Pregnancy changes a woman’s brain

Author: AFP

Pregnancy causes “long-lasting” physical changes to a woman’s brain, with significant, but seemingly beneficial, grey matter loss in parts of the crucial organ, a study said on Monday.

Some alterations lasted at least two years, they reported, but did not appear to erode memory or other mental processes.

The changes “concern brain areas associated with functions necessary to manage the challenges of motherhood”, study co-author Erika Barba-Muller of the Autonomous University of Barcelona (UAB) said in a statement.

The radical hormone surges and physical changes of pregnancy have long been known and studied, but its effects on the brain have been little understood.

The new study, published in Nature Neuroscience, claims to provide the first evidence “that pregnancy confers long-lasting changes in a woman’s brain”. It compared pre- and post-pregnancy brain scans of 25 first-time mothers. They researchers also looked at the brains of first-time fathers, as well as men and women with no children.

It found “pronounced and long-lasting GM volume reductions in a woman’s brain” in pregnancy, in regions involved in social processes.

In later tests, these same regions lit up most on scans measuring the women’s responses to their babies.

The brain changes were likely an adaptation for motherhood – boosting the ability to recognise the needs and emotional state of a baby and decode potential threats to its health and safety, said the researchers.

Grey matter is found in the brain’s wrinkly outer layer called the cerebral cortex, which houses the processes of learning and memory, motor function, social skills, language and problem solving.

The good news: the researchers “did not observe any changes in memory or other cognitive functions during the pregnancies and therefore believe that the loss of grey matter does not imply any cognitive defects,” said a UAB statement.

The study tested the women up to two years after pregnancy, so it is not clear how long the changes last.

The study pointed to a process called “synaptic pruning” which happens to humans in adolescence to remove rarely-used synapses – connections between brain cells.

This is done to make way, after childhood, for more efficient and specialised synapses and boost the network’s overall efficiency.

A similar process may be at play in pregnancy, the researchers speculated.

Share
Leave a Comment

Recent Posts

  • Pakistan

Labour Day — A reminder for better facilities to workers

When international labor community was observing International Labour Day, scores of illiterate laborers in Pakistan…

6 hours ago
  • Pakistan

Xinjiang enjoys social stability, religious freedom and economic development

A delegation of Pakistani elite youth which recently visited Urumqi, Kashgar, and Atush said that…

6 hours ago
  • Pakistan

Pakistan, Turkey, Iran, Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan and Tajikistan delegation visits Beijing

A delegation comprised over 15 participants from the Economic Cooperation Organization Science Foundation (ECOSF) including…

6 hours ago
  • Pakistan

COMSTECH partneres with Chinese University for training program in China

The Committee on Science and Technology of the Organization of Islamic Cooperation (COMSTECH) has partnered…

6 hours ago
  • Pakistan

Street gang war leaves shopkeeper dead in Lahore’s Model Town

A cross-firing between two rival groups on Model Town Link Raod claimed the life of…

6 hours ago
  • Pakistan

Woman kidnaps her own son in Narowal

A woman with the help of her lover kidnapped her own son in Narowal, police…

6 hours ago