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Le cerveau est différent pendant la grossesse.

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Une équipe de l’Université de Californie menée par Laura Pritschet vient de mettre en évidence, à l’aide d’IRM et de scanners, des changements biologiques qui adviennent dans le cerveau au cours de la grossesse, sous l’effet de changements hormonaux : “pregnancy is a period of profound hormonal and physiological changes experienced by millions of women annually, yet the neural changes unfolding in the maternal brain throughout gestation are not well studied in humans. Leveraging precision imaging, we mapped neuroanatomical changes in an individual from preconception through 2 years postpartum. Pronounced decreases in gray matter volume and cortical thickness were evident across the brain, standing in contrast to increases in white matter microstructural integrity, ventricle volume and cerebrospinal fluid, with few regions untouched by the transition to motherhood. This dataset serves as a comprehensive map of the human brain across gestation, providing an open-access resource for the brain imaging community to further explore and understand the maternal brain”,  indiquent les auteurs de l’article publié dans Nature Neurosciences.

Pritschet, L., Taylor, C.M., Cossio, D. et al. Neuroanatomical changes observed over the course of a human pregnancy. Nat Neurosci (2024). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41593-024-01741-0

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