jueves, 13 de marzo de 2014

Mental Illness Risk Higher for Children of Older Fathers, Study Finds

Hi girls!!
I have chosen this article because it is elated to Mental Illness and we are studying these during this academic course, so I think it would be interesting for all you.
In addition, I like the article because it talks about having children in old ages and I feel it interesting for us because we are living in a society where getting a job it is very difficult, especially getting a good or stable job where you can earn enough money to support a child.
Moreover, we are students of Medicine and this involved to be many years studying and we will start to search a job very late. So maybe we will be old when we can have children.
For all of that I have chosen this article and I would like you to tell me, how can we prevent this Mental Illness?
I hope you enjoy the article.
Júlia Siscart

Mental Illness Risk Higher for Children of Older Fathers, Study Finds
Children born to middle-aged men are more likely than those born to younger fathers to develop any of a range of mental difficulties, including attention deficits, bipolar disorder, autism and schizophrenia, according to the most comprehensive study to date of paternal age and offspring mental health.
In recent years, scientists have debated based on mixed evidence whether a father’s age is linked to his child’s vulnerability to individual disorders like autism and schizophrenia. Some studies have found strong associations, while others have found weak associations or none at all.
The new report, which looked at many mental disorders in Sweden, should inflame the debate, if not settle it, experts said. Men have a biological clock of sorts because of random mutations in sperm over time, the report suggests, and the risks associated with later fatherhood may be higher than previously thought. The findings were published on Wednesday in the journal JAMA Psychiatry.
“This is the best paper I’ve seen on this topic, and it suggests several lines of inquiry into mental illness,” said Dr. Patrick F. Sullivan, a professor of genetics at the University of North Carolina, who was not involved in the research. “But the last thing people should do is read this and say, ‘Oh no, I had a kid at 43, the kid’s doomed.’ The vast majority of kids born to older dads will be just fine.”
Dr. Kenneth S. Kendler, a professor of psychiatry and human molecular genetics at Virginia Commonwealth University, also urged caution in interpreting the results. “This is great work from a scientific perspective,” he said. “But it needs to be replicated, and biomedical science needs to get in gear and figure out what accounts for” the mixed findings of previous studies.
The strengths of the new report are size and rigor. The research team, led by Brian M. D’Onofrio of Indiana University, analyzed medical and public records of about 2.6 million people born in Sweden from 1973 to 2001. Like many European countries, Sweden has centralized medical care and keeps detailed records, so the scientists knew the father’s age for each birth and were able to track each child’s medical history over time, as well as that of siblings and other relatives. Among other things, the analysis compared the mental health of siblings born to the same father and found a clear pattern of increased risk with increasing paternal age.
Compared with the children of young fathers, aged 20 to 24, those born to men age 45 and older had about twice the risk of developing psychosis, the signature symptom of schizophrenia; more than three times the likelihood of receiving a diagnosis of autism; and about 13 times the chance of having a diagnosis of attention deficit disorder. Children born to older fathers also tended to struggle more with academics and substance abuse.
The researchers controlled for every factor they could think of, including parents’ education and income. Older couples tend to be more stable and have more income — both protective factors that help to temper mental problems — and this was the case in the study. But much of the risk associated with paternal age remained.
“We spent months trying to make the findings go away, looking at the mother’s age, at psychiatric history, doing sub-analyses,” Dr. D’Onofrio said. “They wouldn’t go away.”
Dr. D’Onofrio had seven co-authors, including Paul Lichtenstein of the Karolinska Institute in Stockholm and Dr. Catarina Almqvist of the Karolinska Institute and Astrid Lindgren Children’s Hospital in nearby Solna.
The researchers say that any increased risk due solely to paternal age is most likely a result of the accumulation of genetic mutations in sperm cells. Unlike women, who age with a limited number of eggs, men have to replenish their supply of sperm cells. Studies suggest that the cells’ repeated reproductions lead to the accumulation of random errors over time, called de novo mutations. Most such mutations are harmless, geneticists say, but some have been linked to mental disorders.
Experts say the numbers in the study look more alarming than they probably are. For example, Dr. Sullivan said, the overall prevalence of autism is 0.5 percent to 1 percent of the population, depending on the estimate and the location. But for the children of healthy parents in their 20s, the rate is perhaps one in 300, or even lower. A threefold increase would put the odds at about one in 100, still very low. The same goes for the risk of psychosis. The baseline rate is tiny for the children of young, healthy parents, and remains quite low even when doubled.
The researchers found much larger increases in risk for attention deficits (13-fold) and bipolar disorder (25-fold) associated with late fatherhood. “I don’t know what to do with those numbers,” Dr. Sullivan said, noting that two recent genetic studies found that the contribution of de novo mutations to the risk of mental disorders was “probably pretty low” compared with other factors.
“The question we now need to ask,” Dr. Kendler said, “is what else is going on with respect to older and younger siblings that could cause these differences.

9 comentarios:

  1. Hi!

    I think this articleis very interesting, beucause it takes care of the age of the fathers, and sometimes, we only care about the age of mathers.

    in my opinion this issue involve us directly, not only as future old mothers, but also as doctors, who will take care of the mothores and their babys.

    I think it is not clear, what exactly makes that the more aged men have childrens with more risc of disseases, but, it is clear that it is like that.

    Several mutations of sperm, during the ages, may make thinking us in genethik disseases, and not in disseases like schizophrenia, wich is more due to the environtment.

    I think we can prevent mental illness, not only givint assessment to old and young parents, telling the rissk before having the child, but also giving them support after labor, and continuous monitoring giving advices and ways to make the child grow as healthy as it is possible.

    I think there are many interessant thinks to coment and discuss. Do you really think that a attention defici disorder will come from the mutations of the sperm?
    I'll wait your answers.

