Maternal physical activity during pregnancy is associated with changes of brain cortical development and executive function in 8-year-old children
Xiaoxu Na, Aline Andres, Lilian Ouyang, Jayne Bellando, Mara Whiteside, Charles M. Glasier, Xiawei Ou

TL;DR
This study finds that physical activity during pregnancy is linked to better brain development and improved executive function in children at age 8.
Contribution
The study demonstrates longitudinal associations between maternal physical activity and child brain cortical development and executive function.
Findings
Higher maternal physical activity correlates with increased cortical surface area and volume in specific brain regions of 8-year-olds.
Maternal activity is negatively linked to executive function issues in children, as measured by BRIEF subscales.
Abstract
Physical activity during pregnancy is regarded as safe and desirable for uncomplicated pregnancy and benefits women’s overall health. It was also previously found to be positively associated with neonatal brain cortical development. This study aims to evaluate whether there are associations between maternal physical activity during pregnancy and child cortical brain development and executive function at age 8 years. Sixty-nine pregnant women and their children (38 boys and 31 girls) completed the longitudinal and prospective study and were included in this report. Maternal physical activity level was recorded using accelerometer worn on the ankle for 3–7 consecutive days each trimester during the pregnancy. Average daily steps and activity count as well as minutes spent in sedentary/light/moderate/vigorous activity modes were calculated. At age 8 years, their children’s brain cortical…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMaternal Mental Health During Pregnancy and Postpartum · Gestational Diabetes Research and Management · Prenatal Substance Exposure Effects
