TeganGrace_Web

17 Nov 2017

By The Record

Studies by Notre Dame researcher Tegan Grace, which received the Best Poster Award at the 2015 Science on the Swan Conference in Western Australia, show that motor development at ages 10, 14 and 17 from pregnancies complicated by preeclampsia had poorer motor outcomes than children from either normotensive mothers or those with hypertension. PHOTO: University of Notre Dame Australia

Studies by Notre Dame researcher Tegan Grace, which received the Best Poster Award at the 2015 Science on the Swan Conference in Western Australia, show that motor development at ages 10, 14 and 17 from pregnancies complicated by preeclampsia had poorer motor outcomes than children from either normotensive mothers or those with hypertension. PHOTO: University of Notre Dame Australia