Janicki-Deverts Denise, Cohen Sheldon, Doyle William J, Marsland Anna L, Bosch Jos
Department of Psychology, Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, PA 15213, USA.
Department of Psychology, Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, PA 15213, USA.
Brain Behav Immun. 2014 Aug;40:174-81. doi: 10.1016/j.bbi.2014.03.010. Epub 2014 Mar 25.
Childhood adversity, defined in terms of material hardship or physical or emotional maltreatment has been associated with risk for infection with cytomegalovirus (CMV) among children and adolescents, and with CMV reactivation in children and adults. The present study examined whether different dimensions of childhood experience-those pertaining to socioeconomic status (SES), physical environment, or family relationships-relate differentially to CMV serostatus and reactivation during adulthood. Participants were 140 healthy adults, aged 18-55years (41% female; 64% white). Childhood environments were assessed retrospectively and included family SES (parental housing tenure); childhood neighborhood environment (urban residence; physical conditions; safety; and social atmosphere); residential exposures (parental smoking and physical condition of home); and family relationships (parental divorce; warmth; harmony; dysfunction; parental bonding). Approximately 39% (n=53) of participants were CMV+. In individual analyses controlling for age, sex, race, body mass, current adult SES and smoking status, fewer years of parental home ownership, having a parent who smoked, and living in a poorly maintained or unsafe neighborhood each were associated with greater odds of infection with CMV. By comparison, in individual analyses limited to CMV+ participants, less family warmth, less harmony, greater dysfunction, and suboptimal parental bonding each were related to higher antibody levels, independent of the aforementioned covariates. Findings were not attributable to current adult perceptions of psychological stress or relative levels of emotional stability. These results suggest that different types of childhood adversity may be associated with differential effects on CMV infection and latency.
童年逆境,定义为物质匮乏、身体或情感虐待,与儿童和青少年感染巨细胞病毒(CMV)的风险以及儿童和成人的CMV再激活有关。本研究探讨了童年经历的不同维度——那些与社会经济地位(SES)、物理环境或家庭关系有关的维度——在成年期是否与CMV血清状态和再激活存在不同的关联。研究参与者为140名18至55岁的健康成年人(41%为女性;64%为白人)。通过回顾性评估童年环境,包括家庭SES(父母的住房保有情况);童年邻里环境(城市居住情况、物理条件、安全性和社会氛围);居住暴露因素(父母吸烟情况和家庭物理条件);以及家庭关系(父母离婚情况、温暖程度、和谐程度、功能失调情况、亲子关系)。约39%(n = 53)的参与者CMV呈阳性。在控制年龄、性别、种族、体重、当前成人SES和吸烟状况的个体分析中,父母拥有住房的年限较短、有吸烟的父母以及居住在维护不善或不安全的社区,每一项都与感染CMV的几率增加有关。相比之下,在仅限于CMV阳性参与者的个体分析中,较少的家庭温暖、较低的和谐程度、较大的功能失调以及不理想的亲子关系,每一项都与较高的抗体水平相关,且不受上述协变量的影响。研究结果并非归因于当前成年人对心理压力的感知或情绪稳定性的相对水平。这些结果表明,不同类型的童年逆境可能对CMV感染和潜伏产生不同的影响。