| Literature DB >> 20161700 |
Nim Tottenham1, Margaret A Sheridan.
Abstract
A review of the human developmental neuroimaging literature that investigates outcomes following exposure to psychosocial adversity is presented with a focus on two subcortical structures - the hippocampus and the amygdala. Throughout this review, we discuss how a consideration of developmental timing of adverse experiences and age at measurement might provide insight into the seemingly discrepant findings across studies. We use findings from animal studies to suggest some mechanisms through which timing of experiences may result in differences across time and studies. The literature suggests that early life may be a time of heightened susceptibility to environmental stressors, but that expression of these effects will vary by age at measurement.Entities:
Keywords: HPA axis; adversity; amygdala; hippocampus; human development; stress
Year: 2010 PMID: 20161700 PMCID: PMC2813726 DOI: 10.3389/neuro.09.068.2009
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Hum Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5161 Impact factor: 3.169
Summary of findings on hippocampus and amygdala.
| Article | N | Human/Animal | Sex | Age of adversity | Test during or post adversity | Age at test | Adversity | Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Admon et al. ( | 50 | Human adults | 25M/25F | 18 years | Within 6 months post stress | 19 years | Combat exposure | 1. Amygdala Reactivity pre stress predicted increase in stress-related symptomology. |
| 2. Increases in Hippocampal reactivity predicted increases in stress-related symptomology | ||||||||
| Gilbertson et al. ( | 35 | Human adult | 12M Combat exposed Twin pairs/23 M noncombat exposed twin pairs | Adulthood | Post | 52.8/51.8 | Combat exposure | 1. Small hippocampal volume is a risk factor for PTSD. No effect of combat stress on volume |
| Kasai et al. ( | 41 | Human adult | 18M Combat exposed Twin pairs/23 M noncombat exposed twin pairs | Adulthood | Post | 52.8/51.8 | Combat exposure | 1. Combat exposed twin with PTSD showed decreased hippocampal activity relative to combat exposed twin without PTSD |
| Liberzon et al. ( | 39 | Human adult | 14M Combat Exposure and PTSD/11M Combat only/ 14M Control | Adulthood | Post | 45–52 | Combat exposure/current anxiety disorder | 1. PTSD patients exhibited elevated activation of left amygdala to combat sounds for |
| Rauch et al. ( | 16 | Human adult | 8M Combat Veterans with PTSD/8 Controls | Adulthood | Post | 48–61 years | Combat exposure/current anxiety disorder | 1. Combat Exposed Veterans with PTSD had exaggerated amygdala responses to faces |
| Shin et al. ( | 36 | Human adult | 17 (7M) Combat Exposed Veterans with PTSD/19(9M) Combat Exposed Veterans without PTSD | Adulthood | Post | adulthood | Combat exposure/current anxiety disorder | 1. Male Combat Veterans with PTSD exhibited elevated amygdala activity |
| Shin et al. ( | 16 | Human adult | 8M Firefighters with PTSD/8M Controls | Adulthood | Post | adulthood | Fire fighting exposure/current anxiety disorder | 1. Participants with PTSD showed decreased hippocampal activation during memory task. |
| 2. Participants with PTSD had smaller hippocampal volume than controls | ||||||||
| Gianaros et al. ( | 48 | Human adults | 48 F | Adulthood | During | 48 years | Self report of stress on perceived stress scale for 20 years | 1. Decreases hippocampal volume associated with increased life stress |
| Armony et al. ( | 13 | Human adults | 9F/4M | Adulthood | Post (within past 4–6 weeks) | 19–57 years | Motor vehicle accidents | 1. Increased amygdala activation to masked fearful faces > masked happy faces |
| Andersen et al. ( | 43 | Human adults | 26F with abuse; 17F healthy controls | Childhood | Post | 18–22 years | Retrospective sexual abuse reporting | 1. Sexual abuse at 3–5 or 11–13 years of age was associated with reductions in hippocampal volume. 2. Sexual abuse at 9–10 and 14–16 years was not |
| Bremner et al. ( | 34 | Human adult | 12M/5F with child abuse; 12M/5F matched controls | Childhood | Post | 30–50 years | Chronic child abuse (at least once a month for a year) | 1. PTSD patients have smaller hippocampus and unchanged amygdala |
