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    Home > Active Ingredient News > Study of Nervous System > Molecular Psychiatry: Adverse Childhood Experiences Linked to Depression

    Molecular Psychiatry: Adverse Childhood Experiences Linked to Depression

    • Last Update: 2022-04-22
    • Source: Internet
    • Author: User
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    Adverse childhood experiences are associated with an increased risk of depression in children


    Adverse childhood experiences are associated with an increased risk of depression in children


    Eleonora Iob et al.


    Data from the Avon Parent and Child Longitudinal Study, sample size = 3931


    Data from the Avon Parent and Child Longitudinal Study, sample size = 3931


    Analysis process

    Analysis process

    Population-based depressive symptoms and C -reactive protein trajectories

    Population-based depressive symptoms and C -reactive protein trajectories

    Most types of adverse childhood experiences were associated with elevated depressive trajectories across all early life stages, with greater associations with threat-related adversity


    Most types of adverse childhood experiences were associated with elevated depressive trajectories across all early life stages, with greater associations with threat-related adversity


    Association of Adverse Childhood Experiences (Prenatal to 18 Years) and CRP Trajectory (9-18 Years)


    Association of Adverse Childhood Experiences (Prenatal to 18 Years) and CRP Trajectory (9-18 Years)


    Bullying victimization and sexual abuse in later childhood/adolescence were associated with elevated CRP trajectories, whereas other adverse childhood experiences were not associated with inflammation


    Inflammation was also not associated with depression and did not mediate the association with adverse childhood experiences


    This study shows that adverse childhood experiences from before birth through adolescence are strongly associated with moderate and severe depressive symptoms in early adulthood


    original source

    Iob, E.


    Iob, E.
    , Lacey, R.
    , Giunchiglia, V.
      et al.
    Mol Psychiatry https://doi.
    org/10.
    1038/s41380-022-01478-x

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