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Journal Article

Citation

Bublitz MH, Stroud LR. Stress 2013; 16(6): 706-710.

Affiliation

Alpert Brown Medical School, Department of Psychiatry and Human Behavior, The Miriam Hospital, Centers for Behavioral and Preventive Medicine.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2013, Informa - Taylor and Francis Group)

DOI

10.3109/10253890.2013.825768

PMID

23863127

Abstract

Previous research on the association between maternal daily stress and cortisol in pregnancy has yielded inconsistent findings. However, past studies have not considered whether stressful experiences in childhood impact maternal cortisol regulation in pregnancy. In this pilot study we aimed to examine whether the association between maternal daily stress and cortisol differed according to maternal history of child abuse. Forty-one women provided salivary cortisol samples at wake-up, 30 minutes after wake-up, and bedtime for 3 days at 3 times over second and third trimesters of pregnancy. On each day of cortisol collection women reported their daily stress. Women reported child abuse experiences prior to age 18 by completing 15 items from the Adverse Childhood Experiences scale. Twenty-one percent (N=9) of women reported a history of child sexual abuse (CSA), 44% (N=18) reported a history of non-sexual child abuse, and 34% (N=14) reported no history of child abuse. Hierarchical Linear Modeling (HLM) analyses revealed that stress in the day prior was associated with increases in morning cortisol in women with CSA histories compared to women with non-sexual abuse histories or no history of child abuse. Increases in evening cortisol were associated with increases in daily stress in women with CSA histories compared to women with non-sexual abuse histories or no history of child abuse. Results reveal a dynamic association between daily stress and cortisol in pregnancy and suggest that patterns differ according to maternal child abuse history.


Language: en

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