Flu in Pregnancy Linked to Schizophrenia
A bout of the flu during the first half
of pregnancy may damage the fetal brain and raises the risk of
children developing schizophrenia later in life, researchers said.
In a small 64-family sample, researchers
found the risk of developing the major mental disorder in adult
offspring rose seven-fold if the expectant mother had the flu
during the first trimester.
If the virus struck between the
midpoint of the pregnancy's first trimester and the midpoint of
the second, the risk rose three-fold. There was no increased risk
if the flu occurred in the second half of the pregnancy.
"These findings represent the strongest
evidence thus far that prenatal exposure to influenza plays a
role in schizophrenia," said the study's lead author, Ezra Susser
of the New York State Psychiatric Institute.
In previous studies establishing
a connection between flu in pregnant mothers and schizophrenia
in their children, the link was seen in the second and third trimesters,
the study said.
Unlike those studies, which used
estimates of the peaks of flu outbreaks and mothers' memories,
this research examined preserved blood samples taken between 1959
and 1966. The research is part of a larger study of schizophrenia
examining prenatal infection, nutrition, chemical exposure, paternal
age and other factors.
Among the people in the study with
schizophrenia, one quarter of their mothers had been exposed to
influenza compared to one in 10 of the control subjects.
Schizophrenia is a general term
referring to psychotic disorders that produce delusional or illogical
thinking. Initial signs of the disease typically emerge in people
in their teens or 20s.
The study suggested factors that
could damage the fetal brain including the mother's antibodies
crossing the placenta and reacting with the fetus' developing
immune system, the presence of genetic material from the strain
of influenza, and the mother's elevated body temperature.
Over-the-counter flu remedies also
might cause central nervous system problems, it said.
The study's findings may raise
questions about routine vaccinations of women because the antibodies
generated could damage a fetus.
The study was published in the
Archives of General Psychiatry.
Reference
Source 89
August 3, 2004
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