Belsky Jay, Ruttle Paula L, Boyce W Thomas, Armstrong Jeffrey M, Essex Marilyn J
Department of Human Ecology.
Department of Psychiatry, School of Medicine and Public Health, University of Wisconsin-Madison.
Dev Psychol. 2015 Jun;51(6):816-822. doi: 10.1037/dev0000017. Epub 2015 Apr 27.
Evolutionary-minded developmentalists studying predictive-adaptive-response processes linking childhood adversity with accelerated female reproductive development and health scientists investigating the developmental origins of health and disease (DOoHaD) may be tapping the same process, whereby longer-term health costs are traded off for increased probability of reproducing before dying via a process of accelerated reproductive maturation. Using data from 73 females, we test the following propositions using path analysis: (a) greater exposure to prenatal stress predicts greater maternal depression and negative parenting in infancy, (b) which predicts elevated basal cortisol at 4.5 years, (c) which predicts accelerated adrenarcheal development, (d) which predicts more physical and mental health problems at age 18. Results prove generally consistent with these propositions, including a direct link from cortisol to mental health problems. DOoHaD investigators should consider including early sexual maturation as a core component linking early adversity and stress physiology with poor health later in life in females.
具有进化思维的发育学家研究将童年逆境与女性生殖发育加速联系起来的预测适应性反应过程,以及研究健康与疾病发育起源(DOoHaD)的健康科学家,可能正在探究同一个过程,即通过加速生殖成熟的过程,以牺牲长期健康成本为代价,换取在死亡前增加繁殖的可能性。我们使用来自73名女性的数据,通过路径分析来检验以下命题:(a)孕期压力暴露越大,预测婴儿期母亲抑郁和负面养育方式的程度越高;(b)这又预测4.5岁时基础皮质醇水平升高;(c)这进而预测肾上腺初现发育加速;(d)这再预测18岁时更多的身心健康问题。结果总体上与这些命题一致,包括皮质醇与心理健康问题之间的直接联系。DOoHaD研究人员应考虑将早期性成熟作为连接女性早期逆境和应激生理学与后期健康不良的核心组成部分。