Institute for Policy Research and Department of Psychology, Northwestern University, Evanston, Ill. (Miller, Chen, Nusslock); Boys Town National Research Hospital, Boys Town, Neb. (White).
Am J Psychiatry. 2021 Apr 1;178(4):313-320. doi: 10.1176/appi.ajp.2020.20050635. Epub 2020 Nov 19.
Children exposed to severe, chronic stress are vulnerable to mental and physical health problems across the lifespan. To explain how these problems develop, the neuroimmune network hypothesis suggests that early-life stress initiates a positive feedback loop between peripheral inflammatory cells and networked brain regions involved in threat and reward processing. The authors sought to test this hypothesis by studying a sample of urban children from diverse socioeconomic backgrounds.
The authors examined the basic predictions of the neuroimmune network hypothesis in 207 children (mean age=13.9 years, 63% female; 33% Black; 30% Hispanic), focusing on poverty as a stressor. The children had fasting blood drawn to quantify five inflammatory biomarkers-C-reactive protein, tumor necrosis factor-α, and interleukins-6, -8, and -10-which were averaged to form a composite score. Children also completed two functional MRI tasks, which measured amygdala responsivity to angry facial expressions and ventral striatum responsivity to monetary rewards.
Poverty status and neural responsivity interacted statistically to predict inflammation. Among children living in poverty, amygdala threat responsivity was positively associated with inflammation, and the same was true for ventral striatum responsivity to reward. As children's socioeconomic conditions improved, these brain-immune associations became weaker. In sensitivity analyses, these patterns were robust to alternative measures of socioeconomic status and were independent of age, sex, racial and ethnic identity, and pubertal status. The associations were also condition specific; no interactions were apparent for amygdala responsivity to neutral faces, or striatal responsivity to monetary losses.
These findings suggest that childhood poverty is associated with accentuated neural-immune signaling, consistent with the neuroimmune network hypothesis.
暴露于严重、慢性压力下的儿童在整个生命周期中易患精神和身体健康问题。为了解释这些问题是如何发展的,神经免疫网络假说表明,早期生活压力会引发外周炎性细胞与参与威胁和奖励处理的网络状大脑区域之间的正反馈循环。作者试图通过研究来自不同社会经济背景的城市儿童样本来检验这一假说。
作者研究了 207 名儿童(平均年龄为 13.9 岁,63%为女性;33%为黑人;30%为西班牙裔),以贫困为应激源,检验了神经免疫网络假说的基本预测。这些儿童抽取空腹血样以量化五种炎症生物标志物——C 反应蛋白、肿瘤坏死因子-α以及白细胞介素-6、-8 和 -10,然后将它们平均形成一个综合分数。儿童还完成了两项功能磁共振成像任务,测量杏仁核对愤怒面部表情的反应性和腹侧纹状体对金钱奖励的反应性。
贫困状况和神经反应性在统计学上相互作用,从而预测炎症。在生活贫困的儿童中,杏仁核对威胁的反应性与炎症呈正相关,腹侧纹状体对奖励的反应性也是如此。随着儿童社会经济状况的改善,这些大脑-免疫关联变得较弱。在敏感性分析中,这些模式对社会经济地位的替代衡量标准是稳健的,并且独立于年龄、性别、种族和民族身份以及青春期状态。这些关联也是特定于条件的;杏仁核对中性面部的反应性或纹状体对金钱损失的反应性没有明显的相互作用。
这些发现表明,童年贫困与增强的神经免疫信号有关,与神经免疫网络假说一致。