Early Pregnancy Memory Impact Study
Early Pregnancy Memory Impact Study
To cite this article: R.H.M. de Groot , G. Hornstra , N. Roozendaal & J. Jolles (2003) Memory
Performance, but not Information Processing Speed, may be Reduced During Early Pregnancy,
Journal of Clinical and Experimental Neuropsychology, 25:4, 482-488
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                                                                                       Journal of Clinical and Experimental Neuropsychology                             1380-3395/03/2504-482$16.00
                                                                                       2003, Vol. 25, No. 4, pp. 482–488                                                       # Swets & Zeitlinger
ABSTRACT
                                                                                 Several studies have investigated aspects of cognitive functioning during late pregnancy or in the period
                                                                                 around delivery. The present paper describes a controlled study of neurocognitive functioning in an early
                                                                                 phase of pregnancy (14 weeks). Seventy-one pregnant women and 57 control subjects matched for age and
                                                                                 education were tested with a cognitive test battery. Intentional learning was tested with the Verbal Learning
                                                                                 Test, retrieval from semantic memory with the Fluency Test, and speed of information processing with the
                                                                                 Concept Shifting Test, the Stroop test, and the Letter Digit Substitution Test. Results show that performance
                                                                                 on tests measuring intentional learning and retrieval from semantic memory were lower in the pregnant
                                                                                 group during early pregnancy as compared to a closely matched nonpregnant group. In contrast, speed of
                                                                                 information processing was not different between the two groups. The differences observed in memory
                                                                                 performance were not large and further research is needed to establish their clinical significance. In addition,
                                                                                 the results should be interpreted with care, because our study has a cross-sectional design, which has
                                                                                 limitations concerning the fact that preexisting performance differences might be possible. Therefore,
                                                                                 longitudinal studies are essential to ascertain clear associations between pregnancy and cognitive
                                                                                 performance.
                                                                           Address correspondence to: R.H.M. de Groot, Department of Human Biology, Maastricht University, P.O. Box
                                                                           616, 6200MD Maastricht, The Netherlands. Tel.: þ 31 433881507. Fax: þ 31 433670976. E-mail:
                                                                           RHM.deGroot@HB.unimaas.nl
                                                                           Accepted for publication: September 23, 2002.
                                                                                                                      MEMORY PERFORMANCE                                                   483
                                                                           possibility that early pregnancy is already char-        normal health, that is, not suffering from any metabolic,
                                                                           acterized by cognitive changes is of importance as       cardiovascular, renal, psychiatric, or neurological dis-
                                                                           there is not yet a profound change in psychosocial       orders. Exclusion criteria were diastolic blood pressure
                                                                                                                                    higher than 90 mmHg, multiple pregnancy, consump-
                                                                           circumstances around the pregnant woman. Pos-            tion of dietary supplements rich in polyunsaturated fatty
                                                                           sible changes in cognitive functioning could             acids, and not being of Caucasian origin, in order to
                                                                           therefore more directly be ascribed to biological        limit scatter of the measuring results due to large
                                                                           changes in the body brought about by hormones or         differences in genetic, social, and cultural patterns.
                                                                           by a redistribution of nutrients essential for brain         The nonpregnant women in the control group were
                                                                           functioning (e.g., long chain highly unsaturated         friends or family members of the pregnant women, or
                                                                                                                                    were recruited by advertisements in local newspapers.
                                                                           essential fatty acids) in favor of the unborn child.
                                                                                                                                    All in- and exclusion criteria were the same as for the
                                                                              The present study investigated whether cogni-
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                                                                           Concept Shifting Test (CST)                                  in a random order. On the rest of the page, boxes are
                                                                           The Concept Shifting Test (CST) was used to measure          presented with just letters. Subjects were asked to fill in
                                                                           visual conceptual and visuomotor tracking (Houx,             as many corresponding numbers as possible within
                                                                           1991; Vink & Jolles, 1985). This test consists of four       1 min. The total number of digits correctly related to a
                                                                           test sheets. On each test sheet, 16 small circles are        letter was used as the dependent variable.
                                                                           grouped in a larger circle. On the first sheet, numbers
                                                                           appear in a fixed random order, on the second sheet          Statistics
                                                                           letters, and on the third sheet both. Subjects were          One pregnant subject did not have reliable test results,
                                                                           requested to cross out the items in the right order (1-2-    because the conditions under which she performed the
                                                                           3-4 (Subtask I), A-B-C-D (Subtask II), 1A-2B-3C              cognitive tests were unacceptable. Data for this person
                                                                           (Subtask III), respectively); the time required to do this   were excluded from the analyses. Individual data were
                                                                           was measured with a stopwatch. A fourth sheet with           screened for extreme values based on normative data
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                                                                           empty circles (Subtask IV), which had to be crossed out      from the Maastricht Aging Study (van Boxtel et al.,
                                                                           as fast as possible, was used to correct for motor speed.    1998); Five datapoints were considered outliers, with
                                                                           Mean speed for Subtasks I and II, corrected for motor        values outside the range of þ / 3*SD, and were
                                                                           speed (Subtask IV), was used as a measure of general         excluded from the analyses.
