Abstract

BackgroundChildhood trauma may increase the risk for psychiatric illness by its negative impact on brain development. Studies investigating the association between childhood trauma and deviations in gray matter volume have shown inconsistent findings, often restricted by a region-of interest approach with a sole focus on the amygdala and hippocampus and without controlling for the presence of psychiatric illness.MethodsFirst, using a whole-brain approach in a large cross-diagnostic sample (n=554) of healthy individuals and patients with a bipolar type-I or psychotic disorder, we investigated the neurobiological correlates of childhood trauma by evaluating gray matter volume. Follow-up analyses were conducted to evaluate the effect of psychiatric illness. Second, we investigated to what extent these trauma-related structural correlates could be observed in both groups separately (healthy individuals versus patients). Participants were recruited as part of three different studies, all conducted in the University Medical Center Utrecht (the Netherlands) between 2007 and 2016. We included 554 participants: 220 healthy individuals without a psychiatric history, 250 patients with a bipolar-I disorder and 84 patients with a psychotic disorder. Childhood trauma was evaluated with the Childhood Trauma Questionnaire (CTQ-SF). Anatomical T1 MRI scans were acquired at 3T. FreeSurfer was used to assess regional brain morphology.ResultsIn the total sample, childhood trauma severity was associated with bilateral reductions in frontal and insular gray matter volumes. In the right hemisphere, medial orbitofrontal and superior frontal volume reductions were related to childhood trauma. These associations remained when adjusting for psychiatric illness, with the exception of the right superior frontal subregion. However, when evaluating both groups separately, these structural correlates of childhood trauma were mainly observed in patients. Healthy controls did show trauma related reductions in right medial orbitofrontal region, while this association was not significant in the patient group.DiscussionOur results suggest that gray matter reductions in the frontal and insular regions are important neurobiological correlates of childhood trauma. For future research, a whole brain approach should be applied, as cortical rather than subcortical areas may be the main correlate of childhood trauma contributing to the development of psychopathology.

Highlights

  • In clinical samples, symptomatic ultra-high risk criteria and the basic symptom criterion “cognitive disturbances” perform well in predicting psychosis, and best when both approaches are combined

  • Lifetime and current clinical high risk (CHR) symptoms were reported by 21.1% and 13.8% of interviewees

  • A stepwise relationship underlay the association of the two types of CHR symptoms and criteria with the presence of mental disorders and functional deficits, with odds ratios being highest (7.4–31.8) when ultra-high risk and basic symptoms occurred together

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Summary

Background

There has been a surge of interest into the relationship between psychotic experiences (PEs) and bullying. The methods of bullying and impact of bullying varies across individuals and the prevalence may vary by respondent (parent or children). For this reason, a thorough investigation into this relationship is warranted. Methods: A longitudinal analysis was conducted on waves 1 and 2 (ages 9 and 13) of the nationally representative Growing Up in Ireland study. Information regarding bullying, being a bully, bullying type, reasons for the bullying, the impact of the bullying was collected from the participating child and their primary care giver (PCG) at both waves. Verbal, electronic bullying and bullying by exclusion were associated with an Abstracts for the Sixth Biennial SIRS Conference

Findings

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