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Mixed picture for mom, baby with antidepressants

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Babies born to mothers who took antidepressants while they were pregnant had slightly slower head growth and were more likely to be born early, in a new study from the Netherlands.

Still, that doesn't prove that the drugs, called selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs), caused changes in the babies' development -- or that those differences would end up having long-term effects.

Related: Antidepressants and pregnancy: What to do now

The findings are the latest addition to a still-complicated picture that has suggested a slightly increased risk of certain birth defects and health problems in babies of moms taking antidepressants, but also known benefits for the women.

"The accumulated data that's out there is still controversial," said Christina Chambers, who has studied the topic at the University of California, San Diego, but wasn't involved in the new work.

"It's not a simple, 'Did you take this drug or not?' You have all of these surrounding issues of the underlying condition that's being treated, how long the mother took the medication, and all of the other issues that surround it," she told Reuters Health.

In the current study, babies of mothers who were depressed but didn't take medication also had slightly slower body growth than those born to non-depressed moms.

Dr. Henning Tiemeier from Erasmus Medical Center in Rotterdam and his colleagues tracked close to 8,000 pregnant women as part of a larger study of the moms-to-be and their kids, which included ultrasounds during each trimester to assess the babies' growth.

Most of the women had few symptoms of depression, while 570 appeared depressed but weren't taking medication and another 99 were taking SSRIs.

In the womb, babies of women who were depressed, but not treated, gained less weight per week than babies of non-depressed mothers, and their heads grew a bit more slowly, too.

When moms were treated with antidepressants, however, there was no difference in their babies' body growth, but a bigger effect on head growth, which was slowed by 0.18 millimeters per week. By the time they were born, those babies' heads were about four millimeters smaller, on average, than babies of non-depressed moms.

"You could say half a centimeter... is not so big. But we think that, given that there's not a lot of variation at birth, that half a centimeter is quite substantial," Tiemeier told Reuters Health. "It's not nothing."
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