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Maternal stress in conception linked to higher chance of female foetus


Researchers from the Mind, Brain and Behaviour Research Centre (CIMCYC), the Department of Pharmacology (Faculty of Pharmacy), and the Faculty of Psychology have analysed the levels of cortisol (a steroid hormone that is released in response to stress) in the hair of pregnant women in the period spanning from before conception to week 9 of pregnancy, to determine whether there was any link with the sex of the baby.
A total of 108 women were monitored from the first weeks of pregnancy through to delivery, to record their stress levels before, during, and after conception via the concentration of cortisol in their hair and various psychological tests.

Isabel-peralta-ram , Department-of-pharmacology-faculty-pharmacy , Journal-of-developmental-origins-health , Behaviour-research-centre , University-of-granada , Department-of-personality , Psychological-treatment , Developmental-origins , இசபெல்-பெரால்டா-ரேம் , துறை-ஆஃப்-மருந்தியல்-ஆசிரிய-மருந்தகம் , இதழ்-ஆஃப்-வளர்ச்சி-ஆரிஜிந்ஸ்-ஆரோக்கியம் , நடத்தை-ஆராய்ச்சி-மையம்

Stress During Conception: Women are Less Twice Likely to Give Birth to a Boy


by Hannah Joy on 
April 7, 2021 at 5:04 PM
Women who experience stress during conception are twice as likely to give birth to a girl than a boy, reveals a new study.
A total of 108 women participated in the research from the first weeks of pregnancy to delivery, having recorded their stress levels before, during, and after conception (via the concentration of cortisol in hair) and performed different psychological tests.
A study carried out by scientists from the University of Granada (UGR) has revealed that women who experience stress both before becoming pregnant and during conception are almost twice as likely to have a girl as a boy.

Isabel-peralta-ram , Department-of-pharmacology-faculty-pharmacy , Maternal-stress-during-pregnancy-impairs-child-health , Journal-of-developmental-origins-health , Behaviour-research-centre , University-of-granada , Department-of-personality , During-pregnancy-on-newborns-health , Psychological-treatment , Developmental-origins , During-pregnancy-affects-aging-biomarker , Stress-during-pregnancy-impairs-child-health

Women who experience more stress around time of conception are twice as likely to give birth

Women who experience more stress around time of conception are twice as likely to give birth
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Granada , Andalucísp , Spain , Spanish , Isabel-peralta-ram , Department-of-pharmacology-faculty-pharmacy , Spanish-ministry-of-science , Journal-of-developmental-origins-health , Behaviour-research-centre , University-of-granada , Department-of-personality , Psychological-treatment

Health: Women under more stress around conception are twice as likely to give birth to a GIRL


Women are twice as likely to give birth to a girl if they experienced more stress around the time of conception, a study has found.
Researchers from Spain recorded the levels of the stress hormone cortisol in the hair of 108 women from around week nine of their pregnancy through to delivery.
Each hair measurement covered the cortisol levels for the preceding three months — meaning the first one taken covered the period prior to and including conception.
The findings confirm that foetuses are vulnerable to the effects of maternal stress and that such can play a key role in their development.

United-kingdom , Granada , Andalucísp , Spain , Isabel-peralta-ram , Tommy , Journal-of-developmental-origins-health , University-of-granada , Professor-peralta-ram , Developmental-origins , ஒன்றுபட்டது-கிஂக்டம்

Study links maternal stress in conception to higher chance of female foetus


Study links maternal stress in conception to higher chance of female foetus
ANI |
Updated: Apr 06, 2021 22:02 IST
Washington [US], April 6 (ANI): A study carried out by scientists from the University of Granada (UGR) has revealed that women who experience stress both before becoming pregnant and during conception are almost twice as likely to have a girl as a boy.
A total of 108 women participated in the research from the first weeks of pregnancy to delivery, having recorded their stress levels before, during, and after conception (via the concentration of cortisol in hair) and performed different psychological tests
Researchers from the Mind, Brain and Behaviour Research Centre (CIMCYC), the Department of Pharmacology (Faculty of Pharmacy), and the Faculty of Psychology have analysed the levels of cortisol (a steroid hormone that is released in response to stress) in the hair of pregnant women in the period spanning from before conception to week 9 of pregnancy, to determine whether there was any link with the sex of the baby.

