A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal

Prenatal exposure to antiepileptic drugs and early processing of emotionally relevant sounds




AuthorsMari Videman, Susanna Stjern, Valtteri Wikström, Taina Nybo, Reina Roivainen, Sampsa Vanhatalo, Minna Huotilainen, Eija Gaily

PublisherAcademic Press Inc.

Publication year2019

JournalEpilepsy and Behavior

Journal name in sourceEpilepsy and Behavior

Volume100

IssuePart A

Number of pages8

ISSN1525-5050

eISSN1525-5050

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1016/j.yebeh.2019.106503


Abstract

Introduction

Prenatal exposure to antiepileptic drugs (AEDs) is associated with developmental compromises in verbal intelligence and social skills in childhood. Our aim was to evaluate whether a multifeature Mismatch Negativity (MMN) paradigm assessing semantic and emotional components of linguistic and emotional processing would be useful to detect possible alterations in early auditory processing of newborns with prenatal AED exposure.

Material and methods

Data on AED exposure, pregnancy outcome, neuropsychological evaluation of the mothers, information on maternal epilepsy type, and a structured neurological examination of the newborn were collected prospectively. Blinded to AED exposure, we compared a cohort of 36 AED-exposed with 46 control newborns at the age of two weeks by measuring MMN with a multifeature paradigm with six linguistically relevant deviant sounds and three emotionally uttered sounds.

Results

Frontal responses for the emotionally uttered stimulus Happy differed significantly in the exposed newborns compared with the control newborns. In addition, responses to sounds with or without emotional component differed in newborns exposed to multiple AEDs compared with control newborns or to newborns exposed to only one AED.

Conclusions

These preliminary findings suggest that prenatal AED exposure may alter early processing of emotionally and linguistically relevant sound information.



Last updated on 2024-26-11 at 10:27