Motherhood

The plasticity of human maternal brain: longitudinal changes in brain anatomy during the early postpartum period

Kim P, Leckman JF, Mayes LC, Feldman R, Wang X, Swain JE.
Behav Neurosci. 2010 Oct;124(5):695-700.

Abstract
Animal studies suggest that structural changes occur in the maternal brain during the early postpartum period in regions such as the hypothalamus, amygdala, parietal lobe, and prefrontal cortex and such changes are related to the expression of maternal behaviors. In an attempt to explore this in humans, we conducted a prospective longitudinal study to examine gray matter changes using voxel-based morphometry on high resolution magnetic resonance images of mothers' brains at two time points: 2-4 weeks postpartum and 3-4 months postpartum.

Giving birth to a new brain: hormone exposures of pregnancy influence human memory

Glynn LM.
Psychoneuroendocrinology. 2010 Sep;35(8):1148-55.

Abstract
Mammalian pregnancy produces alterations in maternal physiology that are necessary for maintaining gestation, fetal development and parturition. These changes also may prepare the maternal brain for the unique demands of motherhood. Parous rodents exhibit long-term changes in neurological structure and function and human work suggests that other landmark events in the reproductive cycle, such as menarche and menopause, influence cognition. However, the influence of pregnancy on the human brain remains to be elucidated.

Brain Oxytocin Mediates Beneficial Consequences of Close Social Interactions: From Maternal Love and Sex

Inga D. Neumann
in Research and Perspectives in Endocrine Interactions: Hormones and Social Behaviour, 2008, 81-101

Abstract
There is growing interest directed toward understanding positive emotions, and maternal and romantic love are among the most desired and positive social experiences encountered. It is only now that we are beginning to understand not only their neurobiological and neurochemical regulation but also their beneficial health consequences. For example, around parturition, profound adaptations of the maternal brain take place with significant behavioural consequences that ensure the healthy development of the child, or the offspring, including nutrition, protection and maternal emotional care. There is an activation of several neuroendocrine systems, including oxytocin and prolactin, that play important roles as classical hormones in the regulation of parturition, lactogenesis and milk ejection, respectively. Importantly, as signalling molecules of the brain, they were shown to be important promoters of maternal behaviour. Moreover, oxytocin released within the rat brain is correlated with the protection of the offspring, i.e., with the display of maternal aggression. Thus, oxytocin and prolactin are important for meeting the physiological demands of the offspring, but also to satisfy their emotional demands, including protection and close affiliation with the mother. In turn, the maternal brain profits from these adaptations: oxytocin and prolactin exert anxiolytic effects at various brain sites and have been shown to reduce stress responsiveness at neuronal, neuroendocrine and behavioural levels. As a consequence, increased calmness, reduced anxiety levels and blunted hypothalamopituitary- adrenal axis and sympathetic responses to numerous stressors have been described in pregnancy and/or lactation, both in human and animal studies.

Feliratkozás RSS - Motherhood csatornára