The association between neighborhood environment, prenatal exposure to alcohol and tobacco, and structural brain development
Yingjing Xia, Verónica M. Vieira

TL;DR
This study explores how neighborhood environment and prenatal exposure to alcohol or tobacco affect brain development in children.
Contribution
The study reveals how neighborhood environment interacts differently with prenatal tobacco exposure in influencing brain volume.
Findings
High residential area deprivation was associated with smaller right hippocampal volume.
Prenatal tobacco exposure was linked to smaller volumes in several brain regions.
Neighborhood environment effects on brain volume were not significant in children with prenatal tobacco exposure.
Abstract
Prenatal alcohol and tobacco exposure affects child brain development. Less is known about how neighborhood environment (built, institutional, and social) may be associated with structural brain development and whether prenatal exposure to alcohol or tobacco may modify this relationship. The current study aimed to examine whether neighborhood environment is associated with brain volume at age 9–11, and whether prenatal exposure to alcohol or tobacco modifies this relationship. Baseline data from Adolescent Brain and Cognitive Development (ABCD) study was analyzed (N = 7,887). Neighborhood environment was characterized by 10 variables from the linked external dataset. Prenatal alcohol and tobacco exposures were dichotomized based on the developmental history questionnaire. Bilateral volumes of three regions of interests (hippocampal, parahippocampal, and entorhinal) were examined as…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPrenatal Substance Exposure Effects · Birth, Development, and Health · Fatty Acid Research and Health
