Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta, GA, United States.
Department of Epidemiology, Rollins School of Public Health, Emory University, Atlanta, GA, United States; Department of Medicine, Division of Cardiology, Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta, GA, United States.
J Affect Disord. 2019 Jul 1;254:49-58. doi: 10.1016/j.jad.2019.05.018. Epub 2019 May 11.
Early childhood trauma is known to independently increase adverse outcome risk in coronary artery disease (CAD) patients, although the neurological correlates are not well understood. The purpose of this study was to examine whether early childhood trauma alters neural responses to acute mental stress in CAD patients.
Participants (n = 152) with CAD underwent brain imaging with High Resolution Positron Emission Tomography and radiolabeled water during control (verbal counting, neutral speaking) and mental stress (mental arithmetic, public speaking). Traumatic events in childhood were assessed with the Early Trauma Inventory (ETI-SR-SF) and participants were separated by presence (ETI+) or absence (ETI-) of early childhood trauma. Brain activity during mental stress was compared between ETI+ and ETI-.
Compared to ETI-, ETI+ experienced greater (p < 0.005) activations during mental stress within the left anterior cingulate, bilateral frontal lobe and deactivations (p < 0.005) within the left insula, left parahippocampal gyrus, right dorsal anterior cingulate, bilateral cerebellum, bilateral fusiform gyrus, left inferior temporal gyrus, and right parietal lobe. Significant (p < 0.005) positive correlations between brain activation and ETI-SR-SF scores were observed within the left hippocampus, bilateral frontal lobe, left occipital cuneus, and bilateral temporal lobe.
Results in non-CAD samples may differ and ETI may be subject to recall bias.
Early childhood trauma exacerbated activations in stress-responsive limbic and cognitive brain areas with direct and indirect connections to the heart, potentially contributing to adverse outcomes in CAD patients.
已知儿童期创伤会独立增加冠心病 (CAD) 患者的不良预后风险,尽管其神经相关性尚不清楚。本研究的目的是探讨儿童期创伤是否会改变 CAD 患者对急性心理应激的神经反应。
参与者(n=152)接受了高分辨率正电子发射断层扫描和放射性标记水的脑部成像,同时进行了对照(言语计数、中性演讲)和心理应激(心算、公开演讲)。采用早期创伤量表(ETI-SR-SF)评估童年创伤事件,根据是否存在(ETI+)或不存在(ETI-)儿童期创伤将参与者分开。比较 ETI+和 ETI-在心理应激期间的大脑活动。
与 ETI-相比,ETI+在心理应激期间表现出更大的(p<0.005)左前扣带回、双侧额叶和左岛叶、左旁海马回、右背侧前扣带回、双侧小脑、双侧梭状回、左颞下回和右顶叶的激活(p<0.005)。在左海马体、双侧额叶、左枕叶楔前回和双侧颞叶内观察到大脑激活与 ETI-SR-SF 评分之间存在显著的(p<0.005)正相关。
非 CAD 样本的结果可能有所不同,并且 ETI 可能存在回忆偏差。
儿童期创伤加剧了与心脏有直接和间接联系的应激反应性边缘和认知脑区的激活,可能导致 CAD 患者的不良结局。