So many things change for a woman during pregnancy – and one of them could be her brain. New research suggests that "mommy brain" could be "a real thing", said The Washington Post, but the process is at odds with the "pop culture conception" of young mothers becoming "cognitively fuzzy and absent-minded".
Grey and white matter The brain undergoes a "sweeping reorganisation" when a woman is expecting a baby, said The Guardian, and few areas are untouched by the process. In the new study, regular MRI scans from before conception until two years after childbirth revealed "widespread" changes in the mother's brain.
Some regions of the brain, "especially those involved in social and emotional processing", got smaller, possibly "undergoing a fine-tuning process in preparation for parenting", said The New York Times. While grey matter decreased, there were significant increases in white matter, the nerve fibres that connect neurons and help different brain regions communicate. All of this remodelling, or neuroplasticity, took place across the brain at three times the rate seen in eight non-pregnant women who also had their brains scanned over the same period.
This "probably enables the onset of certain maternal behaviours", said New Scientist. The pattern had already been seen in rodents, in which increases in steroid hormones during pregnancy "trigger brain changes" that "enhance the mother's sensitivity to smells and sounds from her pups".
Scratching the surface Pregnancy is a "linchpin of human existence", said The Washington Post, but the maternal brain has been "understudied and underappreciated" until now. Several experts have welcomed the progress – Gina Rippon, from Aston University in Birmingham, told The Guardian it was "a truly heroic" study.
Some of the brain developments were still present two years after childbirth, "hinting at cellular changes in the organ" that could be permanent, said the paper. The study "really opens up more questions than it answers" and "we're really just starting to scratch the surface", said Dr Elizabeth Chrastil, from the University of California, Irvine.
A greater understanding of the brain's "remodelling" could explain several pregnancy-related behaviours, said New Scientist, as well as helping people at risk of mental health conditions. |