Many things are passed down from mother to child, and now, research is finding that stress is on that list! Join Trace as he discusses how prenatal maternal stress can impact you later in life!
What about wars such at WWII and Vietnam. I am sure these stressors affected methylation patterns on genes and stress response. Also there is work by Racheal Yehuda who had studied the children of men and women who survived Nazi concentration camps and her work has shown differential methylation patterns in offspring based on whether the mother or father had PTSD and the age of the parent while in the camps. There are many studies including preclinical studies in Rhesus Monkeys, for example the work by Stephen Soumi on differential DNA methylation and histone binding sites based on early infant rearing patterns - infact 1/4 about 5000 of the genes were differentially methylated in animals exposed to early maternal deprivation vs those with good maternal care. This is important work. Genes that are protective in one situation - good maternal care are risk genes with negative maternal care. Very important work indeed. Early Experiences matter not just post-natally but anti-natally as well.
When you block a person, they can no longer invite you to a private message or post to your profile wall. Replies and comments they make will be collapsed/hidden by default. Finally, you'll never receive email notifications about content they create or likes they designate for your content.
Note: if you proceed, you will no longer be following .
Comments (1)