                                                                           information processing speed. Subtask III, also cor-             Subject characteristics were examined for statistical
                                                                           rected for motor speed, was used as a measure of             differences between the two groups by unpaired t tests.
                                                                           concept shifting ability.                                    The Mann–Whitney U-test analyzed the differences
                                                                                                                                        in education and number of pregnancies. The group
                                                                           Fluency (FLU)                                                differences for the dependent variables were analyzed
                                                                           The subjects completed a fluency task (Lezak, 1995) as       by ANOVA with education and total number of
                                                                           a measure of retrieval from long-term semantic               pregnancies as covariates. In the analysis of the WLT
                                                                           memory. Subjects had to name as many animals as              a correction for test version was applied too. The CST
                                                                           possible within 1 min. Fluency is a measure of the           was also analyzed by a two-way ANOVA for group 
                                                                           adequate, strategy-driven retrieval of information from      repeated measures (two variables), to find out whether
                                                                           semantic memory. The number of animals named was             there was a differential effect for concept shifting (CST
                                                                           used as dependent variable.                                  III) or general speed (mean CST I/II). The same was
                                                                                                                                        done for the Stroop test. A p level of < .05 was con-
                                                                           Stroop Color-Word Interference Test                          sidered statistically significant.
                                                                           The Stroop Color-Word Interference Test was used to
                                                                           test selective attention (Klein, Ponds, Houx, & Jolles,
                                                                           1997; Stroop, 1935). The test involves three cards           RESULTS
                                                                           displaying 40 stimuli each: color names printed in black
                                                                           (Subtask I), colored patches (Subtask II), and color
                                                                           names printed in one of the other colors (Subtask III).      Subject Characteristics
                                                                           For Subtask I subjects had to read aloud the printed         Table 1 shows the subject characteristics. With an
                                                                           items, for Subtask II they had to name to color of the       unpaired t test no statistically significant differ-
                                                                           patches and for Subtask III they had to name the ink         ences were found between the two groups for age,
                                                                           color the words were printed in. The amount of extra         height, and weight. The control subjects tended to
                                                                           time needed to discard irrelevant but very salient           have attained a higher level of education
                                                                           information (reading) in favor of a less obvious aspect
                                                                                                                                        (p ¼ 0.0628). We therefore decided to use a sta-
                                                                           (color naming) was recorded. Mean speed for Subtasks
                                                                           I and II was used as a measure of general information        tistical design in which education was controlled
                                                                           processing speed. Subtask III was used as a measure of       for. The average total number of pregnancies was
                                                                           color word interference susceptibility.                      statistically different between the two groups
                                                                                                                                        (p ¼ .0014). Therefore, we corrected for both
                                                                           Letter-Digit-Substitution-Test (LDST)                        education and total number of pregnancies.
                                                                           The Letter-Digit-Substitution-Test (LDST) is related to
                                                                           the Symbol-Digit Modalities Test developed by Smith
                                                                                                                                        Intentional Learning Task and Retrieval
                                                                           (Smith, 1968), which originates from the Digit Symbol
                                                                           Test developed by Wechsler (Wechsler, 1958). The             from Semantic Memory
                                                                           LDST was used to measure the efficiency of operations        The control group had a significantly higher score
                                                                           in working memory. At the top of the test sheet, a box is    on the WLTtot (mean  SD 11.77  1.34, n ¼ 57)
                                                                           presented with nine numbers coupled with nine letters        than the pregnant group (11.07  1.35, n ¼ 70,
                                                                                                                      MEMORY PERFORMANCE                                                485
                                                                           0                                                       0 (0)                                      17   (29.8)
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                                                                           1                                                      25 (35.2)                                   11   (19.3)
                                                                           2                                                      31 (43.7)                                   17   (29.8)
                                                                           3                                                       9 (12.7)                                    8   (14.0)
                                                                           >3                                                      6 (8.4)                                     4   (7.1)
                                                                           Note. 1The age range is 21–39 years.
                                                                                 2
                                                                                  Education was measured on an 8-point scale.
                                                                                  Significant.
Table 2. Cognitive Test Performance in the Pregnant Group Versus the Control Group (Mean SD).
