Overly Long Pregnancies Linked to Behavioral Problems in Toddlers

THURSDAY, May 3 (HealthDay News) โ€” Children born after a longer-than-normal pregnancy are at increased risk for behavioral and emotional problems, a new study suggests.
The study found that attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) is an especially common problem among children who were born post-term, defined as birth after a pregnancy of 42 weeks.
The study of more than 5,000 infants in the Netherlands found that about 7 percent were born post-term, while 4 percent were born pre-term (before 37 weeks of pregnancy). Children who were born post-term and pre-term both had an increased risk of behavioral and emotional problems when they were 18 and 36 months old.
The post-term children were more than twice as likely as normal-term children to have ADHD symptoms, according to the study in the International Journal of Epidemiology.
The link between post-term birth and emotional and behavioral problems in early childhood did not appear to be explained by factors such as motherโ€™s weight and height, ethnicity, family income, alcohol consumption or smoking, education level, or the motherโ€™s mental health during pregnancy.
Although the study found an association between lengthy pregnancies and ADHD and other problems in babies, it did not prove causality.
More research is needed determine a causal relationship, as well as whether the link between post-term birth and emotional and behavioral problems continues past 36 months of age, lead author Hanan El Marroun said in a journal news release.
More information
The U.S. National Institute of Mental Health has more about attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder.
โ€“ Robert Preidt
SOURCE: health.com  International Journal of Epidemiology, news release, May 2, 2012

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