Current:Home > ScamsCOVID during pregnancy may alter brain development in boys -Wealth Evolution Experts
COVID during pregnancy may alter brain development in boys
Ethermac Exchange View
Date:2025-04-08 02:16:30
Boys born to mothers who got COVID-19 while pregnant appear nearly twice as likely as other boys to be diagnosed with subtle delays in brain development.
That's the conclusion of a study of more than 18,000 children born at eight hospitals in Eastern Massachusetts. Nearly 900 of the children were born to mothers who had COVID during their pregnancy.
In the study, boys, but not girls, were more likely to be diagnosed with a range of developmental disorders in the first 18 months of life. These included delays in speech and language, psychological development and motor function, as well as intellectual disabilities.
In older children, these differences are often associated with autism spectrum disorder, says Dr. Roy Perlis, a co-author of the study and a psychiatrist at Massachusetts General Hospital.
But for the young children in this study, "it's way too soon to reliably diagnose autism," Perlis says. "All we can hope to detect at this point are more subtle sorts of things like delays in language and speech, and delays in motor milestones."
The study, which relied on an analysis of electronic health records, was published in March in the journal JAMA Network Open.
The finding is just the latest to suggest that a range of maternal infections can alter fetal brain development, especially in male offspring. For example, studies have found links between infections like influenza and cytomegalovirus, and disorders like autism and schizophrenia.
"Male fetuses are known to be more vulnerable to maternal infectious exposures during pregnancy," says Dr. Andrea Edlow, the study's lead author and a maternal-fetal medicine specialist at Massachusetts General Hospital.
But the effect from COVID-19 appears to be modest, Perlis says. "Most children of moms who have COVID during pregnancy won't have neurodevelopmental consequences even if there is some increase in risk."
A research opportunity
The study came about because Perlis and Edlow — both of whom are on the faculty at Harvard Medical School — saw an opportunity when COVID-19 arrived.
They had been looking for ways to use electronic health records to study factors that might affect the brain development of a fetus. That meant identifying pregnancies involving diabetes, high blood pressure, or an infection like influenza, then following the offspring as they grew up.
"When the COVID pandemic started, we pivoted to try to look at fetal brain development and how it might be impacted by SARS-CoV-2 infection," Edlow says.
So the team began comparing the offspring of infected and uninfected mothers. And when they had a large enough group to look for sex differences, they found one.
"If a mom had SARS-CoV-2 infection in pregnancy and had a male child, her 12-month-old was 94% more likely to have any neurodevelopmental diagnosis," Edlow says.
Keep in mind that the virus that causes COVID-19 rarely infects a fetus, Edlow says. That makes it similar to influenza viruses, but very different from Zika virus, which directly attacks a developing brain.
With influenza or COVID-19, the risk to a fetus appears to come primarily from the mother's immune response to an infection, not the infection itself.
As part of the body's effort to fight the virus, it produces proteins known as cytokines, which regulate the immune system.
"These are cytokines that are really important for that initial immune response," says Kim McAllister, a professor at the University of California, Davis and director of the school's Center for Neuroscience. "They make you feel really bad. And that's a good thing because that's your immune system fighting off the pathogen."
But cytokines, unlike most pathogens, can cross the placenta and cause inflammation in a fetal brain. And animal studies suggest that this inflammation has a greater impact on the brains of male fetuses than female fetuses, and results in different behavioral abnormalities after birth.
"There's no doubt from the animal models that there is a link between maternal immune activation, changes in gene expression in the brain, changes in brain development, and long-lasting changes in behaviors," McAllister says.
The Harvard researchers plan to continue assessing the children in their study for several more years. That will allow them to see whether the early delays in boys persist or result in a diagnosis like autism spectrum disorder.
"I hope these effects go away," Perlis says. "I would be far happier if at the two year and three year follow-up there's no effect."
veryGood! (481)
Related
- 'Malcolm in the Middle’ to return with new episodes featuring Frankie Muniz
- Retired Venezuelan general who defied Maduro gets over 21 years in US prison
- When is the next total solar eclipse in the U.S. after today? See the paths for the 2044 and 2045 events
- Rebel Wilson Reveals Whether She’d Work With Sacha Baron Cohen Again After Memoir Bombshell
- The Super Bowl could end in a 'three
- UConn wins NCAA men's basketball tournament, defeating Purdue 75-60
- Google makes it easier to find your missing Android device
- Mississippi Senate blocks House proposal to revise school funding formula
- Biden administration makes final diplomatic push for stability across a turbulent Mideast
- Beyoncé’s Daughter Rumi, 6, Breaks Musical Record Held by Sister Blue Ivy
Ranking
- Spooky or not? Some Choa Chu Kang residents say community garden resembles cemetery
- Books most challenged in 2023 centered on LGBTQ themes, library organization says
- Spring is hummingbird migration season: Interactive map shows where they will be
- Tesla settles lawsuit over California crash involving autopilot that killed Apple engineer
- Chuck Scarborough signs off: Hoda Kotb, Al Roker tribute legendary New York anchor
- Reba McEntire Shares a Rare Glimpse at Inseparable Romance With Actor Rex Linn
- New Mexico Supreme Court upholds 2 murder convictions of man in 2009 double homicide case
- US wildfires are getting bigger and more complex, prompting changes in firefighting workforce
Recommendation
Dick Vitale announces he is cancer free: 'Santa Claus came early'
Many eclipse visitors to northern New England pulled an all-nighter trying to leave
Are potatoes healthy? Settling the debate over sweet vs 'regular' once and for all
Former Miss America runs again for North Dakota’s only U.S. House seat in a crowded GOP primary
Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
Transgender Catholics say new Vatican document shows no understanding of their lives
Horoscopes Today, April 8, 2024
Pre-med student stabbed mother on visit home from college, charged with murder, sheriff says