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Heightened amygdala reactivity and increased stress generation predict internalizing symptoms in adults following childhood maltreatment.

Mattia I GerinEssi VidingJean-Baptiste PingaultVanessa B PuetzAnnchen R KnodtSpenser R RadtkeBartholomew D BrigidiJohnna R SwartzAhmad R HaririEamon J McCrory
Published in: Journal of child psychology and psychiatry, and allied disciplines (2019)
These findings provide support for the view that maltreatment is a potent developmental insult leading to long-lasting neurocognitive recalibrations of the threat processing system. It is possible that such alterations, over time, may impact mental health functioning by compromising the ability to effectively negotiate everyday challenges (stress susceptibility). These alterations were not, however, found to sensitize an individual to the impact of major stressful life events. The results of this study also lend compelling support to the view that increased psychiatric risk, in the context of childhood maltreatment, follows from an increased propensity to experience major stressful life events (stress generation).
Keyphrases
  • mental health
  • stress induced
  • functional connectivity
  • bipolar disorder
  • early life
  • heat stress
  • resting state
  • young adults
  • anti inflammatory
  • depressive symptoms