BMC Medicine (Mar 2024)

Associations between maternal pre-pregnancy BMI and infant striatal mean diffusivity

  • Aylin Rosberg,
  • Harri Merisaari,
  • John D. Lewis,
  • Niloofar Hashempour,
  • Minna Lukkarinen,
  • Jerod M. Rasmussen,
  • Noora M. Scheinin,
  • Linnea Karlsson,
  • Hasse Karlsson,
  • Jetro J. Tuulari

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12916-024-03340-z
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 22, no. 1
pp. 1 – 9

Abstract

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Abstract Background It is well-established that parental obesity is a strong risk factor for offspring obesity. Further, a converging body of evidence now suggests that maternal weight profiles may affect the developing offspring’s brain in a manner that confers future obesity risk. Here, we investigated how pre-pregnancy maternal weight status influences the reward-related striatal areas of the offspring’s brain during in utero development. Methods We used diffusion tensor imaging to quantify the microstructure of the striatal brain regions of interest in neonates (N = 116 [66 males, 50 females], mean gestational weeks at birth [39.88], SD = 1.14; at scan [43.56], SD = 1.05). Linear regression was used to test the associations between maternal pre-pregnancy body mass index (BMI) and infant striatal mean diffusivity. Results High maternal pre-pregnancy BMI was associated with higher mean MD values in the infant’s left caudate nucleus. Results remained unchanged after the adjustment for covariates. Conclusions In utero exposure to maternal adiposity might have a growth-impairing impact on the mean diffusivity of the infant’s left caudate nucleus. Considering the involvement of the caudate nucleus in regulating eating behavior and food-related reward processing later in life, this finding calls for further investigations to define the prognostic relevance of early-life caudate nucleus development and weight trajectories of the offspring.

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