Fňašková Monika, Říha Pavel, Preiss Marek, Bob Petr, Nečasová Markéta, Koriťáková Eva, Rektor Ivan
Central European Institute of Technology (CEITEC), Brain and Mind Research Program, Masaryk University, Brno, Czech Republic.
First Department of Neurology, St. Anne's Hospital and School of Medicine, Masaryk University, Brno, Czech Republic.
Neurobiol Stress. 2021 Mar 20;14:100318. doi: 10.1016/j.ynstr.2021.100318. eCollection 2021 May.
We aimed to assess the lifelong impact of extreme stress on people who survived the Holocaust. We hypothesised that the impact of extreme trauma is detectable even after more than 70 years of an often complicated and stressful post-war life.
Psychological testing was performed on 44 Holocaust survivors (HS; median age 81.5 years; 29 women; 26 HS were under the age of 12 years in 1945) and 31 control participants without a personal or family history of the Holocaust (control group (CG); median 80 years; 17 women). Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) using the 3T Siemens Prisma scanner was performed on 29 HS (median 79 years; 18 women) and 21 CG participants (median 80 years; 11 women). The MRI-tested subgroup that had been younger than 12 years old in 1945 was composed of 20 HS (median 79 years; 17 women) and 21 CG (median 80 years; 11 women).
HS experienced significantly higher frequency of depression symptoms, posttraumatic stress symptoms, and posttraumatic growth, and lower levels of well-being. The MRI shows a lifelong neurobiological effect of extreme stress. The areas with reduced grey matter correspond to the map of the impact of stress on the brain structure: insula, anterior cingulate, ventromedial cortex including the subgenual cingulate/orbitofrontal cortex, temporal pole, prefrontal cortex, and angular gyrus. HS showed good adjustment to post-war life conditions.Psychological growth may contribute to compensation for the psychological and neurobiological consequences of extreme stress.The reduction of GM was significantly expressed also in the subgroup of participants who survived the Holocaust during their childhood.
The lifelong psychological and neurobiological changes in people who survived extreme stress were identified more than 70 years after the Holocaust. Extreme stress in childhood and young adulthood has an irreversible lifelong impact on the brain.
我们旨在评估极端压力对大屠杀幸存者的终生影响。我们假设,即使在经历了70多年往往复杂且充满压力的战后生活之后,极端创伤的影响依然可以被检测到。
对44名大屠杀幸存者(HS;中位年龄81.5岁;29名女性;26名HS在1945年时年龄在12岁以下)和31名没有个人或家族大屠杀史的对照参与者(对照组(CG);中位年龄80岁;17名女性)进行了心理测试。使用3T西门子Prisma扫描仪对29名HS(中位年龄79岁;18名女性)和21名CG参与者(中位年龄80岁;11名女性)进行了磁共振成像(MRI)检查。1945年时年龄小于12岁的接受MRI检查的亚组由20名HS(中位年龄79岁;17名女性)和21名CG(中位年龄80岁;11名女性)组成。
HS出现抑郁症状、创伤后应激症状和创伤后成长的频率显著更高,幸福感水平更低。MRI显示了极端压力对神经生物学的终生影响。灰质减少的区域与压力对脑结构的影响图谱相对应:脑岛、前扣带回、包括膝下扣带回/眶额皮质在内的腹内侧皮质、颞极、前额叶皮质和角回。HS对战后生活条件表现出良好的适应性。心理成长可能有助于补偿极端压力的心理和神经生物学后果。在童年时期经历过大屠杀的参与者亚组中,GM的减少也有显著表现。
在大屠杀70多年后,我们发现了经历极端压力者的终生心理和神经生物学变化。童年和青年时期的极端压力对大脑有不可逆转的终生影响。