How early life stress impact maternal care : a systematic review of rodent studies

Detalhes bibliográficos
Autor(a) principal: Orso, Rodrigo
Data de Publicação: 2019
Outros Autores: Creutzberg, Kerstin Camile, Silva, Luis Eduardo Wearick da, Viola, Thiago Wendt, Tractenberg, Saulo Gantes, Benetti, Fernando, Grassi-Oliveira, Rodrigo
Tipo de documento: Artigo
Idioma: eng
Título da fonte: Repositório Institucional da UFRGS
Texto Completo: http://hdl.handle.net/10183/216372
Resumo: Background: Maternal care refers to the behavior performed by the dam to nourish and protect her litter during its early development. Frequent and high-quality performance of such maternal behaviors is critical for the neurodevelopment of the pups. Maternal exposure to stress during early development can impair maternal care and amplify the deleterious effects of poor maternal caregiving and neglect. As such, a thorough understanding of the effects caused by several models of early life stress on maternal care may yield more insights into the relationship between stress and maternal behavior. Methods: A systematic review was performed to identify and address the effects of early life stress on maternal behavior. The search was conducted using three online databases: PUBMED, Embase, and Web of Science. To provide clear evidence of the impact of stress on maternal care, in every study, the stress group was always compared to a control group. Outcomes were categorized into eight different behaviors: (1) licking/grooming; (2) arched-back nursing; (3) blanket-nursing/passive nursing; (4) nest building; (5) contact with pups; (6) harmful/adverse caregiving; (7) no contact; (8) nest exits. Additionally, the methodological quality of the studies was evaluated. Results: A total of 12 different early life stress protocols were identified from the 56 studies included in this systematic review. Our data demonstrate that different stress models can promote specific maternal patterns of behavior. Regarding the maternal separation protocol, we observed an overall increase in nursing and licking/grooming behaviors, which are essential for pup development. An increase in the number of nest exits, which represents a fragmentation of maternal care, was observed in the limited bedding protocol, but the total amount of maternal care appears to remain similar between groups. Conclusions: Each stress protocol has unique characteristics that increase the difficulty of rendering comparisons of maternal behavior. The increase in maternal care observed in the maternal separation protocol may be an attempt to overcompensate for the time off-nest. Fragmented maternal care is a key component of the limited bedding protocol. Moreover, the methodological approaches to evaluate maternal behavior, such as time, duration, and behavior type should be more homogeneous across studies.
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spelling Orso, RodrigoCreutzberg, Kerstin CamileSilva, Luis Eduardo Wearick daViola, Thiago WendtTractenberg, Saulo GantesBenetti, FernandoGrassi-Oliveira, Rodrigo2020-12-11T04:11:37Z20191662-5153http://hdl.handle.net/10183/216372001119254Background: Maternal care refers to the behavior performed by the dam to nourish and protect her litter during its early development. Frequent and high-quality performance of such maternal behaviors is critical for the neurodevelopment of the pups. Maternal exposure to stress during early development can impair maternal care and amplify the deleterious effects of poor maternal caregiving and neglect. As such, a thorough understanding of the effects caused by several models of early life stress on maternal care may yield more insights into the relationship between stress and maternal behavior. Methods: A systematic review was performed to identify and address the effects of early life stress on maternal behavior. The search was conducted using three online databases: PUBMED, Embase, and Web of Science. To provide clear evidence of the impact of stress on maternal care, in every study, the stress group was always compared to a control group. Outcomes were categorized into eight different behaviors: (1) licking/grooming; (2) arched-back nursing; (3) blanket-nursing/passive nursing; (4) nest building; (5) contact with pups; (6) harmful/adverse caregiving; (7) no contact; (8) nest exits. Additionally, the methodological quality of the studies was evaluated. Results: A total of 12 different early life stress protocols were identified from the 56 studies included in this systematic review. Our data demonstrate that different stress models can promote specific maternal patterns of behavior. Regarding the maternal separation protocol, we observed an overall increase in nursing and licking/grooming behaviors, which are essential for pup development. An increase in the number of nest exits, which represents a fragmentation of maternal care, was observed in the limited bedding protocol, but the total amount of maternal care appears to remain similar between groups. Conclusions: Each stress protocol has unique characteristics that increase the difficulty of rendering comparisons of maternal behavior. The increase in maternal care observed in the maternal separation protocol may be an attempt to overcompensate for the time off-nest. Fragmented maternal care is a key component of the limited bedding protocol. Moreover, the methodological approaches to evaluate maternal behavior, such as time, duration, and behavior type should be more homogeneous across studies.application/pdfengFrontiers in behavioral neuroscience. Lausanne. Vol.13 (Aug. 2019), 197, 17 