| Cohen et al. ( | 250 | Human adult | Sex unreported; 100 with 2 or more early negative events/150 with less than 2 negative events | Childhood | Post | 18–70 years; mean age 40 years | Retrospective reporting of early life stressors (various) | 1. Differences in hippocampal volume were marginally significant and amygdala were nonsignificant between groups |
| Driessen et al. ( | 42 | Human adults | 21F patients with borderline personality disorder/21 age, gender, handedness matched contents | Childhood | Post | 21–40 years | Childhood trauma/current borderline personality disorder | 1. Patients had 16% smaller hippocampal volume and 8% smaller amygdala than controls |
| Schmahl et al. ( | 33 | Human adult | 10F with Borderline Personality Disorder and childhood trauma/10F controls with childhood trauma/13F controls with no trauma | Childhood | Post | 20–39 years | Childhood trauma/Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD) | 1. Patients with BPD had smaller amygdala (∼22%) and hippocampal (∼14%) volumes; Trauma exposure only was not tested |
| Carrion et al. ( | 24 | Human children | 14M/10F with trauma and PTSD or subthreshold PTSD; 14M/10 Fage matched controls | Childhood | Post | 7–14 years | Various traumatic exposures | No differences in hippocampal volume |
| DeBellis et al. ( | 52 | Human children | 44 Children with PTSD (25M)/61 Control (36M) | Childhood | Post | 8–13 years | Childhood maltreatment/current anxiety disorder | 1. Decreased intercranial and cerebral volume, increased ventricle size. |
| 2. No differences in hippocampal volume | ||||||||
| DeBellis et al. ( | 18 | Human children | 9 Children with PTSD(5M)/9 age, gender, Tanner Stage matched Controls | Childhood/ pre-puberty | Post | Pre (10 years)/post (13 years) puberty; longitudinal design | Childhood maitreatment/current anxiety disorder | 1. No significant decrease in hippocampal volume for children with PTSD across adolescence in a longitudinal design |
| Tottenham et al. ( | 62 | Human children | 8M/26F previously institutionalized; 5M/23F comparison | Infancy | Post | 5–12 years | Adverse caregiving | 1. Larger amygdala volume in previously institutionalized group. |
| 2. No differences in hippocampal volume | ||||||||
| Mehta et al. ( | 25 | Human children | 6M/8F previously institutionalized; 6M/5F comparison | Infancy | Post | 16 years | Adverse caregiving | 1. Larger amygdala volume in previously institutionalized group. |
| 2. No differences in hippocampal volume | ||||||||
| Conrad et al. ( | 72 | Sprague-Dawley rat | 36M chronically stressed/ 36M no stress | Adulthood | 0, 10, and 20-days post stress termination | Adulthood | 6 h of restraint stress for 21 consecutive days | 1. Decreased hippocampal CA3 apical dendrite morphology. |
| 2. 10 or 20 days of recovery eliminated changes in dendritic morphology caused by stress | ||||||||
| Honkaniemi et al. ( | 24 | Sprague-Dawley rat | 20 Capsaicin/4 Control | Adulthood | Post | Adulthood | Capsaicin | 1. Expression of c-fos, c-jun, and junB in the PVN and central nucleus of the amygdala |
| Kim et al. ( | 28 | Long-Evans rats | 28M | Adulthood | Post | Adulthood | Restraint/tail shock | 1. Lesioning the amygdala pre-stress protected hippocampal structure (LTP) and function (Morris Water Maze) effects of stress exposure |
| Vyas et al. ( | 3 groups | Adult Wistar rats | Male Wistar Rats (Chronic Immobilization Stress/Chronic Variable Stress/Control | 2-months old (adulthood) | Directly after stress | 3-months old (adulthood) | Chronic immobilization stress/chronic variable stress | 1. Accelerated dendritic arborization in the amygdala. |
| 2. Dendritic atrophy in CA3 (hippocampus) | ||||||||
| Vyas et al. ( | 3 groups | Adult Wistar rats | Male Wistar Rats (Chronic Immobilization Stress/Chronic Variable Stress/ Control | 2.5–3 months old (adulthood) | Post | 3.5–4 months old (adulthood) | Chronic immobilization stress | 1. Anxiety behavior and amygdala dendtric arborization persisted in stressed rats compared to control. |
| 2. Hippocampal dendritic atrophy did not persist after 21 days of recovery | ||||||||
| Liu et al. ( | – | Norway rat | Several large liters | PND 1–10 | Post | Adulthood | Reduced maternal care | 1. Increased adrenocorticotropin and corticosterone to stress, decreased hippocampal GR mRNA |
| Plotsky et al. ( | 20 | Long evans hooded rats | 5M non-handled/ 5M handled/5M maternal separation/5 M control | PND2–14 | Post | PND 100–120 | Maternal separation | 1. Elevated CRH mRNA in Amygdala of Maternally separated and non-handled rats |
