Maternal Symptoms (maternal + symptom)

Distribution by Scientific Domains


Selected Abstracts


Child Behavior Problems and Maternal Symptoms of Depression: A Mediational Model

JOURNAL OF CHILD AND ADOLESCENT PSYCHIATRIC NURSING, Issue 4 2004
Maria A. Gartstein PhD
PROBLEM. The relationship between maternal depression and child behavior problems has been consistently demonstrated, but not the impact of child behavior problems on maternal depression. METHODS. Mothers of 3- to 6-year-old children (N = 69) reported regarding their depression, parenting competence, attachment to the child, the child's impact on the family, and behavior problems. FINDINGS. Child behavior problems were positively associated with maternal depression, an association explained by mediating variables: impact of the child on the family, mother's parenting competence, and attachment to the child. CONCLUSIONS. Maternal depression should be considered when providing clinical services to children, given the potential for exacerbation of symptoms in the face of child behavior problems. [source]


Assessing the Effects of Maternal Symptoms and Homelessness on the Mental Health Problems in their Children

CHILD AND ADOLESCENT MENTAL HEALTH, Issue 4 2009
Ilan Harpaz-Rotem
Objective:, This study examines the longitudinal association between measures of child well being and maternal posttraumatic stress disorder symptoms, homelessness, substance abuse, and other psychiatric conditions. Method:, A sample of 142 mothers who were veterans of the US armed forces were assessed at program entry and every three months thereafter for one year. A repeated-measures with mixed-effects analytic strategy was used to assess the association of children's mental health, school enrolment and attendance with measures of maternal psychiatric symptoms and homelessness. Results:, Significant associations between mothers' psychiatric symptoms and child well-being were identified. However, the multivariable mixed-models suggest that increased depression and anxiety symptoms among children were associated primarily with mothers' PTSD, and not depression, symptoms. Conclusions:, These findings provide evidence of an association between maternal and child mental health and may suggest that treating maternal PTSD symptoms may also benefit children, regardless of whether the child was also exposed to the traumatic experience. [source]


Maternal prenatal anxiety, postnatal caregiving and infants' cortisol responses to the still-face procedure

DEVELOPMENTAL PSYCHOBIOLOGY, Issue 8 2009
Kerry-Ann Grant
Abstract This study prospectively examined the separate and combined influences of maternal prenatal anxiety disorder and postnatal caregiving sensitivity on infants' salivary cortisol responses to the still-face procedure. Effects were assessed by measuring infant salivary cortisol upon arrival at the laboratory, and at 15-, 25-, and 40-min following the still-face procedure. Maternal symptoms of anxiety during the last 6 months of pregnancy were assessed using clinical diagnostic interview. Data analyses using linear mixed models were based on 88 women and their 7-month-old infants. Prenatal anxiety and maternal sensitivity emerged as independent, additive moderators of infant cortisol reactivity, F (3, 180),=,3.29, p,=,.02, F (3, 179),=,2.68, p,=,.05 respectively. Results were independent of maternal prenatal depression symptoms, and postnatal symptoms of anxiety and depression. Infants' stress-induced cortisol secretion patterns appear to relate not only to exposure to maternal prenatal anxiety, but also to maternal caregiving sensitivity, irrespective of prenatal psychological state. © 2009 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Dev Psychobiol 51: 625,637, 2009 [source]


An open-label trial of enhanced brief interpersonal psychotherapy in depressed mothers whose children are receiving psychiatric treatment,,

DEPRESSION AND ANXIETY, Issue 7 2006
Holly A. Swartz M.D.
Abstract Major depression affects one out of five women during her lifetime. Depressed mothers with psychiatrically ill children represent an especially vulnerable population. Challenged by the demands of caring for ill children, these mothers often put their own needs last; consequently, their depressions remain untreated. This population is especially difficult to engage in treatment. We have developed a nine-session intervention, an engagement session followed by eight sessions of brief interpersonal psychotherapy designed to increase maternal participation in their own psychotherapy, resolve symptoms of maternal depression, and enhance relationships (IPT-MOMS). This open-label trial assesses the feasibility and acceptability of providing this treatment to depressed mothers. Thirteen mothers meeting DSM-IV criteria for major depression were recruited from a pediatric mental health clinic where their school-age children were receiving psychiatric treatment. Subjects (mothers) were treated openly with IPT-MOMS. Eighty-five percent (11/13) completed the study. Subjects were evaluated with the Hamilton Rating Scale for Depression, and completed self-report measures of quality of life and functioning at three time points: baseline, after treatment completion, and 6-months posttreatment. A signed rank test was used to compare measurement changes between assessment time points. Subjects showed significant improvement from baseline to posttreatment on measures of maternal symptoms and functioning. These gains were maintained at 6-month follow-up. Therapy was well tolerated and accepted by depressed mothers, who are typically difficult to engage in treatment. A high proportion of subjects completed treatment and experienced improvements in functioning. Future randomized clinical trials are needed to establish the efficacy of this approach. Depression and Anxiety 23:398,404, 2006. Published 2006 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source]


Symptoms of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder in first-time expectant women: Relations with parenting cognitions and behaviors

