Categories
Nevin Manimala Statistics

Interactions between childhood maltreatment and combat exposure trauma on stress-related activity within the cingulate cortex: a pilot study

Mil Psychol. 2020 Jan 31;32(2):176-185. doi: 10.1080/08995605.2019.1702831. eCollection 2020.

ABSTRACT

Childhood trauma may sensitize the brain, increasing vulnerability to maladaptive stress responses following adulthood trauma exposure. Previous work has identified the cingulum as a white matter pathway that may be sensitized to adulthood trauma by childhood maltreatment. In this pilot study of young adult male military veterans (N = 28), we examined a priori regions of interest (ROIs) connected by the cingulum, including regions involved in cognitive processes and stress responses. Our goal was to examine the interaction between childhood maltreatment and combat exposure on stress-related activity within cingulum-associated ROIs. As such we utilized a mild cognitive stress task, a performance-titrated multi-source interference task (MSIT). We found that childhood maltreatment moderated the effect of combat exposure on stress-related, interference-evoked activity within the dorsal anterior cingulate cortex (dACC, activation), subgenual ACC (sgACC, deactivation) and posterior midcingulate cortex (pMCC, deactivation). Greater combat exposure was associated with greater interference-evoked activation within the dACC, and less sgACC and pMCC deactivation among individuals with more severe childhood maltreatment. Our findings suggest that child maltreatment sensitizes these anterior and mid-cingulate regions to later life trauma. These findings may have implications for cognitive control, autonomic regulation/stress reactivity, and responses to noxious/aversive stimuli, which may contribute to increased psychiatric vulnerability.

PMID:38536373 | PMC:PMC10013548 | DOI:10.1080/08995605.2019.1702831

By Nevin Manimala

Portfolio Website for Nevin Manimala