Disruption of circadian rhythms is associated with cognitive impairment during gestation

Apr 14, 2026Journal of neuroendocrinology

Disrupted daily body clocks may be linked to thinking problems during pregnancy

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Abstract

Gestation is associated with disrupted circadian rhythms and cognitive impairment in both humans and mice.

  • Human cognitive screening indicated a modest decline during gestation, followed by recovery postpartum.
  • In mice, gestation disrupted daily activity patterns, affecting nocturnal activity, with partial recovery by one month postpartum and full recovery by three months postpartum.
  • Pregnancy impaired performance in memory tasks, which progressively improved over time after giving birth.
  • Gestation increased the expression of proteins related to Alzheimer's disease in the hippocampus, with alterations partially reversing by one month and normalizing by three months postpartum.
  • Hippocampal clock genes showed 24-hour rhythmicity during gestation, but experienced gene-specific changes that gradually normalized postpartum.

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