4.7 Article

Intellectual performance correlates of trauma exposure in adolescent psychiatric inpatients

Journal

PSYCHIATRY RESEARCH
Volume 325, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER IRELAND LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.psychres.2023.115231

Keywords

Childhood trauma questionnaire; Intelligence; Academic achievement; Abuse; PTSD

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Half of individuals have experienced a trauma sufficient to meet the criteria for PTSD, and the relationship between intelligence and trauma is unclear. A study was conducted on child and adolescent inpatients, assessing their intelligence, academic achievement, and trauma experiences. The results showed that those who experienced physical and sexual abuse performed poorly in intellectual domains, and exposure to substance abuse was associated with lower intelligence and higher CTQ scores.
Half of individuals have experienced a trauma adequate to meet criteria for PTSD. Intelligence may correlate with trauma, with the causal direction unclear. The Childhood Trauma Questionnaire (CTQ) was administered to 733 child and adolescent inpatients. Intelligence and academic achievement was assessed using the Wechsler Scales. Clinician diagnoses came from the electronic medical record, as did data on exposure to substance abuse and other stressors. Multivariate analyses assessed associations between intelligence, diagnoses, experiences, and CTQ. Cases who met criteria for physical and sexual abuse performed more poorly across all intellectual domains. Other than for PTSD, there were no diagnostic differences in CTQ scores. Emotional abuse or neglect were not associated with intelligence, although exposure to substance abuse was associated with increased CTQ scores and lower intelligence. Exposure to substance abuse as a covariate did not eliminate the influence of CTQ scores on intelligence, but was consistently related to intelligence beyond CTQ scores. Intelligence and substance abuse are known to have genomic influences and recent studies have suggested a genomic signature associated with childhood abuse. Future genomic studies of the consequences of trauma exposure could add intelligence poly -genic scores into their models, while considering genomic and nongenomic elements of family experiences.

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