Abstract

Very premature children (<33 weeks of gestational age (GA)) experience greater academic difficulties and have lower, though normal-range, intelligence quotients (IQs) versus their full-term peers. These differences are often attributed to GA or familial socio-economic status (SES). However, additional factors are increasingly recognized as likely contributors. Parental stress after a child’s premature birth can present as post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) symptoms and can in turn reinforce difficulties in parent-child interaction pattern. Following a longitudinal design, we studied the interplay between a premature child’s perinatal history and maternal PTSD symptoms on intelligence abilities assessed at 11 years of age. Thirty-three very preterm and 21 full-term mother-children dyads partook in the study. Children’s perinatal risk was evaluated at hospital discharge, maternal PTSD symptoms were assessed when the children were 18 months old, and children’s IQ was measured at 11 years old. IQ was significantly lower for preterm than full-term children, without reliable influences from perinatal risk scores. However, lower maternal PTSD symptoms predicted higher IQ in preterm children. This preliminary study highlights the importance detecting maternal PTSD symptoms after a preterm birth and suggests interventions should target reducing maternal PTSD symptoms during early childhood to enhance very preterm children’s intelligence development.

Highlights

  • 10% of babies are born prematurely (

  • Vinall et al.[27] showed that the greater is the number of invasive procedures during the NICU stay, the lower is the fractional anisotropy value of the superior white matter, which was in turn associated with lower intelligence quotients (IQs) scores at 7 years old

  • Few studies have considered the severity of perinatal problems, varying for every premature baby, and maternal post-traumatic stress disorders (PTSD) symptoms on a preterm-born child’s outcomes[17,28]

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Summary

Introduction

10% of babies are born prematurely (

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