p.Comportamento maternoEstresse fisiológicoRecém-nascidoEarly life stressMaternal careMaternal behaviorRodentSystematic reviewPostnatal stressHow early life stress impact maternal care : a systematic review of rodent studiesEstrangeiroinfo:eu-repo/semantics/articleinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersioninfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessreponame:Repositório Institucional da UFRGSinstname:Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul (UFRGS)instacron:UFRGSTEXT001119254.pdf.txt001119254.pdf.txtExtracted Texttext/plain84948http://www.lume.ufrgs.br/bitstream/10183/216372/2/001119254.pdf.txte07bf8dfdc8ec23758f5c4f5b67770e1MD52ORIGINAL001119254.pdfTexto completo (inglês)application/pdf3068739http://www.lume.ufrgs.br/bitstream/10183/216372/1/001119254.pdf5a0e59d04ec2032d8ae68f6b6df2e6d6MD5110183/2163722020-12-12 05:19:56.714803oai:www.lume.ufrgs.br:10183/216372Repositório de PublicaçõesPUBhttps://lume.ufrgs.br/oai/requestopendoar:2020-12-12T07:19:56Repositório Institucional da UFRGS - Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul (UFRGS)false
dc.title.pt_BR.fl_str_mv How early life stress impact maternal care : a systematic review of rodent studies
title How early life stress impact maternal care : a systematic review of rodent studies
spellingShingle How early life stress impact maternal care : a systematic review of rodent studies
Orso, Rodrigo
Comportamento materno
Estresse fisiológico
Recém-nascido
Early life stress
Maternal care
Maternal behavior
Rodent
Systematic review
Postnatal stress
title_short How early life stress impact maternal care : a systematic review of rodent studies
title_full How early life stress impact maternal care : a systematic review of rodent studies
title_fullStr How early life stress impact maternal care : a systematic review of rodent studies
title_full_unstemmed How early life stress impact maternal care : a systematic review of rodent studies
title_sort How early life stress impact maternal care : a systematic review of rodent studies
author Orso, Rodrigo
author_facet Orso, Rodrigo
Creutzberg, Kerstin Camile
Silva, Luis Eduardo Wearick da
Viola, Thiago Wendt
Tractenberg, Saulo Gantes
Benetti, Fernando
Grassi-Oliveira, Rodrigo
author_role author
author2 Creutzberg, Kerstin Camile
Silva, Luis Eduardo Wearick da
Viola, Thiago Wendt
Tractenberg, Saulo Gantes
Benetti, Fernando
Grassi-Oliveira, Rodrigo
author2_role author
author
author
author
author
author
dc.contributor.author.fl_str_mv Orso, Rodrigo
Creutzberg, Kerstin Camile
Silva, Luis Eduardo Wearick da
Viola, Thiago Wendt
Tractenberg, Saulo Gantes
Benetti, Fernando
Grassi-Oliveira, Rodrigo
dc.subject.por.fl_str_mv Comportamento materno
Estresse fisiológico
Recém-nascido
topic Comportamento materno
Estresse fisiológico
Recém-nascido
Early life stress
Maternal care
Maternal behavior
Rodent
Systematic review
Postnatal stress
dc.subject.eng.fl_str_mv Early life stress
Maternal care
Maternal behavior
Rodent
Systematic review
Postnatal stress
description Background: Maternal care refers to the behavior performed by the dam to nourish and protect her litter during its early development. Frequent and high-quality performance of such maternal behaviors is critical for the neurodevelopment of the pups. Maternal exposure to stress during early development can impair maternal care and amplify the deleterious effects of poor maternal caregiving and neglect. As such, a thorough understanding of the effects caused by several models of early life stress on maternal care may yield more insights into the relationship between stress and maternal behavior. Methods: A systematic review was performed to identify and address the effects of early life stress on maternal behavior. The search was conducted using three online databases: PUBMED, Embase, and Web of Science. To provide clear evidence of the impact of stress on maternal care, in every study, the stress group was always compared to a control group. Outcomes were categorized into eight different behaviors: (1) licking/grooming; (2) arched-back nursing; (3) blanket-nursing/passive nursing; (4) nest building; (5) contact with pups; (6) harmful/adverse caregiving; (7) no contact; (8) nest exits. Additionally, the methodological quality of the studies was evaluated. Results: A total of 12 different early life stress protocols were identified from the 56 studies included in this systematic review. Our data demonstrate that different stress models can promote specific maternal patterns of behavior. Regarding the maternal separation protocol, we observed an overall increase in nursing and licking/grooming behaviors, which are essential for pup development. An increase in the number of nest exits, which represents a fragmentation of maternal care, was observed in the limited bedding protocol, but the total amount of maternal care appears to remain similar between groups. Conclusions: Each stress protocol has unique characteristics that increase the difficulty of rendering comparisons of maternal behavior. The increase in maternal care observed in the maternal separation protocol may be an attempt to overcompensate for the time off-nest. Fragmented maternal care is a key component of the limited bedding protocol. Moreover, the methodological approaches to evaluate maternal behavior, such as time, duration, and behavior type should be more homogeneous across studies.
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dc.relation.ispartof.pt_BR.fl_str_mv Frontiers in behavioral neuroscience. Lausanne. Vol.13 (Aug. 2019), 197, 17 p.
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