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      Prenatal maternal stress, fetal programming, and mechanisms underlying later psychopathology-A global perspective.

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          Abstract

          There is clear evidence that the mother's stress, anxiety, or depression during pregnancy can alter the development of her fetus and her child, with an increased risk for later psychopathology. We are starting to understand some of the underlying mechanisms including the role of the placenta, gene-environment interactions, epigenetics, and specific systems including the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis and cytokines. In this review we also consider how these effects may be different, and potentially exacerbated, in different parts of the world. There can be many reasons for elevated prenatal stress, as in communities at war. There may be raised pregnancy-specific anxiety with high levels of maternal and infant death. There can be raised interpersonal violence (in Afghanistan 90.2% of women thought that "wife beating" was justified compared with 2.0% in Argentina). There may be interactions with nutritional deficiencies or with extremes of temperature. Prenatal stress alters the microbiome, and this can differ in different countries. Genetic differences in different ethnic groups may make some more vulnerable or more resilient to the effects of prenatal stress on child neurodevelopment. Most research on these questions has been in predominantly Caucasian samples from high-income countries. It is now time to understand more about prenatal stress and psychopathology, and the role of both social and biological differences, in the rest of the world.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Dev. Psychopathol.
          Development and psychopathology
          Cambridge University Press (CUP)
          1469-2198
          0954-5794
          August 2018
          : 30
          : 3
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Imperial College London.
          [2 ] McGill University.
          [3 ] University of Rochester Medical Center.
          [4 ] Monash University.
          Article
          S095457941800038X
          10.1017/S095457941800038X
          30068411
          c88acb80-4adb-421f-ba57-d917e9162d7f
          History

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