    :D

    ResponderEliminar
  2. Hi girs, I hope you have enjoyed the Easter!

    To begin, it seems to me that this article is very interesting, too. Because, in this we can see a explanation for some mental illness. Normally, these studies treat about mothers more than fathers, for this reason I have the impression that it`s a great new point of view.

    Above all, it`s important that these studies be well explained to the people who read them. Because, it is a fact that these can confuse or alarm parents.

    In answer to Neus`s quetion, I don`t believe that an attention deficit disorder is caused by mutations in the sperm. Nowadays, many scientific studies haven`t find an etiology for this disorder, indeed it seems that the cause is a combinated of several factors, like genes, food, brain damage, etc.

    Finally, my question is:in your opinion what is the optimal age for having children in men? Thanks for your attention.

    ResponderEliminar
  3. Hi girls!

    In women is common to speak of the biological clock, according to studies, the fertility in women declines after age 30.

    People believe that men are virile throughout his life and they are able to have a child regardless of their biological age, but the truth is that from age 40 fertility decreases by 70%. As men age, their sperm present in the DNA begins to fragment, causing infertility.

    Other studies have also shown that as men wait to be older to have a child, they are the ones that cause an increase in the probability of having a child suffering from genetic defects.

    Finally, I would like Do you really think it is so important age of parents in relation to mental disorders?

    ResponderEliminar
  4. Good morning partners:
    I think that the essence or the idea that the article wants to make us reflexing is not new.All of us like girls or medical students know that there are risk in women after age 30 and the same situation with men.The future baby could have problems too.
    For this reason i´ts a good idea, if our economic situation is good,having babies earlier because when you are young you enjoy more with them and you want to do more things( go to the park all evenning,meeting with other mothers and their babies..) but when you are older you are more tired and you are not with the same enthusiam that a girl of 28.
    If a couple wants to have a baby when they have more than 30 years old,we need to tell them like doctors all problems but my question is: Is there a real conexion between age of parents and mental diseases?
    I agree with Marta and Neus about the genetic disorders that a child can get if his parents aren´t in the optimal age for having babies.When we´re living we are expossed to more factors and more mutations can be produced in our genes but till the point of affecting the health of our children is too much.
    Like everything in this world ,it´s needed to have a good own judgment and having babies during our optimal age( 20-30) and not at 40 or 15.There are more factors like economic situation,jobs.. that are important but it´s necessary to do some sacrifices for having a health girl or boy.

    ResponderEliminar
  5. Hi girls!
    Like Neus and Melania, I have found this article interesting because it considers the age of the father, not only the mother's age, which is what we are used to.
    I don't know if mental disorders are really related to age of parents, however there is no doubt that it is involved in the development of other diseases.
    Because of this, I agree with Miriam if a couple older than 30 years wants to have a baby, we must advice them of the risks.
    On the other hand, I think nowadays life is very complicated: we are living a poor economic situation, finding job is very difficult... So I think there are a lot of couples which would like have a baby, but in the actual situation then can not.
    So my question is... Do you think people have children older than before because they want to, or they are bound by actual situation?
    Thanks!

    ResponderEliminar
  6. Hi girls!
    I like this article because it speaks about the men’s biological clock and it isn’t very common! Everybody knows or has heard something about the risk of age in pregnant women for themselves and for their babies, but not in men.

    Well, I don’t know if mental illnesses are as related to age as the article says. I think so because, as you already know, most mental disorders are more related to the environment than genetic causes. Moreover we live in a society increasingly stressful and parents have less time to care and educate their children and I think that this inattention influence in mental development.

    I agree with my partners that the conditions of current life are not the best to have children soon despite the best biological age to do it is about 20 to 30 years old.

    ResponderEliminar
  7. Hello everyone!
    First of all, I want to say that I found this article very interesting because it is one of the most current topic in society.

    As we know, advanced maternal age carries an increased risk of mental or physical illnesses in babies. Until now, it was what we heard more strongly. However, this article deals with the parents, and how their age may also be associated with the development of mental illness.

    However, can afford a young couple have children under the age of 30? Sadly, the most common answer is no. Today, everyone needs to have a lot of stability to raise a child (stable job, acceptable wages, housing, conveyance, funds in the bank ...), which is impossible at early ages. The crisis and the lack of jobs have led to a situation where many of our young people can not consider to have a child too young.

    Personally, I think medical students - like us - we have no more choice than this. Can be affected the likelihood that your child will develop a disease if you are over age that this study says? Well, I think there are other factors influencing, such as genetics, the environment in which the child grows up etc.

    Nowadays, there is nothing more important for a child than the love of their parents. If the kid have this, what does it matter the age which their parents have?

    ResponderEliminar
  8. Hello!!

    Late childbirths are a fact in our country. The actual social and economic context have done that people don´t think about have a baby, cause they are too worried thinking about their lives. From a long time to here, birth rates have been decreasing more and more, and in addition, nowadays the neonates’ conception of these neonates is performed later and later. Unfortunately, that happening is parallel to an increasing depression rate in population and there are a forecast about this growth that defends it will become to be the 2nd prevalence disease over the world.

    ResponderEliminar
  9. Hello everybody!

    First of all, I would like to thank you for your contributions, I'm glad that you find the article interesting.

    After the discussion we have had here I can draw some conclusions. To start it seems that there is a lot of information about the maximum age to have children in women but it isn’t the same about men, and that’s why you think that the article is interesting.

    Moreover, you have discussed about the causes of mental disorders in children and most of you think that this is due to environmental factors more than genetic ones. I have to say that I agree with you on that.

    Finally, all you have expressed your worries about how the society works, and about the crisis we are living which is bringing us to having children very late.

    To conclude, I have a nice time reading your opinions!

    ResponderEliminar

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