Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta, Georgia.
Division of Depression and Anxiety, McLean Hospital, Belmont, Massachusetts; Department of Psychiatry, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts.
Biol Psychiatry. 2022 Feb 1;91(3):254-261. doi: 10.1016/j.biopsych.2021.08.011. Epub 2021 Aug 24.
Experiences of racial discrimination are linked to a range of negative brain health outcomes, but little is known about how these experiences impact neural architecture, including white matter microstructure, which may partially mediate these outcomes. Our goal was to examine associations between racially discriminatory experiences and white matter structural integrity in a sample of Black American women.
We recruited 116 Black American women as part of a long-standing study of trauma. Participants completed assessments of racial discrimination, trauma exposure, and posttraumatic stress disorder and underwent diffusion tensor imaging. Fractional anisotropy and mean diffusivity values were extracted from major white matter tracts throughout the brain.
Experiences of racial discrimination were associated with significantly lower fractional anisotropy in multiple white matter tracts, including the corpus callosum, cingulum, and superior longitudinal fasciculus (ps < .004), even after accounting for variance associated with trauma, posttraumatic stress disorder, and demographic- and scanner-related factors.
These findings suggest that experiences of racial discrimination are independently related to decrements in white matter microarchitecture throughout the brain. In individuals who have experienced other types of adversity, racial discrimination clearly has additive and distinctive deleterious effects on white matter structure. Our findings suggest a pathway through which racial discrimination can contribute to brain health disparities in Black Americans; the deleterious contributions of racial discrimination on the microstructure of major white matter pathways may increase vulnerability for the development of neurodegenerative disorders as well as the development of mental health problems.
经历种族歧视与一系列负面的大脑健康结果有关,但人们对这些经历如何影响神经结构知之甚少,包括可能部分介导这些结果的白质微观结构。我们的目标是在一组美国黑人女性中研究种族歧视经历与白质结构完整性之间的关联。
我们招募了 116 名美国黑人女性作为创伤长期研究的一部分。参与者完成了种族歧视、创伤暴露和创伤后应激障碍的评估,并接受了弥散张量成像。从大脑中主要的白质束中提取分数各向异性和平均扩散系数值。
种族歧视经历与多个白质束的分数各向异性显著降低有关,包括胼胝体、扣带束和上纵束(p<.004),即使考虑到与创伤、创伤后应激障碍以及人口统计学和扫描仪相关因素相关的方差也是如此。
这些发现表明,种族歧视经历与大脑中整个白质微观结构的减少独立相关。在经历过其他类型逆境的个体中,种族歧视对白质结构显然具有额外的、独特的有害影响。我们的研究结果表明,种族歧视可能是导致美国黑人脑健康差异的一种途径;种族歧视对白质主要通路微观结构的有害影响可能会增加神经退行性疾病和心理健康问题发展的脆弱性。