                                                                           p ¼ .015). The same was found for WLT delayed             Speed of Information Processing
                                                                           recall task: 12.75  1.83 for the control group           General speed of processing and concept shifting
                                                                           (n ¼ 57) versus 11.69  2.06 for the pregnant             in the concept shifting test were not different
                                                                           group (n ¼ 70, p ¼ .006) (see Table 2).                   between the two groups (see also Table 2). Two
                                                                              With respect to retrieval from long-term               scores on this test were analyzed; the mean of
                                                                           semantic memory, the pregnant group had a                 Version I and II as the general speed of informa-
                                                                           significantly lower score for the fluency test than       tion processing (p ¼ .421) and the score of Ver-
                                                                           did the control group (24.80  5.46, n ¼ 70 vs.           sion III as a measure of concept shifting ability
                                                                           27.84  5.79, n ¼ 57; p ¼ .006 after correction for       ( p ¼ .303). By two-way repeated measures
                                                                           education and number of pregnancies).                     ANOVA no differential effect was found for
                                                                              Analyses without correction for number of              concept shifting.
                                                                           pregnancies revealed comparable results (WLTtot               Likewise, there were no significant group
                                                                           p ¼ .013, WLTdr p ¼ .004, FLU p ¼ .020).                  differences in scores on the Stroop test (p ¼ .872
                                                                           486                                         R.H.M. DE GROOT ET AL.
                                                                           for the group differences concerning the mean of         (Keenan et al., 1998; Sharp et al., 1993). In our
                                                                           Stroop Version I and II and p ¼ .491 for Ver-            study, explicit memory (as measured by WLTtot
                                                                           sion III). Also, two-way ANOVA for repeated              and WLTdr) was significantly impaired in the
                                                                           measures did not show any statistically significant      pregnant group compared to the control group.
                                                                           differences. Finally, scores on the Letter Digit         These results are consistent with those of Keenan
                                                                           Substitution Test were not statistically different       et al. (1998), who, however, only found statisti-
                                                                           between the pregnant and the control groups              cally significant differences in explicit memory in
                                                                           (p ¼ .624).                                              the third trimester of pregnancy. Their group
                                                                                                                                    sizes, however, were small (10 pregnant women
                                                                                                                                    and 10 women in the control group). Sharp et al.
                                                                           DISCUSSION                                               (1993) detected deficits in explicit memory in all
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                                                                           Keenan et al. (1998) found that although pregnant      factors, and hormones. A change in LC-PUFA
                                                                           women scored higher on both depression and             availability could, therefore, explain our findings.
                                                                           anxiety scales, the pregnancy-related decline in       During pregnancy, accretion of maternal, placen-
                                                                           memory was not attributable to these factors. It is    tal and fetal tissue occurs and, consequently, the
                                                                           not likely that our findings were influenced by        LC-PUFA requirements of pregnant women and
                                                                           mood changes or depression, because our study          their developing fetuses are high (Clandinin et al.,
                                                                           was performed in early pregnancy, when mood            1980). To obtain these LC-PUFA, the fetus mainly
                                                                           changes are minor, if present, in contrast to late     depends on placental transfer and thus on the EFA
                                                                           pregnancy, close to delivery, when a substantial       status and/or supply of the mother (Innis, 1991).
                                                                           proportion of pregnant women experience some-          The overall biochemical LC-PUFA status of
                                                                           times profound psychological changes. However,         women declines during pregnancy (Al, van
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                                                                           preexisting mood differences between our two           Houwelingen, & Hornstra, 2000) which may have
                                                                           groups cannot be completely ruled out, as this is      functional consequences on maternal cognition.
                                                                           one of the limitations of a cross-sectional study          In summary this cross-sectional study demon-
                                                                           design as has been stated before.                      strated less adequate memory performance in an
                                                                               Several biological factors may underlie the        early pregnancy group as compared to a matched
                                                                           cognitive decline during pregnancy. One factor         group of nonpregnant women. A longitudinal
                                                                           may be hormonal, because the levels of estrogen,       study will be needed to establish clear association
                                                                           progesterone, testosterone, and dehydroepiandos-       with pregnancy, especially any causal relation,
                                                                           terone change considerably during pregnancy.           and to find out whether the observed differences
                                                                           Buckwalter et al. (1999) tried to find a relation      in early pregnancy disappear at some point after
                                                                           between impaired memory and the above-men-             delivery. Currently, such a study is in progress in
                                                                           tioned hormones. They confirmed that cognitive         our laboratory and results will become available
                                                                           functioning decreased during pregnancy, especially     later this year.
                                                                           aspects of verbal memory, and that negative mood
                                                                           states were reported more often during pregnancy
                                                                           than after delivery. However, no consistent correla-   REFERENCES
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