Calgary: Increased stress biomarkers in women carrying female fetuses could explain some health outcomes. Researchers
at the University of Calgary have more clearly identified how gender
plays a significant part in a baby’s growth during pregnancy. Gerald
Giesbrecht, PhD, and his research team have shown that patterns of
maternal physiology differ as a function of fetal sex. The results of
the study were recently published in the journal Psychoneuroendocrinology.
“This is significant because we have known for some time that fetal
development is influenced by the maternal stress physiology but for the
first time we are showing that the sex of the fetus is also influencing
the mom," says Giesbrecht, who is an assistant professor in the
Department of Paediatrics in the Cumming School of Medicine and an
adjunct assistant professor in the Department of Psychology in the
Faculty of Arts.
The researcher is also one of the principal investigators in the newly opened Alberta Children’s Hospital Research Institute Owerko Centre for neurodevelopment and child mental health.
Study one of the largest longitudinal cohorts in Canada
The study was based on saliva samples taken from 295 healthy pregnant
women in Calgary from 2010-2012. These women were participants in
Alberta Pregnancy Outcomes and Nutrition (APRON) study which involved
thousands of women from Calgary and Edmonton, designed to analyze the
relationship between maternal nutrient status during pregnancy and
maternal mental health and child health and development. It represents
one of the largest and most comprehensive longitudinal cohorts
established in Canada.
Giesbrecht demonstrated that stress biomarkers — basal cortisol and
salivary alpha amylase (sAA) — differ by fetal sex in pregnant women.
Women carrying female fetuses displayed greater cortisol and sAA
secretions compared to women carrying males. Greater cortisol and sAA
were also associated with lower birth weight and provides new evidence
to suggest that the fetus plays a role in regulating its own growth
through its effects on maternal physiology.
New insight into sex differences
“We believe these findings provide new insight into sex differences
in a variety of stress-related outcomes, such as higher rates of
depression in females, which are linked with increases in cortisol and
sAA,” he says.
Until now, these sex-differences have been interpreted in terms of
gender-specific vulnerability. The new findings suggest that differences
in a variety of health and disease outcomes could originate from sex
specific patterns of stress-related exposures in utero.
“Researchers interested in child development often talk about
reciprocal influences — we need to start thinking about the ways these
reciprocal influences may operate during pregnancy and specifically the
ways that the fetus may help to shape its own development.”
The research was supported by grants from the Alberta Innovates
Health Solutions, the Canadian Institutes of Health Research and the
Alberta Centre for Child, Family and Community Research.