| Brunson et al. ( | Sprague-Dawley rat | Several male litters | PND2-weaning | Post | 4-and 12-months old | Poor maternal care | 1. Impaired hippocampal function appeared only in middle aged adults | |
| Tsoory et al. ( | 104 | Sprague-Dawley rat | 56M exposed to juvenile stress/48M control | PND 27–29 | Post | PND 33 - juvenile/9-week-old adult | 3-day variable stress exposure | 1. Increased neural cell adhesion molecule in basolateral amygdala, hippocampus CA1, dentate gyrus, entorhinal cortex measured at adulthood but not during the juvenile period |
| Andersen and Teicher ( | 100 | Sprague-Dawley rat | 50M/50F | PND 2–20 | Post | PND 25, 40, 60, 80, 100 | Maternal separation | 1. Synaptophysin OD decreases in hippocampal CA1 and CA3 at postnatal day 60 (not before). |
| 2. No effect on Synaptophysin OD in the amygdala | ||||||||
| Ono et al. ( | 148 | Balb/c mice | 76 (33M) early weaned/ 72 (34M) typically weaned | PND 14 | Post | 3, 5, and 8 weeks of age | Early weaning (PND 14) | 1. Precocious development of amygdala, not hippocampus (accumulation of galactosylceramide) at 5 weeks of age |
| Chen et al. ( | 55 | Sprague-Dawley rat | 55 stressed | PND 18 and Adult (3 months old) | Directly after stress | PND 18 and Adult | Restraint/restraint-noise | 1. Hippocampal response (FOS) to stress was more rapid and robust at PND 18 than adulthood |
| Kikusui and Mori ( | 129 | Balb/c mice | 63(28M) early weaned/66 (32M) typically weaned | PND 14 | Post | 8–22 weeks | Early weaning (PND 14) | 1. Accelerated amygdala development |
| Salzberg et al. ( | 29 | Wistar rats | 16 (9M) maternal separation/13 (6 M) early handling | PND 2–14 | Post | 7 weeks | Maternal Separation | 1. Amygdala sensitization following maternal separation |
| Isgor et al. ( | 156 | Juvenile Sprague Dawley rats | 156M | PND 28 | 24 h post stress/ 3 weeks post stress | PND 57/77 | 28 days of variable chronic stress | 1. 3 weeks post stress when rodents were adults hippocampal volume (CA1 and CA3) was decreased due to inhibited growth. |
| 2. 24-h post stress when rodents were still juvenile hippocampal volume differences were absent or reversed | ||||||||
| Becker et al. ( | 20 | Octodon Degus | 10M stressed/10M non-stressed | PND 1–21 | Post stress | PND 22 (post weaning/pre reproduction) | PND1–21 separated 1x per day for 1 h | 1. Higher levels of CRF neurons in basolateral amygdala. |
| 2. Lower levels of corticotropin releasing factor (CRF) fibers/neurons in central amygdala and hippocampal dentate gyrus and CA1 | ||||||||
| Vazquez et al. ( | 300 | Hybrid Sprague-Dawley/Long-Kvans | 80 (40M) stress at PND 6/ 80(40M) stress at PND 12/80(40M) stress at PND 18/ 60(30M) controls | PND 6, 12, or 18 | Directly after, 1 h after, or 4 h after | PND 6, 12, or 18 | Maternal separation and restraint stress | 1. Basal CRH gene expression is higher at earlier ages in amygdala than hippocampus. |
| 2. Deprivation had site-specific effects on the temporal response to restraint stress | ||||||||
| Vazquez et al. ( | 12 groups | Juvenile Wistar rats | Stressed at PND 6, 9, or 18/ challenged at PND 6, 9, 18/ control PND 6, 9,18 | PND 6/9/18 | 1-h post stress | PND 6/9/18 | Maternal deprivation/saline injection | 1. Mineral corticoid receptor (MR) and glucocorticoid receptor (GR) mRNA decreases in hippocampus of deprived pups |
| Moriceau et al. ( | 108 | Juvenile Long Evans rats | Approximately 1/2 M | PND 8 or 12 | During stress | PND 8 or 12 | Predator odor | 1. Exogenously administered Cortisol increased amygdala activation and fear responding in young rats |
| Hatalski et al. ( | 2 litters | Juvenile Sprauge Dawley | Mixed litters | PND 9/10 | 4-h post stress | PND 9/10 | Single exposure to cold stress/3 exposures to cold | 1. Increased CRF-mRNA in the central nucleus of the amygdala |
| Sabatini et al. ( | 12 | Juvenile Rhesus Macaque | 4 F 1 week maternally seperated/4F 1 month maternally separated/ 4F controls | Infancy equivalent | Post stress | 3 months | 1 week maternally seperated/1 month maternally separated | 1. Early separation, more than later separation, decreased amygdala gene expression (guanylate cyclase 1 α 3) |
| Spinelli et al. ( | 28 | Rhesus monkeys | 15 (7M) mother reared/13 (6M) peer reared | 0–6 months old | Post stress | 23–32 Months (age equivalent to childhood) | Maternal deprivation | 1. No difference in hippocampal volume measurements |