Department of Society, Human Development, and Health, Harvard School of Public Health, Boston, MA 02115, USA.
Biol Psychiatry. 2010 Aug 15;68(4):329-36. doi: 10.1016/j.biopsych.2010.04.005. Epub 2010 May 23.
Children raised in institutional settings are exposed to social and environmental circumstances that may deprive them of expected environmental inputs during sensitive periods of brain development that are necessary to foster healthy development. This deprivation is thought to underlie the abnormalities in neurodevelopment that have been found in previously institutionalized children. It is unknown whether deviations in neurodevelopment explain the high rates of developmental problems evident in previously institutionalized children, including psychiatric disorders.
We present data from a sample of children raised in institutions in Bucharest, Romania (n = 117) and an age- and sex-matched sample of community control subjects (n = 49). Electroencephalogram data were acquired following entry into the study at age 6 to 30 months, and a structured diagnostic interview of psychiatric disorders was completed at age 54 months.
Children reared in institutions evidenced greater symptoms of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, anxiety, depression, and disruptive behavior disorders than community controls. Electroencephalogram revealed significant reductions in alpha relative power and increases in theta relative power among children reared in institutions in frontal, temporal, and occipital regions, suggesting a delay in cortical maturation. This pattern of brain activity predicted symptoms of hyperactivity and impulsivity at age 54 months, and significantly mediated the association between institutionalization and attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder symptoms. Electroencephalogram power was unrelated to depression, anxiety, or disruptive behaviors.
These findings document a potential neurodevelopmental mechanism underlying the association between institutionalization and psychiatric morbidity. Deprivation in social and environmental conditions may perturb early patterns of neurodevelopment and manifest as psychiatric problems later in life.
在机构环境中长大的儿童会接触到社会和环境因素,这些因素可能会剥夺他们在大脑发育敏感时期获得预期环境刺激的机会,而这些刺激对于促进健康发育是必要的。这种剥夺被认为是导致以前被机构收容的儿童出现神经发育异常的基础。目前尚不清楚神经发育的偏差是否可以解释以前被机构收容的儿童中明显存在的发育问题的高发生率,包括精神障碍。
我们提供了来自罗马尼亚布加勒斯特机构中长大的儿童样本(n = 117)和年龄及性别匹配的社区对照组(n = 49)的数据。在 6 至 30 个月大时进入研究后,获取了脑电图数据,并在 54 个月大时完成了精神障碍的结构化诊断访谈。
在机构中长大的儿童比社区对照组表现出更多的注意力缺陷/多动障碍、焦虑、抑郁和破坏性行为障碍的症状。脑电图显示,在机构中长大的儿童的额部、颞部和枕部区域的阿尔法相对功率显著降低,theta 相对功率增加,表明皮质成熟延迟。这种大脑活动模式预测了 54 个月时的多动和冲动症状,并且显著介导了机构化与注意力缺陷/多动障碍症状之间的关联。脑电图功率与抑郁、焦虑或破坏性行为无关。
这些发现记录了机构化与精神发病率之间关联的潜在神经发育机制。社会和环境条件的剥夺可能会扰乱早期的神经发育模式,并在以后的生活中表现为精神问题。