Children who were exposed to cannabis in the womb
continue to show elevated rates of symptoms of psychopathology — depression,
anxiety and other psychiatric conditions — even as, at ages 11 and 12, they
head toward adolescence, according to research from the Department of
Psychological & Brain Sciences’ BRAIN Lab, led by Ryan Bogdan, associate professor in Arts & Sciences at
Washington University in St. Louis.
The findings, published Sept. 12 in the Journal of the
American Medical Association, Pediatrics,
is a follow-up to 2020 research from the Bogdan lab that revealed younger
children who had been prenatally exposed to cannabis were slightly more likely
to have had sleep problems, lower birth weight and lower cognitive performance,
among other things.
In both cases, the effect is strongest
when looking at exposure to cannabis after the pregnancy was known. To
determine whether or not these associations persisted as the children aged,
David Baranger, a postdoctoral researcher in the BRAIN Lab, returned to the
more than 10,500 children from the 2020 analysis. They averaged 10 years old in
2020.
The data on the children and their mothers came from
the Adolescent Brain and Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study, an ongoing study of nearly 12,000 children,
beginning when they were 9-10 years old, and their parent or caregiver. The
study, which is funded by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and its
federal partners, began in 2016, when participants were enrolled at 22 sites
across the United States.
This seemingly small change in age —
from 10 to 12 — is an important one. “During the first wave, they were just
children. Now they’re edging up on adolescence,” Baranger said. “We know this
is a period when a large proportion of mental health diagnoses occur.”
An analysis of the more recent data
showed no significant changes in the rate of psychiatric conditions as the
children aged; they remain at greater risk for clinical psychiatric disorders
and problematic substance use as they enter the later adolescent years.
“Once they hit 14 or 15, we’re expecting to see further increases in mental health disorders or other psychiatric conditions — increases that will continue into the kids’ early 20s,” Baranger said.
Source: https://source.wustl.edu/2022/09/problems-persist-for-kids-exposed-to-cannabis-in-the-womb/
Journal article: https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jamapediatrics/article-abstract/2795863
Source: Problems persist for kids exposed to cannabis in
the womb – Scents of Science (myfusimotors.com)
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