Hawkins Misty, Ciciolla Lucia, Colaizzi Janna, Keirns Natalie, Smith Caitlin, Stout Madison, Addante Samantha, Armans Mira, Erato Gina
Department of Psychology Oklahoma State University Stillwater Oklahoma.
Laureate Institute for Brain Research Tulsa Oklahoma.
Obes Sci Pract. 2019 Dec 26;6(1):47-56. doi: 10.1002/osp4.385. eCollection 2020 Feb.
Adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) and obesity are independently associated with brain/neurocognitive health. Despite a growing emphasis on the importance of early life adversity on health, the relationship between ACEs and neurocognition in adults with overweight/obesity is unclear. The objective was to examine associations between self-reported ACEs and measured neurocognitive domains in a sample of adults with overweight/obesity.
Participants were 95 predominantly white, highly educated adult women (76% female, 81% Caucasian, and 75% ≥ bachelor's degree) with excess adiposity enrolled in the Cognitive and Self-regulatory Mechanisms of Obesity Study. ACEs and fluid/crystallized neurocognitive domains were measured at baseline using the Adverse Childhood Experiences Scale and the NIH Toolbox Cognition Battery and Automated Neuropsychological Assessment Metric, respectively.
Higher ACEs scores were negatively correlated with fluid cognition ( = -.34, < .001) but not crystallized cognition ( = .01, ). Individuals with 3 and 4+ ACEs displayed significantly lower fluid cognition scores than those with fewer ACEs = 3.24, < .05. After accounting for body mass index (BMI), age, sex, race, and education, higher ACEs scores were still associated with poorer performance on overall fluid cognition ( = -.36, < .01), along with the following subtests: Stroop Colour/Word test ( = -.23, < .05), Go/No-Go omissions ( = .29, < .01), and Picture Sequence Memory task ( = -.30, < .01).
The role of ACEs in health may be related to their associations with executive function and episodic neurocognitive domains essential to cognitive processing and self-regulation. Obesity science should further examine the role of ACEs and neurocognition in obesity prevention, prognosis, and treatment using more rigorous, prospective designs and more diverse samples.
童年不良经历(ACEs)和肥胖均与大脑/神经认知健康独立相关。尽管人们越来越重视早期生活逆境对健康的重要性,但超重/肥胖成年人中ACEs与神经认知之间的关系尚不清楚。本研究的目的是在超重/肥胖成年人样本中,探讨自我报告的ACEs与测量的神经认知领域之间的关联。
参与者为95名主要为白人、受过高等教育的成年女性(76%为女性,81%为白种人,75%≥本科学历),她们均患有肥胖症,参与了肥胖的认知和自我调节机制研究。在基线时,分别使用童年不良经历量表、美国国立卫生研究院工具箱认知电池和自动神经心理评估指标来测量ACEs以及流体/晶体神经认知领域。
较高的ACEs得分与流体认知呈负相关(r = -0.34,p < 0.001),但与晶体认知无关(r = 0.01,p值未给出)。有3次及4次以上ACEs经历的个体,其流体认知得分显著低于ACEs经历较少的个体(p = 3.24,p < 0.05)。在考虑了体重指数(BMI)、年龄、性别、种族和教育因素后,较高的ACEs得分仍与整体流体认知表现较差相关(r = -0.36,p < 0.01),以及以下子测试:Stroop颜色/单词测试(r = -0.23,p < 0.05)、Go/No-Go遗漏错误(r = 0.29,p < 0.01)和图片序列记忆任务(r = -0.30,p < 0.01)。
ACEs在健康中的作用可能与其与执行功能以及对认知加工和自我调节至关重要的情景神经认知领域的关联有关。肥胖科学应采用更严谨的前瞻性设计和更多样化的样本,进一步研究ACEs和神经认知在肥胖预防、预后和治疗中的作用。