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Stress-Related Hippocampus Activation Mediates the Association Between Polyvictimization and Trait Anxiety in Adolescents.

Rachel CorrSarah GlierJoshua BizzellAndrea Pelletier-BaldelliAlana CampbellCandace Killian-FarrellAysenil Belger
Published in: Social cognitive and affective neuroscience (2021)
Early life stress exposures are associated with adverse health outcomes and heightened anxiety symptoms in adolescents. Stress-sensitive brain regions like the hippocampus and amygdala are particularly impacted by early life adversities and are also implicated in the development of anxiety disorders. However, to date no studies have specifically examined the neural correlates of polyvictimization (exposure to multiple categories of victimization) or the contribution of stress-sensitive neural nodes to polyvictimization's impact on mental health. To elucidate these relationships, the current study analyzed associations between polyvictimization, hippocampal and amygdalar activation during an acute stress task, and trait anxiety in a sample of 80 children and adolescents aged 9-16 years (33 female). Results showed that polyvictimization was associated with higher trait anxiety as well as greater stress-related right hippocampus activation, and this greater hippocampal activity predicted heightened trait anxiety. Robust mediation analyses revealed that stress-related right hippocampus activation partially mediated the relationship between polyvictimization and trait anxiety. Our results expand upon the existing polyvictimization literature by suggesting a possible neurobiological pathway through which polyvictimization is connected to the etiology of mental illness.
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