Danese Andrea, Moffitt Terrie E, Harrington HonaLee, Milne Barry J, Polanczyk Guilherme, Pariante Carmine M, Poulton Richie, Caspi Avshalom
Social, Genetic, and Developmental Psychiatry Centre, Department of Psychology and Neuroscience, Duke University, Durham, NC 27708, USA.
Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med. 2009 Dec;163(12):1135-43. doi: 10.1001/archpediatrics.2009.214.
To understand why children exposed to adverse psychosocial experiences are at elevated risk for age-related disease, such as cardiovascular disease, by testing whether adverse childhood experiences predict enduring abnormalities in stress-sensitive biological systems, namely, the nervous, immune, and endocrine/metabolic systems.
A 32-year prospective longitudinal study of a representative birth cohort.
New Zealand.
A total of 1037 members of the Dunedin Multidisciplinary Health and Development Study. Main Exposures During their first decade of life, study members were assessed for exposure to 3 adverse psychosocial experiences: socioeconomic disadvantage, maltreatment, and social isolation.
At age 32 years, study members were assessed for the presence of 3 age-related-disease risks: major depression, high inflammation levels (high-sensitivity C-reactive protein level >3 mg/L), and the clustering of metabolic risk biomarkers (overweight, high blood pressure, high total cholesterol, low high-density lipoprotein cholesterol, high glycated hemoglobin, and low maximum oxygen consumption levels.
Children exposed to adverse psychosocial experiences were at elevated risk of depression, high inflammation levels, and clustering of metabolic risk markers. Children who had experienced socioeconomic disadvantage (incidence rate ratio, 1.89; 95% confidence interval, 1.36-2.62), maltreatment (1.81; 1.38-2.38), or social isolation (1.87; 1.38-2.51) had elevated age-related-disease risks in adulthood. The effects of adverse childhood experiences on age-related-disease risks in adulthood were nonredundant, cumulative, and independent of the influence of established developmental and concurrent risk factors.
Children exposed to adverse psychosocial experiences have enduring emotional, immune, and metabolic abnormalities that contribute to explaining their elevated risk for age-related disease. The promotion of healthy psychosocial experiences for children is a necessary and potentially cost-effective target for the prevention of age-related disease.
通过测试童年不良经历是否能预测应激敏感生物系统(即神经、免疫和内分泌/代谢系统)的持续性异常,以了解为何经历不良心理社会经历的儿童患心血管疾病等与年龄相关疾病的风险会升高。
对一个具有代表性的出生队列进行为期32年的前瞻性纵向研究。
新西兰。
达尼丁多学科健康与发展研究的1037名成员。主要暴露因素 在其生命的第一个十年中,研究成员接受了三种不良心理社会经历暴露的评估:社会经济劣势、虐待和社会孤立。
在32岁时,研究成员接受了三种与年龄相关疾病风险的评估:重度抑郁症、高炎症水平(高敏C反应蛋白水平>3mg/L)以及代谢风险生物标志物的聚集(超重、高血压、高总胆固醇、低高密度脂蛋白胆固醇、高糖化血红蛋白和低最大耗氧量水平)。
经历不良心理社会经历的儿童患抑郁症、高炎症水平和代谢风险标志物聚集的风险升高。经历社会经济劣势(发病率比,1.89;95%置信区间,1.36 - 2.62)、虐待(1.81;1.38 - 2.38)或社会孤立(1.87;1.38 - 2.51)的儿童成年后患与年龄相关疾病的风险升高。童年不良经历对成年后患与年龄相关疾病风险的影响是不可冗余、累积的,且独立于既定的发育和并发风险因素的影响。
经历不良心理社会经历的儿童存在持久的情绪、免疫和代谢异常,这有助于解释他们患与年龄相关疾病的风险升高。促进儿童健康的心理社会经历是预防与年龄相关疾病的必要且可能具有成本效益的目标。