Department of Psychology, University of Denver.
Department of Epidemiology, Colorado School of Public Health.
Dev Psychol. 2024 Sep;60(9):1620-1638. doi: 10.1037/dev0001704. Epub 2024 Feb 15.
Given prior literature focused on the Developmental Origins of Health and Disease framework, there is strong rationale to hypothesize that reducing depression in the prenatal period will cause improvements in offspring cardiometabolic health. The current review outlines evidence that prenatal depression is associated with offspring cardiometabolic risk and health behaviors. We review evidence of these associations in humans and in nonhuman animals at multiple developmental periods, from the prenatal period (maternal preeclampsia, gestational diabetes), neonatal period (preterm birth, small size at birth), infancy (rapid weight gain), childhood and adolescence (high blood pressure, impaired glucose-insulin homeostasis, unfavorable lipid profiles, abdominal obesity), and into adulthood (diabetes, cardiovascular disease). In addition to these cardiometabolic outcomes, we focus on health behaviors associated with cardiometabolic risk, such as child eating behaviors, diet, physical activity, and sleep health. Our review focuses on child behaviors (e.g., emotional eating, preference for highly palatable foods, short sleep duration) and parenting behaviors (e.g., pressuring child to eat, modeling of health behaviors). These changes in health behaviors may be detected before changes to cardiometabolic outcomes, which may allow for early identification of and prevention for children at risk for poor adult cardiometabolic outcomes. We also discuss the methods of the ongoing Care Project, which is a randomized clinical trial to test whether reducing prenatal maternal depression improves offspring's cardiometabolic health and health behaviors in preschool. The goal of this review and the Care Project are to inform future research, interventions, and policies that support prenatal mental health and offspring cardiometabolic health. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).
鉴于先前的文献主要集中在健康与疾病的发育起源框架上,有强有力的理由假设在产前阶段减少抑郁会改善后代的心脏代谢健康。本综述概述了证据表明产前抑郁与后代的心脏代谢风险和健康行为有关。我们回顾了人类和非人类动物在多个发育阶段的这些关联的证据,从产前阶段(母亲子痫前期、妊娠期糖尿病)、新生儿期(早产、出生时体重小)、婴儿期(体重快速增加)、儿童期和青少年期(高血压、葡萄糖-胰岛素稳态受损、不利的血脂谱、腹部肥胖)到成年期(糖尿病、心血管疾病)。除了这些心脏代谢结果外,我们还关注与心脏代谢风险相关的健康行为,如儿童的饮食行为、饮食、体育活动和睡眠健康。我们的综述重点关注儿童行为(例如,情绪性进食、偏好高可口食物、睡眠时长短)和育儿行为(例如,迫使孩子进食、健康行为的示范)。这些健康行为的变化可能在心脏代谢结果发生变化之前就被检测到,这可能使处于心脏代谢不良成年结局风险中的儿童能够早期识别并预防。我们还讨论了正在进行的 Care 项目的方法,该项目是一项随机临床试验,旨在测试减少产前母亲抑郁是否能改善学龄前儿童的后代心脏代谢健康和健康行为。本综述和 Care 项目的目的是为未来支持产前心理健康和后代心脏代谢健康的研究、干预和政策提供信息。(PsycInfo 数据库记录(c)2024 APA,保留所有权利)。