Literature DB >> 25622303

Effect of early institutionalization and foster care on long-term white matter development: a randomized clinical trial.

Johanna Bick1, Tong Zhu2, Catherine Stamoulis3, Nathan A Fox4, Charles Zeanah5, Charles A Nelson6.   

Abstract

IMPORTANCE: Severe neglect in early life is associated with compromises in brain development and associated behavioral functioning. Although early intervention has been shown to support more normative trajectories of brain development, specific improvements in the white matter pathways that underlie emotional and cognitive development are unknown.
OBJECTIVE: To examine associations among neglect in early life, early intervention, and the microstructural integrity of white matter pathways in middle childhood. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: The Bucharest Early Intervention Project is a randomized clinical trial of high-quality foster care as an intervention for institutionally reared children in Bucharest, Romania, from 2000 through the present. During infancy, children were randomly selected to remain in an institution or to be placed in foster care. Those who remained in institutions experienced neglect, including social, emotional, linguistic, and cognitive impoverishment. Developmental trajectories of these children were compared with a group of sociodemographically matched children reared in biological families at baseline and several points throughout development. At approximately 8 years of age, 69 of the original 136 children underwent structural magnetic resonance imaging scans. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES: Four estimates of white matter integrity (fractional anisotropy [FA] and mean [MD], radial [RD], and axial [AD] diffusivity) for 48 white matter tracts throughout the brain were obtained through diffusion tensor imaging.
RESULTS: Significant associations emerged between neglect in early life and microstructural integrity of the body of the corpus callosum (FA, β = 0.01 [P = .01]; RD, β = -0.02 [P = .005]; MD, β = -0.01 [P = .02]) and tracts involved in limbic circuitry (fornix crus [AD, β = 0.02 (P = .046)] and cingulum [RD, β = -0.01 (P = .02); MD, β = -0.01 (P = .049)]), frontostriatal circuitry (anterior [AD, β = -0.01 (P = .02)] and superior [AD, β = -0.02 (P = .02); MD, β = -0.01 (P = .03)] corona radiata and external capsule [right FA, β = 0.01 (P = .03); left FA, β = 0.01 (P = .03); RD, β = -0.01 (P = .01); MD, β = -0.01 (P = .03)]), and sensory processing (medial lemniscus [AD, β = -0.02 (P = .045); MD, β = -0.01 (P = .04)] and retrolenticular internal capsule [FA, β = -0.01 (P = .002); RD, β = 0.01 (P = .003); MD, β = 0.01 (P = .04)]). Follow-up analyses revealed that early intervention promoted more normative white matter development among previously neglected children who entered foster care. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: Results suggest that removal from conditions of neglect in early life and entry into a high-quality family environment can support more normative trajectories of white matter growth. Our findings have implications for public health and policy efforts designed to promote normative brain development among vulnerable children. TRIAL REGISTRATION: clinicaltrials.gov Identifier: NCT00747396.

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Year:  2015        PMID: 25622303      PMCID: PMC4413892          DOI: 10.1001/jamapediatrics.2014.3212

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  JAMA Pediatr        ISSN: 2168-6203            Impact factor:   16.193


  37 in total

1.  Diffusion tensor eigenvalues or both mean diffusivity and fractional anisotropy are required in quantitative clinical diffusion tensor MR reports: fractional anisotropy alone is not sufficient.

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3.  Abnormal brain connectivity in children after early severe socioemotional deprivation: a diffusion tensor imaging study.

Authors:  Thomas J Eluvathingal; Harry T Chugani; Michael E Behen; Csaba Juhász; Otto Muzik; Mohsin Maqbool; Diane C Chugani; Malek Makki
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6.  Microstructural abnormalities in language and limbic pathways in orphanage-reared children: a diffusion tensor imaging study.

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7.  Institutional rearing and psychiatric disorders in Romanian preschool children.

Authors:  Charles H Zeanah; Helen L Egger; Anna T Smyke; Charles A Nelson; Nathan A Fox; Peter J Marshall; Donald Guthrie
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8.  Altered water diffusivity in cortical association tracts in children with early deprivation identified with Tract-Based Spatial Statistics (TBSS).

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9.  Diffusion tensor imaging study of white matter fiber tracts in pediatric bipolar disorder and attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder.

Authors:  Mani N Pavuluri; Shuohui Yang; Kiran Kamineni; Alessandra M Passarotti; Girish Srinivasan; Erin M Harral; John A Sweeney; Xiaohong Joe Zhou
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10.  Abnormal white matter integrity in adolescents with internet addiction disorder: a tract-based spatial statistics study.

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Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2012-01-11       Impact factor: 3.240

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  62 in total

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Review 2.  The Neuro-Environmental Loop of Plasticity: A Cross-Species Analysis of Parental Effects on Emotion Circuitry Development Following Typical and Adverse Caregiving.

Authors:  Bridget L Callaghan; Nim Tottenham
Journal:  Neuropsychopharmacology       Date:  2015-07-21       Impact factor: 7.853

3.  Altered brain network integrity after childhood maltreatment: A structural connectomic DTI-study.

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4.  Disentangling the effects of early caregiving experience and heritable factors on brain white matter development in rhesus monkeys.

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Review 5.  All Wrapped Up: Environmental Effects on Myelination.

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6.  Early deprivation, atypical brain development, and internalizing symptoms in late childhood.

Authors:  J Bick; N Fox; C Zeanah; C A Nelson
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7.  Long-term effects of institutional rearing, foster care, and brain activity on memory and executive functioning.

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8.  Rapid Infant Prefrontal Cortex Development and Sensitivity to Early Environmental Experience.

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Journal:  Dev Rev       Date:  2018-03-11

9.  Impact of early institutionalization on attention mechanisms underlying the inhibition of a planned action.

Authors:  Connie Lamm; Sonya V Troller-Renfree; Charles H Zeanah; Charles A Nelson; Nathan A Fox
Journal:  Neuropsychologia       Date:  2018-06-15       Impact factor: 3.139

Review 10.  Social Origins of Developmental Risk for Mental and Physical Illness.

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