Hair cortisol levels in pregnancy as a possible determinant of fetal sex: a longitudinal study
Metadatos
Afficher la notice complèteAuteur
Romero González, Borja; Puertas González, José Antonio; González Pérez, Raquel; Davila, Marta; Peralta Ramírez, María IsabelEditorial
Cambridge University Press
Materia
Cortisol Pregnancy Stress Fetus Sex
Date
2020Referencia bibliográfica
Romero-Gonzalez, B., Puertas-Gonzalez, J., Gonzalez-Perez, R., Davila, M., & Peralta-Ramirez, M. (2021). Hair cortisol levels in pregnancy as a possible determinant of fetal sex: A longitudinal study. Journal of Developmental Origins of Health and Disease, 1-6. doi:10.1017/S2040174420001300
Patrocinador
Frontier Project “A-CTS-229-UGR18” of the Ministry of Economy, Knowledge, Business and University of the Junta de Andalucía; European Regional Development Fund (ERDF); Spanish Ministry of Science, Innovation and Universities, FPU program, reference number 18/00617; (Spanish Ministry of Economy, Industry and Competitiveness, FPI Program, reference number BES-2016-077619Résumé
Stress during pregnancy has been widely studied and associated to different variables, usually
with negative results for the health of the mother and the newborn, such as having a higher
risk of suffering postpartum depression, premature birth, obstetrics complications or low
birthweight, among others. However, there are not many lines of research that study the role
that the sex of the baby plays on this specific stress and vice versa. Thus, the main objective was
to analyse the relationship between the sex of the offspring and the stress of the mothers in the
first trimester of pregnancy. In order to achieve this, 108 women had their biological stress
measured (trough hair cortisol levels) and psychological stress evaluated (the Prenatal
Distress Questionnaire (PSS), the Perceived Stress Scale (PDQ) and the Stress Vulnerability
Inventory (IVE)). The results revealed significant differences in maternal hair cortisol levels
in the first trimester based on the sex of the baby they had given birth to (t = −2.04;
P < 0.05): the concentration of the hormone was higher if the baby was a girl (164.36:
54.45-284.87 pg/mg) than if it was a boy (101.13:37.95-193.56 pg/mg). These findings show that
the sex of the future baby could be conditioned, among many other variables, by the mother´s
stress levels during conception and first weeks of pregnancy. Further research is needed in this
area to support our findings.