RESUMO
BACKGROUND: Fetal development is affected by maternal mental health with research indicating that maternal anxiety and depression are co-morbid; nevertheless differential effects on the fetus have been found. This study examines, prenatally, effects of maternal stress, anxiety and depression on fetal eye-blink reactions to experimental sound and light stimulation. METHODS: Two groups of singleton fetuses (mean 32-weeks gestation) were examined using 4D ultrasound: a control group (Nâ¯=â¯14, 7 female) with no stimulation and an experimental group (Nâ¯=â¯21, 13 female) exposed to experimental sound, light and cross-modal stimulation. For both groups ultrasound scans were performed and fetal eye-blink was assessed. Mothers completed the Hospital-Anxiety-and-Depression Scale and the Perceived-Stress Scale. Analysis was carried out using Poisson mixed effects modelling. RESULTS: Fetal eye-blink rate during experimental stimulation was significantly and differentially associated with maternal mental health with a 20% increase of fetal eye-blink rate for each unit increase in anxiety score (pâ¯=â¯0.02) and a decrease of 21% of eye blink rate for each unit of increase in depression score (pâ¯=â¯0.02). Sound stimulation but not light stimulation significantly affected blink-rate with fetuses habituating to the stimuli (pâ¯<â¯0.001). LIMITATIONS: Limitations are the relatively small number of fetuses and that a follow up after birth is essential to establish potential long-term effects. CONCLUSIONS: Of clinical importance is the finding that although fetuses are affected by maternal mental health in general here we demonstrate, using eye-blink-rate during stimulation as measure of neuro-development, that fetuses are differentially affected by maternal anxiety and depression with anxiety increasing and depression decreasing fetal reactivity significantly.