Campbell Family Mental Health Research Institute, Centre for Addiction and Mental Health, Toronto, Ontario, Canada; Brain and Mind Research, Central European Institute of Technology, Masaryk University, Brno, Czech Republic.
Brain and Mind Research, Central European Institute of Technology, Masaryk University, Brno, Czech Republic.
Biol Psychiatry Cogn Neurosci Neuroimaging. 2022 Feb;7(2):231-238. doi: 10.1016/j.bpsc.2021.07.009. Epub 2021 Aug 3.
Exposure to maternal stress in utero has long-term implications for the developing brain and has been linked with a higher risk of depression. The amygdala, which develops during the early embryonic stage and is critical for emotion processing, might be particularly sensitive.
Using data from a neuroimaging follow-up of the European Longitudinal Study of Pregnancy and Childhood prenatal birth cohort (n = 129, 47% men, 23-24 years old), we studied the impact of prenatal stress during the first and second halves of pregnancy on the volume of the amygdala and its nuclei in young adult offspring. We further evaluated the relationship between amygdala anatomy and offspring depressive symptomatology. Amygdala nuclei were parcellated using FreeSurfer's automated segmentation pipeline. Depressive symptoms were measured via self-report using the Beck Depression Inventory.
Exposure to stress during the first half of pregnancy was associated with smaller accessory basal (Cohen's f = 0.27, false discovery rate [FDR]-corrected p [p] = .03) and cortical (Cohen's f = 0.29, p = .03) nuclei volumes. This effect remained significant after correcting for sex, stress during the second half of pregnancy, maternal age at birth, birth weight, maternal education, and offspring's age at magnetic resonance imaging. These two nuclei showed a quadratic relationship with Beck Depression Inventory scores in young adulthood, where both smaller and larger volumes were associated with more depressive symptoms (accessory basal nucleus: adj. R = 0.05, p = .015; cortical nucleus: adj. R = 0.04, p = .015).
We conclude that exposure to stress during the first half of pregnancy might have long-term implications for amygdala anatomy, which may in turn predict the experience of depressive symptoms in young adulthood.
子宫内暴露于母体应激会对发育中的大脑产生长期影响,并与更高的抑郁风险相关。杏仁核在胚胎早期发育,对于情绪处理至关重要,可能特别敏感。
我们利用来自欧洲妊娠和儿童纵向研究的神经影像学随访出生队列的数据(n=129,47%为男性,年龄 23-24 岁),研究了妊娠前半期和后半期的产前应激对年轻成年后代杏仁核体积及其核团的影响。我们进一步评估了杏仁核解剖结构与后代抑郁症状之间的关系。杏仁核核团使用 FreeSurfer 的自动分割管道进行分割。使用贝克抑郁量表通过自我报告测量抑郁症状。
妊娠前半期暴露于应激与附属基底核(Cohen's f=0.27,经 FDR 校正的 p 值[p] =.03)和皮质核(Cohen's f=0.29,p=.03)体积减小相关。在校正性别、妊娠后半期应激、出生时母亲年龄、出生体重、母亲教育程度和磁共振成像时的后代年龄后,这种影响仍然显著。这两个核团与年轻人的贝克抑郁量表评分呈二次关系,较小和较大的体积都与更多的抑郁症状相关(附属基底核:adj. R=0.05,p=0.015;皮质核:adj. R=0.04,p=0.015)。
我们的结论是,妊娠前半期暴露于应激可能对杏仁核解剖结构产生长期影响,而杏仁核解剖结构又可能预测年轻人的抑郁症状体验。