Department of Psychology, University of California, Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA, United States.
Department of Psychology, Stanford University, Stanford, CA, United States.
Psychoneuroendocrinology. 2024 Mar;161:106944. doi: 10.1016/j.psyneuen.2023.106944. Epub 2023 Dec 29.
Despite evidence that early life adversity (ELA) affects mental health in adolescence, we know little about sex differences in how distinct dimensions of adversity affect development and their corresponding effects on mental health. In this three-wave longitudinal study, 209 participants (118 females; ages 9-13 years at baseline) provided objective (salivary hormones, BMI, age of menarche) and subjective (perceived gonadal and adrenal status) measures of puberty and physical development, and reported on levels of internalizing and externalizing symptoms at all timepoints. Participants also reported lifetime exposure to three distinct types of ELA: deprivation, threat, and unpredictability. Using generalized additive mixed models, we tested within each sex whether dimensions of adversity were associated with longitudinal changes in measures of pubertal and physical development, and whether these indices of development were associated with trajectories of internalizing and externalizing symptoms. In females, experiences of threat and unpredictability were significantly associated with earlier pubertal timing (e.g., age of menarche) whereas experiences of deprivation were associated with steeper increases in BMI; further, faster pubertal tempo (i.e., steeper increases in pubertal stage) was associated with increases in internalizing and externalizing symptoms. In males, however, ELA was not associated with any measures of pubertal or physical development or with symptoms. Together, our results suggest that adverse experiences during early life have sex-selective consequences for pubertal and physical maturation and mental health trajectories in ways that may elucidate why females are at higher risk for mental health difficulties during puberty, particularly following exposure to unpredictable and threatening experiences of adversity.
尽管有证据表明早期生活逆境(ELA)会影响青少年的心理健康,但我们对不同逆境维度如何影响发展及其对心理健康的相应影响的性别差异知之甚少。在这项三波纵向研究中,209 名参与者(118 名女性;基线时年龄为 9-13 岁)提供了青春期和身体发育的客观(唾液激素、BMI、初潮年龄)和主观(感知性腺和肾上腺状态)测量值,并在所有时间点报告了内化和外化症状的水平。参与者还报告了一生中经历的三种不同类型的 ELA:剥夺、威胁和不可预测性。使用广义加性混合模型,我们在每个性别中测试了逆境维度是否与青春期和身体发育的纵向变化相关,以及这些发育指标是否与内化和外化症状的轨迹相关。在女性中,威胁和不可预测性的经历与更早的青春期开始(例如,初潮年龄)显著相关,而剥夺的经历与 BMI 的急剧增加相关;此外,更快的青春期节奏(即,青春期阶段的急剧增加)与内化和外化症状的增加相关。然而,在男性中,ELA 与青春期或身体发育的任何测量值或症状都没有关联。总之,我们的研究结果表明,早期生活中的不良经历对青春期和身体成熟以及心理健康轨迹有性别选择性的影响,这可能解释了为什么女性在青春期,尤其是在经历不可预测和威胁性的逆境时,面临更高的心理健康困难风险。