4.8 Article

Traumatic stress load and stressor reactivity score associated with accelerated gray matter maturation in youths indexed by normative models

Journal

MOLECULAR PSYCHIATRY
Volume 28, Issue 3, Pages 1137-1145

Publisher

SPRINGERNATURE
DOI: 10.1038/s41380-022-01908-w

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Understanding how traumatic stress affects brain development during adolescence is crucial. This study aimed to investigate deviations from normal brain gray matter in youths with traumatic exposures. Results showed that high traumatic stress load was associated with poorer cognitive functioning and more psychopathology, mediated by accelerated gray matter maturation. Additionally, individuals with higher stressor reactivity scores showed greater acceleration of gray matter maturation under traumatic stress.
Understanding how traumatic stress affects typical brain development during adolescence is critical to elucidate underlying mechanisms related to both maladaptive functioning and resilience after traumatic exposures. The current study aimed to map deviations from normative ranges of brain gray matter for youths with traumatic exposures. For each cortical and subcortical gray matter region, normative percentiles of variations were established using structural MRI from typically developing youths without any traumatic exposure (n = 245; age range = 8-23) from the Philadelphia Neurodevelopmental Cohort (PNC). The remaining PNC participants with neuroimaging data (n = 1129) were classified as either within the normative range (5-95%), delayed (> 95%) or accelerated (< 5%) maturational ranges for each region using the normative model. An averaged quantile regression index was calculated across all regions. Mediation models revealed that high traumatic stress load was positively associated with poorer cognitive functioning and greater psychopathology, and these associations were mediated by accelerated gray matter maturation. Furthermore, higher stressor reactivity scores, which represent a less resilient response under traumatic stress, were positively correlated with greater acceleration of gray matter maturation (r = 0.224, 95% CI = [0.17, 0.28], p < 0.001), suggesting that more accelerated maturation was linked to greater stressor response regardless of traumatic stress load. We conclude that traumatic stress is a source of deviation from normative brain development associated with poorer cognitive functioning and more psychopathology in the long run.

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