal anxiety levels early in pregnancy and a child's susceptibility to attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) years later. The association was stronger than that seen for any other predictor of behavioral problems during childhood, including smoking during pregnancy, low birth weight, or a mother's current stress level.

The findings support the somewhat controversial idea that exposures in the womb play a critical role in predisposing people to a host of diseases and emotional disorders later in life. Known as the "fetal programming hypothesis," the theory suggests that at certain points during pregnancy environmental exposures to the fetus in the womb significantly influence brain development, which, in turn, can impact future health.

"This is some of the strongest evidence yet to suggest that anxiety during pregnancy influences the offspring's risk for attention hyperactivity disorders," author Bea Van den Bergh, tells WebMD. "Obviously, genetic predisposition plays an important role in these disorders, but this suggests an interaction between environmental factors and genes."

Stressed Before Birth

It is well known that stress and anxiety during pregnancy can increase a woman's risk of miscarriage, preterm delivery, and giving birth to a baby that is low birth weight, but few studies in humans have examined the longer-term implications in children born to mothers stressed during pregnancy.

In this study, Van den Bergh and colleagues from Belgium's Catholic University of Leuven followed 71 mothers and their first-born children from pregnancy through early childhood. The mothers completed questionnaires designed to measure anxiety throughout their pregnancies, and the children were assessed for ADHD and other behavioral disorders between the ages of 8 and 9.

Maternal anxiety levels early in pregnancy -- during the 12th and 22nd week of pregnancy -- were strongly linked to ADHD in the children. Previous findings from the same group of mothers and children showed a link between anxiety during this developmental period and temperament during early childhood. The findings are reported in the latest issue of the journal Child Development.

Blaming Mom

Van den Bergh says pregnant women should do all they can to reduce the stresses and anxiety in their lives, especially early in their pregnancies. While the findings could produce even more anxiety among women who worry that worrying will damage their unborn babies, the researcher says she hopes it will lead to the development of better strategies for dealing with stress during pregnancy.

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