Maternal stress and fetal responses: Evolutionary perspectives on preterm delivery

被引:91
作者
Pike, IL [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Arizona, Dept Anthropol, Tucson, AZ 85721 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1002/ajhb.20093
中图分类号
Q98 [人类学];
学科分类号
030303 ;
摘要
New epidemiological and neurohormonal evidence provides insights into the persistent public health issue of preterm delivery and its long-term health consequences for the newborn. Mechanisms linked to preterm delivery may originate early in gestation as a result of maternal cues signaling a stressful intrauterine environment. When these signals are present, the fetus responds with a series of facultative responses, including accelerated organ maturation. If these responses are unsuccessful and the environment remains insufficient, a series of feed-forward mechanisms initiate the hormonal cascade that leads to parturition, and thus, early expulsion from a stressful environment. The internal environmental cues are delivered via glucocorticoids (stress hormones) in the circulatory system, but fetal responses and the initiation of the final terminal pathway to parturition are regulated by placentally derived corticotropin-releasing hormone (CRH). The potential costs of early expulsion from a stressful intrauterine environment are high and include an increased likelihood of perinatal and infant mortality. Permanent alterations in organ and metabolic functioning may occur, suggesting considerable fitness trade-offs. There is some evidence that preterm parturition is a maternal adaptation to limit the energetic costs of individual pregnancies in the face of poor condition at the time of conception. Moreover, nutritional stress is not the only indicator that signals a stressful environment: maternal psychosocial stress, and thus her response to an assessment of the social environment, also signal an insufficient internal environment to the fetus. The epidemiological and neurohormonal evidence for these relationships and mechanisms responsible for regulating such delicate negotiations are explored. In turn, the implications of such findings are examined from life history and public health perspectives. (C) 2004 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
引用
收藏
页码:55 / 65
页数:11
相关论文
共 89 条
[1]   Depression and anxiety among women in an urban setting in Zimbabwe [J].
Abas, MA ;
Broadhead, JC .
PSYCHOLOGICAL MEDICINE, 1997, 27 (01) :59-71
[2]   Size at birth predicts age at menarche [J].
Adair, LS .
PEDIATRICS, 2001, 107 (04) :E59
[3]  
[Anonymous], 1995, Bull World Health Organ, V73 Suppl, P1
[4]  
BARKER DJP, 1989, LANCET, V2, P577
[5]   FETAL NUTRITION AND CARDIOVASCULAR-DISEASE IN ADULT LIFE [J].
BARKER, DJP ;
GLUCKMAN, PD ;
GODFREY, KM ;
HARDING, JE ;
OWENS, JA ;
ROBINSON, JS .
LANCET, 1993, 341 (8850) :938-941
[6]   EPIDEMIOLOGY OF PRETERM BIRTH [J].
BERKOWITZ, GS ;
PAPIERNIK, E .
EPIDEMIOLOGIC REVIEWS, 1993, 15 (02) :414-443
[7]   A periconceptional nutritional origin for noninfectious preterm birth [J].
Bloomfield, FH ;
Oliver, MH ;
Hawkins, P ;
Campbell, M ;
Phillips, DJ ;
Gluckman, PD ;
Challis, JRG ;
Harding, JE .
SCIENCE, 2003, 300 (5619) :606-606
[8]   GLOMERULI AND BLOOD-PRESSURE - LESS OF ONE, MORE THE OTHER [J].
BRENNER, BM ;
GARCIA, DL ;
ANDERSON, S .
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF HYPERTENSION, 1988, 1 (04) :335-347
[9]   Maternal anxiety during pregnancy and subsequent infant development [J].
Brouwers, EPM ;
van Baar, AL ;
Pop, VJM .
INFANT BEHAVIOR & DEVELOPMENT, 2001, 24 (01) :95-106
[10]   Impairment of growth in fetuses destined to deliver preterm [J].
Bukowski, R ;
Gahn, D ;
Denning, J ;
Saade, G .
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY, 2001, 185 (02) :463-467