Motherhood may actually cause the brain to grow, not turn it into mush,  as some have claimed. Exploratory research published by the American  Psychological Association found that the brains of new mothers bulked up  in areas linked to motivation and behavior, and that mothers who gushed  the most about their babies showed the greatest growth in key parts of  the mid-brain.
Led by neuroscientist Pilyoung Kim, PhD, now with the National  Institute of Mental Health, the authors speculated that hormonal changes  right after birth,  
including increases in estrogen, oxytocin and  prolactin, may help make mothers' brains susceptible to reshaping in  response to the baby. Their findings were published in the October issue  of Behavioral Neuroscience.
The motivation to take care of a baby, and the hallmark traits of  motherhood, might be less of an instinctive response and more of a  result of active brain building, neuroscientists Craig Kinsley, PhD, and  Elizabeth Meyer, PhD, wrote in a special commentary in the same journal  issue.
The researchers performed baseline and follow-up high-resolution  magnetic-resonance imaging on the brains of 19 women who gave birth at  Yale-New Haven Hospital, 10 to boys and nine to girls. A comparison of  images taken two to four weeks and three to four months after the women  gave birth showed that gray matter volume increased by a small but  significant amount in various parts of the brain. In adults, gray matter  volume doesn't ordinarily change over a few months without significant  learning, brain injury or illness, or major environmental change.
The areas affected support maternal motivation (hypothalamus), reward  and emotion processing (substantia nigra and amygdala), sensory  integration (parietal lobe), and reasoning and judgment (prefrontal  cortex).
In particular, the mothers who most enthusiastically rated their  babies as special, beautiful, ideal, perfect and so on were  significantly more likely to develop bigger mid-brains than the less  awestruck mothers in key areas linked to maternal motivation, rewards  and the regulation of emotions.
The mothers averaged just over 33 years in age and 18 years of  school. All were breastfeeding, nearly half had other children and none  had serious postpartum depression.
Although these early findings require replication with a larger and  more representative sample, they raise intriguing questions about the  interaction between mother and child (or parent and child, since fathers  are also the focus of study). The intense sensory-tactile stimulation  of a baby may trigger the adult brain to grow in key areas, allowing  mothers, in this case, to "orchestrate a new and increased repertoire of  complex interactive behaviors with infants," the authors wrote.  Expansion in the brain's "motivation" area in particular could lead to  more nurturing, which would help babies survive and thrive physically,  emotionally and cognitively.
Further study using adoptive mothers could help "tease out effects of  postpartum hormones versus mother-infant interactions," said Kim, and  help resolve the question of whether the brain changes behavior or  behavior changes the brain -- or both.
The authors said that postpartum depression may involve reductions in  the same brain areas that grew in mothers who were not depressed. "The  abnormal changes may be associated with difficulties in learning the  rewarding value of infant stimuli and in regulating emotions during the  postpartum period," they said. Further study is expected to clarify what  happens in the brains of mothers at risk, which may lead to improved  interventions.
In their "Theoretical Comment," Kinsley and Meyer, of the University  of Richmond, connected this research on human mothers to similar basic  research findings in laboratory animals. All the scientists agreed that  further research may show whether increased brain volumes are due to  growth in nerve cells themselves, longer and more complex connections  (dendrites and dendritic spines) between them, or bushier branching in  nerve-cell networks.
Editor's Note: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment.
source : www.sciencedaily.com
      
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New Mothers Grow Bigger Brains Within Months of Giving Birth: Warmer Feelings Toward Babies Linked to Bigger Mid-Brains
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Label: Baby, Mid Brains, mom, New Born


