Pregnancy has an impact on the brain.Photo:Getty Images

Pregnant belly

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Hormonal changes inpregnancylead to permanent changes in a mother’s brain, according to a new study on mice that reflects how similar changes happen in humans.

By using tiny devices attached to the mice’s heads, scientists were able to track neurons in the hypothalamus, the part of the brain considered to “regulate parental behaviors,” according to theNational Institute of Health.

Mice mothers spent their time looking after their young, while “virgin” mice showed no interest in the babies, the study said.

Pregnancy impacts the brain.Getty Images

young mother holding her newborn baby

“What’s fascinating is that this switch doesn’t happen at birth – the brain is preparing much earlier for this big life change.”

Human mothers experience changes to their brain as well, as pregnancy can impact the brain for up to two years, according to a report inScience: “New mothers' brains are more efficiently wired in areas that allow them, for instance, to respond to their infant’s needs or to detect threatening people in their environments.”

“We know that the female body changes during pregnancy to prepare for bringing up young. One example is the production of milk, which starts long before giving birth,” Dr. Kohl toldThe Guardian.“Our research shows that such preparations are taking place in the brain, too,”

Close up Mother holding hands Asian female newborn baby

“There is still so much we don’t understand about parenting and hormone signaling in the body and brain – these results are a solid step in that direction,” Prof. Robert Froemke, of NYU Langone toldThe Guardian.

“Parenting is among the most complex and difficult set of behaviors we and other animals engage in, and there’s not a lot of room for ‘trial and error’ especially in the earliest days of postpartum when infants need a lot of care.”

Understanding what happens to the brain is essential for postnatal care for the mother as well, since postpartum depression has been linked to hormonal changes in the brain.

“When you are pregnant, levels of the female hormones estrogen and progesterone are the highest they’ll ever be. In the first 24 hours after childbirth, hormone levels quickly drop back to normal, pre-pregnancy levels,” reports theOffice on Women’s Health.

“Researchers think this sudden change in hormone levels may lead to depression.”

And theNational Institute of Healthnotes that “progesterone is the most abundant hormone in pregnancy. The dramatic drop in progesterone after birth may have a role in postpartum depression,” adding, “Further research on hormonal adjuvant therapy is needed.”

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source: people.com