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1.
J Physiol Sci ; 73(1): 3, 2023 Mar 14.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36918820

RÉSUMÉ

The mother-infant relation is key to infant physical, cognitive and social development. Mutual regulation and cooperation are required to maintain the dyadic system, but the biological foundation of these responses remains to be clarified. In this study, we report the maternal calming responses to infant suckling during breastfeeding. Using behavioral measures and a Holter electrocardiogram as a readout of the maternal autonomic nervous system, the maternal activities during resting, sitting with her infant on her lap, and breastfeeding were assessed. We found that during breastfeeding, mothers talked less and maternal heart rate was lower than during sitting with the infant without breastfeeding. Congruently, maternal heart rate variability measurements indicated a higher parasympathetic activity during breastfeeding. Time-locked analyses suggested that this maternal calming response was initiated by the tactile stimulation at the breast by the infant face or mouth latch, which preceded the perceived milk ejection. These findings suggest that somatosensory stimuli of breastfeeding activate parasympathetic activity in mothers. Just as how the infant Transport Response facilitates the carrying of infants, the maternal calming responses during breastfeeding may promote efficient milk intake by inhibiting spontaneous maternal activities.


Sujet(s)
Allaitement naturel , Émotions , Humains , Nourrisson , Femelle , Allaitement naturel/psychologie , Anxiété , Mères/psychologie
2.
J Neuroendocrinol ; 35(7): e13247, 2023 07.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36973234

RÉSUMÉ

Oxytocin, a neuropeptide hormone, is indispensable for milk ejection during nursing and is important for uterine contractions during parturition. The exact functions of oxytocin in postpartum maternal behaviors and motivations require further investigation. To this end, we characterized the role of oxytocin in components of maternal motivations during the mid-postpartum period, which has not been previously studied. To maintain suckling stimuli, postpartum oxytocin knockout (Oxt-/- ) and heterozygous (Oxt+/- ) littermates were co-housed with a wild-type lactating mother and its litter, and were examined for their ability to retrieve pups under standard or high-risk conditions, nursing behavior, maternal aggression towards an unfamiliar intruder, and motivation to regain contact with separated pups. One-third of Oxt-/- mothers exhibited prolonged parturition but were otherwise grossly healthy. Despite their inability to eject milk, Oxt-/- mothers displayed nursing behaviors for similar durations to Oxt+/- mothers during the second postpartum week. In addition, Oxt-/- mothers were essentially intact for pup retrieval under standard conditions and were motivated to stay close to pups, although they showed a mild decrease in maternal care under high-risk conditions and increased anxiety-like behaviors in pup-related contexts. The present findings indicate that oxytocin is dispensable for nursing behavior and maternal motivations, yet suggest that oxytocin may be relevant for stress resilience in the postpartum period.


Sujet(s)
Lactation , Ocytocine , Grossesse , Humains , Femelle , Souris , Animaux , Ocytocine/physiologie , Période du postpartum , Parturition , Comportement maternel/physiologie
3.
Curr Biol ; 32(20): 4521-4529.e4, 2022 10 24.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36103877

RÉSUMÉ

Approximately 20%-30% of infants cry excessively and exhibit sleep difficulties for no apparent reason, causing parental stress and even triggering impulsive child maltreatment in a small number of cases.1-8 While several sleep training methods or parental education programs may provide long-term improvement of infant cry and sleep problems, there is yet to be a conclusive recommendation for on-site behavioral interventions.9-13 Previously we have reported that brief carrying of infants transiently reduces infant cry via the transport response, a coordinated set of vagal activation and behavioral calming conserved in altricial mammals.14-18 In this study, we disentangled complex infant responses to maternal holding and transport by combining subsecond-scale, event-locked physiological analyses with dynamic mother-infant interactions. Infant cry was attenuated either by maternal carrying or by reciprocal motion provided by a moving cot, but not by maternal holding. Five-minute carrying promoted sleep for crying infants even in the daytime when these infants were usually awake, but not for non-crying infants. Maternal laydown of sleeping infants into a cot exerted bimodal effects, either interrupting or deepening the infants' sleep. During laydown, sleeping infants were alerted most consistently by the initiation of maternal detachment, then calmed after the completion of maternal detachment in a successful laydown. Finally, the sleep outcome after laydown was associated with the sleep duration before the laydown onset. These data propose a "5-min carrying, 5- to 8- min sitting" scheme for attending to infant cry and sleep difficulties, which should be further substantiated in future studies. VIDEO ABSTRACT.


Sujet(s)
Relations mère-enfant , Troubles de la veille et du sommeil , Nourrisson , Animaux , Enfant , Humains , Sommeil/physiologie , Anxiété , Plan de recherche , Mammifères
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