Abstract

Background: Cross-sectional as well as longitudinal studies have linked childhood maltreatment to type 2 diabetes in adulthood with childhood neglect showing the strongest effect on type 2 diabetes risk. However, the mechanisms that link childhood maltreatment to type 2 diabetes are still unclear. Alterations in the psychological and physiological stress response system, specifically the hypothalamus-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis are a common finding in samples with a background of childhood neglect and are associated with type 2 diabetes. In the present study, we investigated the association between childhood neglect and the physiological and psychological stress response in patients with type 2 diabetes and healthy control participants.Method: We assessed emotional and physical childhood neglect in a sample of n = 74 patients with type 2 diabetes and n = 50 healthy control participants. We used the trier social stress test (TSST) to induce a stress response. Blood ACTH and cortisol levels were measured before (T0), directly after (T1) as well as 30 (T2) and 60 (T3) min after the TSST. Participants' subjective experience was assessed via visual analog scales before, directly after as well as at 45 min after the TSST. We used multiple regression analyses to predict the change in self-reported tension between T0 and T1. Multilevel models were applied to predict cortisol and ACTH levels across all measurement points.Results: We found a significant association between moderate to severe childhood neglect and a stronger psychological stress response in patients with type 2 diabetes, that was not present in healthy controls. In type 2 diabetes patients, but not in healthy controls, higher ACTH levels across all measurement points were significantly associated with higher severity of emotional neglect and higher severity of physical neglect was significantly associated with a stronger increase in plasma cortisol from T0 to T1.Conclusions: This is the first study to investigate whether childhood maltreatment in patients with type 2 diabetes could be associated with a dysregulated stress response. Our results show a link between the psychological and physiological stress response and childhood neglect in type 2 diabetes patients. This pathway is thus a possible mechanism connecting type 2 diabetes and childhood neglect.

Highlights

  • Type 2 diabetes is a growing health concern with currently 1 in 11 adults worldwide suffering from type 2 diabetes and prevalence rates still on the rise [1]

  • The most common diagnosis in the SCID was lifetime depression with 26 (35.1%) type 2 diabetes patients and 11 (22.0%) healthy controls fulfilling the criteria for diagnosis

  • The aim of this study was to test the assumption that childhood maltreatment in patients with type 2 diabetes is associated with a dysregulated stress response system

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Summary

Introduction

Type 2 diabetes is a growing health concern with currently 1 in 11 adults worldwide suffering from type 2 diabetes and prevalence rates still on the rise [1]. Cross-sectional studies as well as prospective studies have already reported an increased risk for type 2 diabetes in samples with a background of childhood maltreatment [7] with experiences of emotional and physical neglect showing the strongest effect on type 2 diabetes risk [8]. Hypotheses on possible mechanisms often assume alterations in the psychological and physiological stress response system to be a key factor in this relationship [9,10,11]. Cross-sectional as well as longitudinal studies have linked childhood maltreatment to type 2 diabetes in adulthood with childhood neglect showing the strongest effect on type 2 diabetes risk. Alterations in the psychological and physiological stress response system, the hypothalamus-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis are a common finding in samples with a background of childhood neglect and are associated with type 2 diabetes. We investigated the association between childhood neglect and the physiological and psychological stress response in patients with type 2 diabetes and healthy control participants

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