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Infant Temperament Is Associated With Milk Cortisol but Not With Maternal Childhood Trauma.

Anna ApanasewiczMaja MatyasMagdalena PiosekNatalia JamrozikPatrycja WinczowskaMałgorzata Krzystek-KorpackaAnna Ziomkiewicz
Published in: American journal of human biology : the official journal of the Human Biology Council (2024)
Previous studies have suggested that maternal childhood trauma (MCT) may influence infant temperament, but the underlying physiological mechanisms remain unclear. This study sought to confirm the involvement of breast milk cortisol in the link between MCT and infant temperament. The study sample included 90 mother-infant dyads recruited from the urban Polish population. MCT was assessed based on the Early Life Stress Questionnaire (ELSQ) and infant temperamental factors (surgency/extraversion, negative affectivity, and orienting/regulation) using the Infant Behavior Questionnaire-Revised at 12 months of life. Cortisol was assayed in milk samples collected at 5 months of life using the ELISA method. Based on the ELSQ median, the sample was divided into low and high MCT groups. The ANCOVA models with milk cortisol as a covariant were run to check the effect of low versus high MCT on infant temperament. We found a positive association between milk cortisol and orienting/regulation. Surprisingly, the low and high MCT groups did not significantly differ in milk cortisol. Furthermore, we found that MCT was unrelated to any infant temperamental factor. While recent literature on the association between milk cortisol and infant temperament is inconsistent, our results suggest that high orienting/regulation might be an adaptation to adverse environments such as stress. Moreover, the infant's temperament appears to be more responsive to the current exposition to maternal stress than her experience of traumatic stress.
Keyphrases
  • early life
  • systematic review
  • spinal cord injury
  • physical activity
  • drug delivery
  • body mass index
  • birth weight
  • cancer therapy
  • young adults
  • heat stress
  • drug induced
  • adverse drug