INFANT MENTAL HEALTH JOURNAL, Issue 1 2007
Jerilyn E. Ninowski
The relationship between maternal symptoms of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) and parenting cognitions and behaviors was studied in 86 first-time expectant women. Women high on ADHD symptoms were less likely to be married, less likely to have obtained at least some university education, and less likely to report that they wanted to get pregnant at the time they became pregnant. As predicted, ADHD symptoms were positively correlated with symptoms of anxiety and depression, and predicted less positive prenatal expectations regarding the infant and the future maternal role and lower maternal self-efficacy. Contrary to predictions, ADHD did not predict any incremental variance in maternal stressful life events or social support. Symptoms of ADHD were negatively correlated with attendance at recommended prenatal checkups, but were unrelated to other behaviors during pregnancy. Findings suggest that even prior to any contact with their infant, women with ADHD symptoms have maladaptive cognitions regarding their expectations of motherhood and parenting abilities. As a result, they may benefit from early interventions that focus on attenuating the potential negative effects that these maladaptive cognitions might have on the mother-infant relationship and later developmental outcomes for their children. [source]


Parvovirus B19 infection in pregnancy: Quantitative viral DNA analysis using a kinetic fluorescence detection system (TaqMan PCR)

JOURNAL OF MEDICAL VIROLOGY, Issue 2 2002
Antje Knöll M.D.
Abstract Human parvovirus B19 infections are common in the general population, and infection during pregnancy may cause hydrops fetalis and fetal death. To initiate adequate treatment, accurate laboratory diagnosis is essential. The most sensitive tests are nested PCR systems, but these assays provide semiquantitative results at best. A parvovirus B19 DNA assay was developed based on the real time TaqMan PCR. This method was calibrated on the basis of serial plasmid dilutions and tested with an international parvovirus B19 standard. The assay was capable of quantifying parvovirus B19 DNA from one to about 5,×,107 genome equivalents per reaction (corresponding to 100 to 5,×,109 genome equivalents per ml serum). Samples from 51 pregnant women with suspected acute parvovirus B19 infection were tested, and positive PCR results were obtained in at least one of the materials investigated in 41 cases. The median viral DNA load in maternal blood samples was 1.3,×,104 copies/ml (range 7.2,×,102,2.6,×,107). Maternal virus DNA concentration was not associated with the presence of maternal symptoms and/or fetal complications. As the stage of infection was not known in the majority of cases, our data do not exclude an association between peak levels of parvovirus B19 DNA and the development of complications. Maternal sera and corresponding fetal material were available for concurrent testing from 15 DNA-positive cases: in most fetal samples, viral DNA concentrations were several orders of magnitude higher (up to 2.1,×,1012 copies/ml) compared to the corresponding maternal blood samples. J. Med. Virol. 67:259,266, 2002. © 2002 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source]


The role of autocrine TGF,1 in endothelial cell activation induced by phagocytosis of necrotic trophoblasts: a possible role in the pathogenesis of pre-eclampsia,

THE JOURNAL OF PATHOLOGY, Issue 1 2010
Qi Chen
Abstract Pre-eclampsia is a disorder of pregnancy characterized by hypertension and endothelial cell dysfunction. The causes of pre-eclampsia are unclear but it is proposed that a factor released from the placenta triggers the maternal symptoms. One possible triggering factor is dead trophoblasts that are shed from the placenta, then deported to become trapped in the maternal pulmonary capillaries. It is hypothesized that trophoblasts die by apoptosis in normal pregnancy, but by necrosis in pre-eclampsia. Deported trophoblasts may be phagocytosed by the pulmonary endothelial cells and we have previously shown that phagocytosis of necrotic trophoblasts leads to the activation of endothelial cells, accompanied by the release of interleukin-6 from these cells. However, the mechanistic pathway linking phagocytosis of necrotic trophoblasts and endothelial cell activation is unknown. Here we show that, after phagocytosis of necrotic, but not apoptotic, trophoblasts, endothelial cells secrete TGF,1. Using recombinant endoglin to inhibit the function of TGF,1 we have shown that the TGF,1 does not directly activate endothelial cells but rather it induces endothelial IL-6 secretion. The IL-6 then induces endothelial cell activation. Inhibiting either TGF,1 or IL-6 prevented endothelial cell activation in response to phagocytosing necrotic trophoblasts, but inhibiting IL-6 did not prevent secretion of TGF,1, confirming the order of signalling. IL-6 also reduced endothelial cell-surface endoglin but increased the amount of soluble endoglin released from placental explants. These interactions between the IL-6 and TGF,1 pathways in both the endothelium and placenta may help to regulate the maternal response to deported trophoblasts in pregnancy. Copyright © 2010 Pathological Society of Great Britain and Ireland. Published by John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


Association between depression and anxiety in high-functioning children with autism spectrum disorders and maternal mood symptoms

AUTISM RESEARCH, Issue 3 2010
Carla A. Mazefsky
Abstract Research suggests that children with autism spectrum disorders (ASDs) and their relatives have high rates of depression and anxiety. However, relatively few studies have looked at both factors concurrently. This study examined the potential relationship between maternal mood symptoms and depression and anxiety in their children with ASD. Participants were 31 10- to 17-year-old children with an ASD diagnosis that was supported by gold-standard measures and their biological mothers. Mothers completed the Autism Comorbidity Interview to determine whether the child with ASD met criteria for any depressive or anxiety diagnoses and a questionnaire of their own current mood symptoms. As expected, many children with ASD met criteria for lifetime diagnoses of depressive (32%) and anxiety disorders (39%). Mothers' report of their own current mood symptoms revealed averages within the normal range, though there was significant variability. Approximately 75% of children with ASD could be correctly classified as having a depressive or anxiety disorder history or not based on maternal symptoms of interpersonal sensitivity, hostility, phobic anxiety, depression, and anxiety. The results provide preliminary evidence that maternal mood symptoms may be related to depression and anxiety in their children with ASD. Although the design did not allow for testing of heritability per se, the familial transmission patterns were generally consistent with research in typical populations. While larger follow-up studies are needed, this research has implications for prevention and intervention efforts. [source]