Stress responses of infants and mothers to a still-face paradigm after traumatic childbirth.

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Version: Final published version
License: CC BY 4.0
Serval ID
serval:BIB_F35D9D4A0349
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Stress responses of infants and mothers to a still-face paradigm after traumatic childbirth.
Journal
Psychoneuroendocrinology
Author(s)
Messerli-Bürgy N., Sandoz V., Deforge C., Lacroix A., Sekarski N., Horsch A.
ISSN
1873-3360 (Electronic)
ISSN-L
0306-4530
Publication state
Published
Issued date
16/10/2024
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
171
Pages
107222
Language
english
Abstract
One-third of women experience childbirth as traumatic and some develop symptoms of childbirth-related posttraumatic stress symptoms (CB-PTSD symptoms). Whether CB-PTSD symptoms negatively impact on physiological and psychological stress responses in mothers and their offspring and whether they are associated with mother-infant synchrony is not clear. This study aimed to investigate stress responses of (1) mothers with CB-PTSS, (2) of their infant, and (3) the physiological mother-child-synchrony at six months postpartum.
Psychophysiological (cortisol and vagal tone) and psychological stress responses of mothers and infant's (n=31 dyads) from the Swiss TrAumatic biRth Trial (NCT03576586) were assessed during a face-to-face still-face paradigm (FFSF-R).
There was a significant time effect in maternal stress responses for salivary cortisol, vagal tone, and for maternal subjective stress. As expected, mothers' subjective stress increased during the stress task and mothers vagal tone changed during the first stressful period but not during the second, whereas cortisol unexpectedly decreased over the FFSF-R. Infant negative mood increased over the experiment, but there were no physiological changes. However, a significant interaction effect for mother-infant synchrony during the second reunion period of the FFSF-R was found.
Although mothers and their infants were subjectively stressed, they showed only limited physiological stress responses.
Keywords
Birth, PTSD, Physiological, Still-face paradigm, Stress response, Trauma
Pubmed
Web of science
Open Access
Yes
Funding(s)
Swiss National Science Foundation
Create date
23/10/2024 11:00
Last modification date
20/12/2024 7:07
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