4.5 Article

Developmental Timing of Trauma Exposure Relative to Puberty and the Nature of Psychopathology Among Adolescent Girls

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.jaac.2015.10.004

Keywords

sensitive period; anxiety; depression; posttraumatic stress disorder; abuse

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health (NIH), National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD) Building Interdisciplinary Research Careers in Women's Health (BIRCWH) program [K12 HD055882]

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Objective: Increased neuroplasticity and neural development during puberty provide a context for which stress and trauma can have dramatic and long-lasting effects on psychological systems; therefore, this study was designed to determine whether exposure to potentially traumatic events during puberty uniquely predicts adolescent girls' psychopathology. Because neural substrates associated with different forms of psychopathology seemingly develop at different rates, the possibility that the developmental timing of trauma relative to puberty predicts the nature of psychopathology (posttraumatic stress disorder [PTSD], depressive, and anxiety disorders) was examined. Method: A subset of 2,899 adolescent girls from the National Comorbidity Survey Replication Adolescent Supplement who completed the study 2+ years post-menarche was selected. Past-year psychiatric disorders and reports of age of trauma exposure were assessed using the Composite International Diagnostic Interview. Developmental stages were defined as the 2 years after the year of menarche (postpuberty), 3 years before and year of menarche (puberty), 2 to 6 years before the puberty period (grade school), and 4 to 5 years after birth (infancy-preschool). Results: Compared to other developmental periods, trauma during puberty conferred significantly more risk (50.47% of model R-2) for girls' past-year anxiety disorder diagnoses (primarily social phobia), whereas trauma during the grade school period conferred significantly more risk (47.24% of model R-2) for past-year depressive disorder diagnoses. Recency of trauma best predicted past-year PTSD diagnoses. Conclusion: Supporting rodent models, puberty may be a sensitive period for the impact of trauma on girls' development of an anxiety disorder. Trauma prepuberty or postpuberty distinctly predicts depression or PTSD, suggesting differential etiological processes.

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