Children born to mothers with low levels of thyroid hormones during pregnancy are 60 % more likely to do badly in arithmetic tests when they reach school age as children born to mothers with normal levels of the
hormone; according to a study published today in the European Journal of Endocrinology.
Scientists have already found that relatively low levels of the thyroid hormone thyroxine in pregnant women is linked to poor mental development in their children during infancy. However, until now it has been
unclear how this change would be reflected in the children’s performance at school.
Dr Martijn Finken and colleagues at the VU University Medical Centre in The Netherlands studied 1,196 healthy children from birth to age five. At 12 weeks of pregnancy, the team recorded levels of maternal thyroxine.
The team then looked at the children’s school test scores for language and arithmetic at age five.
The study found that five year olds whose mothers had very low levels of thyroxine (within the lowest 10 % of the distribution) at the end of the first trimester of their pregnancy were almost twice (1.9 times)
as likely to score a subnormal mark in an arithmetic test than children whose mothers had normal thyroxine levels during early pregnancy. When the family background of these children and their variation in health at birth were taken into account then this
was reduced to 1.6 times – meaning they were actually 60 % more likely to score a subnormal mark. The children’s performance in language tests however was not affected. The performance of the child was based on how well they did in the test compared to the
rest of the class; a subnormal test performance was defined as coming in the lower 50% of the class.
Lead author of the study Dr Martijn Finken said: “Whether these problems persist into adulthood remains to be seen. We will continue to follow these children to answer this next big question.”
In the future, hormone tests could be used to identify children who will need extra help in mathematics at school. “It is possible that these children could benefit from hormonal supplements to boost their brain
development in the womb” suggested Dr Finken. “Such treatment has been tried in the past but as yet has failed to improve cognitive ability.”
No comments:
Post a Comment