Literature DB >> 25273550

Childhood trauma is associated with a specific admixture of affective, anxiety, and psychosis symptoms cutting across traditional diagnostic boundaries.

M van Nierop1, W Viechtbauer1, N Gunther2, C van Zelst1, R de Graaf3, M Ten Have3, S van Dorsselaer3, M Bak1, R van Winkel1.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Meta-analyses link childhood trauma to depression, mania, anxiety disorders, and psychosis. It is unclear, however, whether these outcomes truly represent distinct disorders following childhood trauma, or that childhood trauma is associated with admixtures of affective, psychotic, anxiety and manic psychopathology throughout life.
METHOD: We used data from a representative general population sample (NEMESIS-2, n = 6646), of whom respectively 1577 and 1120 had a lifetime diagnosis of mood or anxiety disorder, as well as from a sample of patients with a diagnosis of schizophrenia (GROUP, n = 825). Multinomial logistic regression was used to assess whether childhood trauma was more strongly associated with isolated affective/psychotic/anxiety/manic symptoms than with their admixture.
RESULTS: In NEMESIS-2, largely comparable associations were found between childhood trauma and depression, mania, anxiety and psychosis. However, childhood trauma was considerably more strongly associated with their lifetime admixture. These results were confirmed in the patient samples, in which it was consistently found that patients with a history of childhood trauma were more likely to have a combination of multiple symptom domains compared to their non-traumatized counterparts. This pattern was also found in exposed individuals who did not meet criteria for a psychotic, affective or anxiety disorder and who did not seek help for subclinical psychopathology.
CONCLUSIONS: Childhood trauma increases the likelihood of a specific admixture of affective, anxiety and psychotic symptoms cutting across traditional diagnostic boundaries, and this admixture may already be present in the earliest stages of psychopathology. These findings may have significant aetiological, pathophysiological, diagnostic and clinical repercussions.

Entities:  

Keywords:  stratified medicine

Mesh:

Year:  2014        PMID: 25273550     DOI: 10.1017/S0033291714002372

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Psychol Med        ISSN: 0033-2917            Impact factor:   7.723


  44 in total

1.  Traumatic Events Are Associated with Diverse Psychological Symptoms in Typically-Developing Children.

Authors:  Mackenzie S Mills; Christine M Embury; Alicia K Klanecky; Maya M Khanna; Vince D Calhoun; Julia M Stephen; Yu-Ping Wang; Tony W Wilson; Amy S Badura-Brack
Journal:  J Child Adolesc Trauma       Date:  2019-08-19

2.  Evidence That Environmental and Familial Risks for Psychosis Additively Impact a Multidimensional Subthreshold Psychosis Syndrome.

Authors:  Lotta-Katrin Pries; Sinan Guloksuz; Margreet Ten Have; Ron de Graaf; Saskia van Dorsselaer; Nicole Gunther; Christian Rauschenberg; Ulrich Reininghaus; Rajiv Radhakrishnan; Maarten Bak; Bart P F Rutten; Jim van Os
Journal:  Schizophr Bull       Date:  2018-06-06       Impact factor: 9.306

Review 3.  Trauma and the psychosis spectrum: A review of symptom specificity and explanatory mechanisms.

Authors:  Lauren E Gibson; Lauren B Alloy; Lauren M Ellman
Journal:  Clin Psychol Rev       Date:  2016-08-31

4.  Aetiological stratification as a conceptual framework for gene-by-environment interaction research in psychiatry.

Authors:  Ruud van Winkel
Journal:  Epidemiol Psychiatr Sci       Date:  2015-02       Impact factor: 6.892

5.  Neurobehavioural mechanisms of threat generalization moderate the link between childhood maltreatment and psychopathology in emerging adulthood

Authors:  Iris Lange; Liesbet Goossens; Jindra Bakker; Stijn Michielse; Ruud van Winkel; Shmuel Lissek; Nicole Leibold; Machteld Marcelis; Marieke Wichers; Jim van Os; Therese van Amelsvoort; Koen Schruers
Journal:  J Psychiatry Neurosci       Date:  2019-05-01       Impact factor: 6.186

6.  Psychosis Literacy Among Latinos With First-Episode Psychosis and Their Caregivers.

Authors:  Steven R López; Diana Gamez; Yesenia Mejia; Vanessa Calderon; Daisy Lopez; Jodie B Ullman; Alex Kopelowicz
Journal:  Psychiatr Serv       Date:  2018-09-17       Impact factor: 3.084

Review 7.  Anxiety in Patients with Schizophrenia: Epidemiology and Management.

Authors:  Henk Temmingh; Dan J Stein
Journal:  CNS Drugs       Date:  2015       Impact factor: 5.749

8.  Mild Depressive Symptoms Mediate the Impact of Childhood Trauma on Long-Term Functional Outcome in Early Psychosis Patients.

Authors:  Luis Alameda; Philippe Golay; Philipp S Baumann; Pierre Progin; Nadir Mebdouhi; Julien Elowe; Carina Ferrari; Kim Q Do; Philippe Conus
Journal:  Schizophr Bull       Date:  2017-09-01       Impact factor: 9.306

9.  A critique of the "ultra-high risk" and "transition" paradigm.

Authors:  Jim van Os; Sinan Guloksuz
Journal:  World Psychiatry       Date:  2017-06       Impact factor: 49.548

10.  Treating a 16 Year Old with a History of Severe Bullying: Supplementing Cognitive Behavioural Therapy with EMDR within the Context of a Case Formulation Approach.

Authors:  Alice Taylor; Niel H McLachlan
Journal:  J Child Adolesc Trauma       Date:  2019-05-06
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