Literature DB >> 29162178

Childhood maltreatment moderates the effect of combat exposure on cingulum structural integrity.

Layla Banihashemi1, Meredith L Wallace1, Lei K Sheu1, Michael C Lee1, Peter J Gianaros1, Robert P Mackenzie1, Salvatore P Insana1, Anne Germain1, Ryan J Herringa1.   

Abstract

Limbic white matter pathways link emotion, cognition, and behavior and are potentially malleable to the influences of traumatic events throughout development. However, the impact of interactions between childhood and later life trauma on limbic white matter pathways has yet to be examined. Here, we examined whether childhood maltreatment moderated the effect of combat exposure on diffusion tensor imaging measures within a sample of military veterans (N = 28). We examined five limbic tracts of interest: two components of the cingulum (cingulum, cingulate gyrus, and cingulum hippocampus [CGH]), the uncinate fasciculus, the fornix/stria terminalis, and the anterior limb of the internal capsule. Using effect sizes, clinically meaningful moderator effects were found only within the CGH. Greater combat exposure was associated with decreased CGH fractional anisotropy (overall structural integrity) and increased CGH radial diffusivity (perpendicular water diffusivity) among individuals with more severe childhood maltreatment. Our findings provide preliminary evidence of the moderating effect of childhood maltreatment on the relationship between combat exposure and CGH structural integrity. These differences in CGH structural integrity could have maladaptive implications for emotion and memory, as well as provide a potential mechanism by which childhood maltreatment induces vulnerability to later life trauma exposure.

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Year:  2017        PMID: 29162178      PMCID: PMC5773248          DOI: 10.1017/S0954579417001365

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Dev Psychopathol        ISSN: 0954-5794


  68 in total

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9.  Acquisition and voxelwise analysis of multi-subject diffusion data with tract-based spatial statistics.

Authors:  Stephen M Smith; Heidi Johansen-Berg; Mark Jenkinson; Daniel Rueckert; Thomas E Nichols; Karla L Miller; Matthew D Robson; Derek K Jones; Johannes C Klein; Andreas J Bartsch; Timothy E J Behrens
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  5 in total

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