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Prenatal tobacco exposure on brain morphometry partially mediated poor cognitive performance in preadolescent children.


ABSTRACT:

Objectives

To evaluate whether prenatal tobacco exposure (PTE) is related to poorer cognitive performance, abnormal brain morphometry, and whether poor cognitive performance is mediated by PTE-related structural brain differences.

Methods

The Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development study dataset was used to compare structural MRI data and neurocognitive (NIH Toolbox®) scores in 9-to-10-year-old children with (n=620) and without PTE (n=10,989). We also evaluated whether PTE effects on brain morphometry mediated PTE effects on neurocognitive scores. Group effects were evaluated using Linear Mixed Models, covaried for socio-demographics and prenatal exposures to alcohol and/or marijuana, and corrected for multiple comparisons using the false-discovery rate (FDR).

Results

Compared to unexposed children, those with PTE had poorer performance (all p-values <0.05) on executive function, working memory, episodic memory, reading decoding, crystallized intelligence, fluid intelligence and overall cognition. Exposed children also had thinner parahippocampal gyri, smaller surface areas in the posterior-cingulate and pericalcarine cortices; the lingual and inferior parietal gyri, and smaller thalamic volumes (all p-values <0.001). Furthermore, among children with PTE, girls had smaller surface areas in the superior-frontal (interaction-FDR-p=0.01), precuneus (interaction-FDR-p=0.03) and postcentral gyri (interaction-FDR-p=0.02), while boys had smaller putamen volumes (interaction-FDR-p=0.02). Smaller surface areas across regions of the frontal and parietal lobes, and lower thalamic volumes, partially mediated the associations between PTE and poorer neurocognitive scores (p-values <0.001).

Conclusions

Our findings suggest PTE may lead to poorer cognitive performance and abnormal brain morphometry, with sex-specific effects in some brain regions, in pre-adolescent children. The poor cognition in children with PTE may result from the smaller areas and subcortical brain volumes.

SUBMITTER: Rodriguez Rivera PJ 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC10696570 | biostudies-literature | 2023 Dec

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Publications

Prenatal tobacco exposure on brain morphometry partially mediated poor cognitive performance in preadolescent children.

Rodriguez Rivera Pedro J PJ   Liang Huajun H   Isaiah Amal A   Cloak Christine C CC   Menken Miriam S MS   Ryan Meghann C MC   Ernst Thomas T   Chang Linda L  

NeuroImmune pharmacology and therapeutics 20230713 4


<h4>Objectives</h4>To evaluate whether prenatal tobacco exposure (PTE) is related to poorer cognitive performance, abnormal brain morphometry, and whether poor cognitive performance is mediated by PTE-related structural brain differences.<h4>Methods</h4>The Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development study dataset was used to compare structural MRI data and neurocognitive (NIH Toolbox<sup>®</sup>) scores in 9-to-10-year-old children with (n=620) and without PTE (n=10,989). We also evaluated whether P  ...[more]

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