Washington , United-states , Maria-isabel-peralta-ramirez , Department-of-pharmacology-faculty-pharmacy , Journal-of-developmental-origins-health , Behaviour-research-centre , University-of-granada , Department-of-personality , Isabel-peralta-ramirez , Psychological-treatment , Developmental-origins , வாஷிங்டன்

Mother's stress levels during conception could be a determinant of fetal sex


Mother's stress levels during conception could be a determinant of fetal sex
A study carried out by scientists from the University of Granada (UGR) has revealed that women who experience stress both before becoming pregnant and during conception are almost twice as likely to have a girl as a boy.
Researchers from the Mind, Brain and Behavior Research Centre (CIMCYC), the Department of Pharmacology (Faculty of Pharmacy), and the Faculty of Psychology have analyzed the levels of cortisol (a steroid hormone that is released in response to stress) in the hair of pregnant women in the period spanning from before conception to week 9 of pregnancy, to determine whether there was any link with the sex of the baby.

Granada , Andalucísp , Spain , Spanish , Isabel-peralta-ram , Emily-henderson , Department-of-pharmacology-faculty-pharmacy , Behavior-research-centre , Spanish-ministry-of-science , Journal-of-developmental-origins-health , University-of-granada , Department-of-personality

Maternal stress in conception linked to higher chance of female foetus

Maternal stress in conception linked to higher chance of female foetus
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Granada , Andalucísp , Spain , Spanish , Isabel-peralta-ram , Department-of-pharmacology-faculty-pharmacy , Spanish-ministry-of-science , Journal-of-developmental-origins-health , Behaviour-research-centre , University-of-granada , Department-of-personality , Psychological-treatment

Boiling peanuts and then eating them under medical supervision might help stop food allergies


Eating peanuts that have been boiled in water could cut the risk of life-threatening reactions in those who are allergic, according to researchers at Imperial College London, who are now testing the approach in a trial.
Boiling peanuts for 20 to 30 minutes washes out some of the proteins that can trigger often fatal responses — and which remain for example after roasting.
Once the nuts have been boiled and cooled, they are fed under medical supervision to those with a peanut allergy. This is in minute quantities at first — a few crumbs every few weeks — but is increased to six to eight whole peanuts at a time over the course of a year.

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New study looks at how to reduce the risk of children developing peanut allergies


 
WINNIPEG --
A new study has found a way to potentially reduce the risk of children developing a peanut allergy.
The study, led by researchers from the University of Manitoba as well as McMaster University looked at how a baby's sensitivity to peanuts was affected if the mother was eating peanuts while breastfeeding, and also introducing peanut products to babies before they were a year old.
Dr. Meghan Azad, who is an associate professor at the U of M and is also with the Children's Hospital Research Institute of Manitoba, is the lead researcher on this study and said the theory is called the triple exposure hypothesis.

Meghan-azad , Mcmaster-university , Children-hospital-research-institute-of-manitoba , Journal-of-developmental-origins-health , University-of-manitoba , Hospital-research-institute , Developmental-origins , மேகன்-அசாத் , மக்மாஸ்டர்-பல்கலைக்கழகம் , குழந்தைகள்-மருத்துவமனை-ஆராய்ச்சி-நிறுவனம்-ஆஃப்-ம்யாநிடோப , இதழ்-ஆஃப்-வளர்ச்சி-ஆரிஜிந்ஸ்-ஆரோக்கியம் , பல்கலைக்கழகம்-ஆஃப்-ம்யாநிடோப

'Triple exposure' to peanuts may reduce allergy risk in children, study finds


 
TORONTO --
A new study suggests that ‘triple exposure’ to peanuts in newborn babies may reduce the risk of developing a peanut allergy later in life.
Researchers at the University of Manitoba and McMaster University – published last week in the Journal of Developmental Origins of Health and Disease --  found that mothers who eat peanuts while breastfeeding and introduce peanuts to their babies before the age of 12 months reduce the risk of a peanut sensitivity developing in their child within the next four years by 88 per cent.
“If a mom breastfed, ate peanuts herself andintroduced it early to her child, the combined effect of all three exposures seemed to offer an enhanced protection against peanut sensitization and future allergy risk.” Dr. Meghan Azad, a senior author of the study and an associate professor and Canada research chair in Developmental Origins of Chronic Disease at the University of Manitoba, said in a news release.

Canada , Toronto , Ontario , Canadian , Meghan-azad , Mcmaster-university , Journal-of-developmental-origins-health , University-of-manitoba , Developmental-origins , Chronic-disease , கனடா , டொராண்டோ