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Prenatal Maternal Stress and Cord Blood Innate and Adaptive Cytokine Responses in an Inner-city Cohort.

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Talk about avoiding the huge pink elephant in the room.   MOLD!!!!

>>>Prenatal Maternal Stress and Cord Blood Innate and Adaptive

Cytokine Responses in an Inner-city Cohort.

RJ, Visness CM, Calatroni A, Grayson MH, Gold DR, Sandel MT,

Lee-Parritz A, Wood RA, Kattan M, Bloomberg GR, Burger M, Togias A, Witter FR,

Sperling RS, Sadovsky Y, Gern JE.

Am J Respir Crit Care Med. 2010 Mar 1. [Epub ahead of print]

The Channing Laboratory, Department of Medicine, Brigham and Womenâs

Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts, United States;

Department of Environmental Health, Harvard School of Public Health, Boston,

Massachusetts, United States.

RATIONALE: Stress-elicited disruption of immunity begins in utero.

 

OBJECTIVES: Associations among prenatal maternal stress and cord blood

mononuclear cell (CBMC) cytokine responses were prospectively examined in the

Urban Environment and Childhood Asthma Study (N=557 families).

 

METHODS: Prenatal maternal stress included financial hardship, Difficult

Life Circumstances, community violence, neighborhood/ block and housing

conditions. Factor analysis produced latent variables representing three

contexts - individual stressors and ecological-level strains (housing and

neighborhood problems) which were combined to create a composite cumulative

stress indicator. CBMCs were incubated with innate [lipopolysaccharide , Poly

I:C, CpG, peptidoglycan] and adaptive [tetanus, dust mite, cockroach] stimuli,

RSV, phytohemagglutinin, or medium alone. Cytokines were measured using

multiplex ELISAs. Using linear regression, associations among increasing

cumulative stress and cytokine responses were examined adjusting for

sociodemographic factors, parity, season of birth, maternal asthma and steroid

use, and potential pathway variables (prenatal smoking, birth weight for

gestational age).

 

MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS: Mothers were primarily minorities [black

(71%), Latino (19%)] with an income <$15,000 (69%). Mothers with the highest

cumulative stress were older and more likely to have asthma and deliver lower

birth weight infants. Higher prenatal stress was related to increased IL-8

production after microbial (CpG, PIC, PG) stimuli and increased TNF-alpha to

microbial stimuli (CpG, PIC). In the adaptive panel, higher stress was

associated with increased IL-13 after dust mite stimulation and reduced

PHA-induced IFN-gamma.

 

CONCLUSIONS: Prenatal stress was associated with altered innate and

adaptive immune responses in CBMCs. Stress-induced perinatal immunomodulation

may impact the expression of allergic disease in these children.

PMID: 20194818 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]

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