4.8 Article

Childhood abuse, parental warmth, and adult multisystem biological risk in the Coronary Artery Risk Development in Young Adults study

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1315458110

Keywords

childhood adversity; allostatic load; disease risk

Funding

  1. National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute
  2. University of Alabama (Birmingham, AL) [N01-HC95095, N01-HC48047]
  3. University of Minnesota [N01-HC48048]
  4. Northwestern University [N01-HC48049]
  5. Kaiser Foundation Research Institute [N01-HC48050]
  6. University of California (Irvine, CA) Echocardiography Reading Center [N01-HC-45134]
  7. Harbor-University of California (Los Angeles, CA) Research Education Institute and Computed Tomography Reading Center [N01-HC-05187]
  8. MacArthur Research Network on Socioeconomic Status and Health through grants from the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation
  9. Cousins Center for Psychoneuroimmunology at the University of California (Los Angeles, CA)
  10. [T32-MH19925]

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Childhood abuse increases adult risk for morbidity and mortality. Less clear is how this toxic stress becomes embedded to influence health decades later, and whether protective factors guard against these effects. Early biological embedding is hypothesized to occur through programming of the neural circuitry that influences physiological response patterns to subsequent stress, causing wear and tear across multiple regulatory systems. To examine this hypothesis, we related reports of childhood abuse to a comprehensive 18-biomarker measure of multisystem risk and also examined whether presence of a loving parental figure buffers against the impact of childhood abuse on adult risk. A total of 756 subjects (45.8% white, 42.7% male) participated in this ancillary substudy of the Coronary Artery Risk Development in Young Adults Study. Childhood stress was determined by using the Risky Families Questionnaire, a well-validated retrospective self-report scale. Linear regression models adjusting for age, sex, race, parental education, and oral contraceptive use found a significant positive relationship between reports of childhood abuse and multisystem health risks [B (SE) = 0.68 (0.16); P < 0.001]. Inversely, higher amounts of reported parental warmth and affection during childhood was associated with lower multisystem health risks [B (SE) = -0.40 (0.14); P < 0.005]. A significant interaction of abuse and warmth (P < 0.05) was found, such that individuals reporting low levels of love and affection and high levels of abuse in childhood had the highest multisystem risk in adulthood.

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