Læknablaðið : fylgirit - 01.08.2003, Qupperneq 14

Læknablaðið : fylgirit - 01.08.2003, Qupperneq 14
■ ABSTRACTS / 27TH NORDIC PSYCHIATRIC CONGRESS F - Free Papers F-1/1 Thursday 14/8,15:00-16:00 Modest excess of obstetric complications in the offspring of bipolar mothers Jamcs H. MacCabc Dr„ Clinical Researcher, Division of Psychological Medicine, Institute of Psychiatry, London, and Dept. of Medical Epidemiology, Karolinska Instítute, Stockholm, PO 63, Institute of Psychiatry, de Crespigny Park, London SE5 8AE Lennart Martinsson, Paul Lichtenstein, Emma Nilsson, Robin M. Murray, Christina M. Hultman. j.maccabe@iop.kcl.ac.uk Background: The role of pregnancy and birth complications (PBCs) in the aetiology of bipolar disorder is unclear, with most studies showing weak associations. The question of whether the offspring of bipolar mothers are at increased risk of experiencing obstetric complications has not been investigated. Aim: To use Swedish national registers to investigate the preva- lence of 5 PBCs (stillbirth, neonatal death, pre-term delivery, low birth weight and smallness for gestational age) in the offspring of mothers with bipolar affective disorder. Method: The study sample comprised data on 5,618 births to mothers with bipolar affective disorder, and 1,552,453 births to mothers without this diagnosis. Results: We found modest elevations in risk for low birth weight (unadjusted OR 1.36 (95%CI 1.21-1.55)) and pre-term delivery (OR 1.29 (1.15-1.45)). These associations were attenuated, but remained significant, after adjusting for maternal age, parity, smoking, cohabitation, education level, immigrant status, and pregnancy- induced hypertensive disease. An additional unadjusted association with smallness for gestational age (OR 1.31 (1.13-1.51) was accounted for mainly by an excess of smoking in the bipolar group. Conclusions: It appears that bipolar mothers have a modest excess of low birth weight and pre-term delivery in their offspring, which are not accounted for by smoking, nor by a range of other potential confounders. Possible explanations for this include a small genetic effect, medication effects, or misdiagnosis of some schizophrenic mothers as bipolar. F - 1 / 2 Thursday 14/8,15:00-16:00 Early risk factors for infantile autism: data from the Swedish Medical Birth Registry Hultman CM, Research Fellow, Associate Professor, Department of Medical Epidemio- logy and Biostatistics, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden. Cnattingius S, Sparén P. Christina. H ultman @mep. ki. se Background: Etiologic hypotheses in infantile autism suggest a strong genetic component as well as possible environmental risks linked to early fetal development. We evaluated the association of maternal, pregnancy, delivery, and infant characteristics with risks of infantile autism. Methods: We conducted a case-control study nested within a popu- lation-based cohort (all Swedish children born 1974-93). We used prospectively recorded data from the Swedish Birth Register, which was individually linked to the Swedish Inpatient Register. Cases were 408 children (321 boys and 87 girls) discharged with a main diagnosis of infantile autism from any hospital in Sweden before 10 years of age 1987-1994 and 2,040 matched controls. Conditional logistic regression was used to calculate odds ratios (ORs) and 95% confidence intervals (CIs). Results: The risk of autism was associated with daily smoking in early pregnancy (OR = 1.4; CI = 1.1-1.8), maternal birth outside Europe and North America (OR = 3.0; CI = 1.7-5.2), Cesarean delivery (OR = 1.6; CI = 1.1-2.3), small-for-gestational-age (OR = 2.1; CI = 1.1-3.9), an Apgar score below 7 at 5 minutes (OR = 3.2, CI = 1.2-8.2), and congenital malformations (OR = 1.8, CI = 1.1- 3.1). No association was found between autism and head circum- ference, maternal diabetes, being a twin or season of birth. Condusions: Our findings suggest that intrauterine and neonatal factors related to deviant intrauterine growth or fetal distress are important in the pathogenesis of autism. F-1/3 Thursday 1/8,15:00-16:00 Childhood motor skills and persistent anxiety in early adult life Engilbcrt Sigurðsson, Consultant Psychiatrist, Landspitali University Hospital, Department of Psychiatry, 101 Hringbraut, Reykjavík, Iceland engilbs@landspitali. is Background: Childhood motor impairment have been shown to be strongly associated with matemally rated persistent anxiety in male adolescents while no such association has been reported for female adolescents. Aims: To test the hypothesis that childhood motor skills are associ- ated with persistent anxiety in early adulthood. Method: A historic cohort study. Post hoc analysis of data from the UK National Child Development Study (n=17,000) to put the hypothesis to the test within the 1958 UK birth cohort using an internal comparison group. Odds ratios were used to examine the effect of motor impairment on persistent anxiety after adjusting for sex, social class, birth weight, depressive symptoms and, by proxy, early-onset psychoses. Rcsults: No association was found between childhood motor delay and persistent anxiety in early adult life in the cohort. No effect modification by sex was observed unlike the findings for the same cohort in adolescence. Conclusions: While childhood motor delay may be associated with persistent anxiety in adolescent males, this association does not seem to extend into adult life in the 1958 UK birth cohort. F-1/4 Thursday 14/8, 15:00-16:00 Depression and the incidence of first-ever stroke in 85- year olds Ingmar Skoog. Professor, Institute of Clinical Neurosciences, Göteborg, University, Dcpt. of Psychiatry, Sahlgrenska University Hospital, SE-413 45, Göteborg, Sweden. Liebetrau M, Steen B. ingmar.skoog@neuro.gu.se Background: Depression is common after stroke, but only little is known whether depression increases the risk for stroke. 14 L/EKNABLAÐIÐ / FYLGIRIT 48 2003/89
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