Posts Tagged ‘prenatal’
Neb. Clears Path For Consideration Of Bill Providing Prenatal Care To Undocumented Immigrants
Nebraska lawmakers voted 36-0 Wednesday to bypass a legislative rule preventing bills from being introduced more than 10 days into a new legislative session, thereby allowing consideration of a bill (LB 1110) that would continue public insurance coverage for pregnant undocumented immigrants, the Lincoln Journal Star reports (Hicks, Lincoln Journal Star, 2/17)…
Prenatal alcohol exposure can alter the brain’s developing pain regulatory system
Prenatal alcohol exposure is widely known to impair brain development in exposed offspring. Rodent studies have shown that developmental deficits in newborns related to altered levels of a brain chemical called serotonin, leading to subsequent alterations in patterns of neonatal acute pain responses and/or hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal stress reactivity. New findings show a “blunted response” to an acutely painful event in alcohol-exposed human newborns, indicating that prenatal alcohol exposure may alter the brain’s developing pain regulatory system.
The Brain’s Developing Pain Regulatory System Can Be Altered By Prenatal Alcohol Exposure
Prenatal alcohol exposure is widely known to impair brain development in exposed offspring. Rodent studies have shown that developmental deficits in newborns related to altered levels of a brain chemical called serotonin (5-HT), leading to subsequent alterations in patterns of neonatal acute pain responses and/or hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) stress reactivity…
Risk Of Heart Disease Increased By Prenatal Exposure To Flu Pandemic
People exposed to a H1NI strain of influenza A while in utero were significantly more likely to have cardiovascular disease later in life, reveals a new study published in Journal of Developmental Origins of Health and Disease on Oct. 1. “Our point is that during pregnancy, even mild sickness from flu could affect development with longer consequences,” said senior author Caleb Finch, USC professor of gerontology and biological sciences.
Link Between Prenatal Exposure To Hong Kong Flu And Reduced Intelligence In Adulthood
The Hong Kong flu pandemic was responsible for more than 700,000 deaths worldwide in the late 1960s, with major disease outbreaks in Europe in the winter of 1969-1970. A number of studies have been conducted to determine if prenatal exposure to the influenza virus may result in mental disorders that affect a small portion of the population, but no studies have explored the possible effects of prenatal exposure on the mean intelligence in the general population.



