Childhood adversity predicts reduced physiological flexibility during the processing of negative affect among adolescents with major depression histories

Shimrit Daches, Maria Kovacs, Charles J. George, Ilya Yaroslavsky, Eniko Kiss, Ágnes Vetró, Roberta Dochnal, István Benák, Ildikó Baji, Kitti Halas, Attila Makai, Krisztina Kapornai, Jonathan Rottenberg

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11 Scopus citations

Abstract

Background Adversity during early development has been shown to have enduring negative physiological consequences. In turn, atypical physiological functioning has been associated with maladaptive processing of negative affect, including its regulation. The present study therefore explored whether exposure to adverse life events in childhood predicted maladaptive (less flexible) parasympathetic nervous system functioning during the processing of negative affect among adolescents with depression histories. Methods An initially clinic-referred, pediatric sample (N = 189) was assessed at two time points. At Time 1, when subjects were 10.17 years old (SD = 1.42), on average, and were depressed, parents reported on adverse life events the offspring experienced up to that point. At Time 2, when subjects were 17.18 years old (SD = 1.28), and were remitted from depression, parents again reported on adverse life events in their offspring's lives for the interim period. At time 2, subjects' parasympathetic nervous system functioning (quantified as respiratory sinus arrhythmia) also was assessed at rest, during sad mood induction, and during instructed mood repair. Results Extent of adverse life events experienced by T1 (but not events occurring between T1 and T2) predicted less flexible RSA functioning 7 years later during the processing of negative affect. Adolescents with more extensive early life adversities exhibited less vagal withdrawal following negative mood induction and tended to show less physiological recovery following mood repair. Conclusions Early adversities appear to be associated with less flexible physiological regulatory control during negative affect experience, when measured later in development. Stress-related autonomic dysfunction in vulnerable youths may contribute to the unfavorable clinical prognosis associated with juvenile-onset depression.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)22-28
Number of pages7
JournalInternational Journal of Psychophysiology
Volume121
DOIs
StatePublished - Nov 2017
Externally publishedYes

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2017 Elsevier B.V.

Funding

This study was supported by NIH Grants MH056193 , MH084938 , and Hungarian Scientific Research Fund Grant NN85285 .

FundersFunder number
National Institutes of HealthMH056193
National Institute of Mental HealthR01MH084938
Hungarian Scientific Research FundNN85285

    Keywords

    • Adolescents
    • Depression
    • Early adversity
    • Negative affect processing
    • Physiological flexibility
    • Respiratory sinus arrhythmia

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