Literature DB >> 29767624

The maternal brain in women with a history of early-life maltreatment: an imagination-based fMRI study of conflictual versus pleasant interactions with children.

Corinne Neukel1, Katja Bertsch1, Anna Fuchs PhD1, Anna-Lena Zietlow1, Corinna Reck1, Eva Moehler1, Romuald Brunner1, Felix Bermpohl1, Sabine C Herpertz1.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Early-life maltreatment has severe consequences for the affected individual, and it has an impact on the next generation. To improve understanding of the intergenerational effects of abuse, we investigated the consequences of early-life maltreatment on maternal sensitivity and associated brain mechanisms during mother-child interactions.
METHODS: In total, 47 mothers (22 with a history of physical and/or sexual childhood abuse and 25 without, all without current mental disorders) took part in a standardized real-life interaction with their 7- to 11-year-old child (not abused) and a subsequent functional imaging script-driven imagery task.
RESULTS: Mothers with early-life maltreatment were less sensitive in real-life mother-child interactions, but while imagining conflictual interactions with their child, they showed increased activation in regions of the salience and emotion-processing network, such as the amygdala, insula and hippocampus. This activation pattern was in contrast to that of mothers without early-life maltreatment, who showed higher activations in those regions in response to pleasant mother-child interactions. Mothers with early-life maltreatment also showed reduced functional connectivity between regions of the salience and the mentalizing networks. LIMITATIONS: Region-of-interest analyses, which were performed in addition to whole-brain analyses, were exploratory in nature, because they were not further controlled for multiple comparisons.
CONCLUSIONS: Results suggest that for mothers with early-life maltreatment, conflictual interactions with their child may be more salient and behaviourally relevant than pleasant interactions, and that their salience network is poorly modulated by the brain regions involved in mentalizing processes. This activation pattern offers new insights into the mechanisms behind the intergenerational effects of maltreatment and into options for reducing these effects.

Entities:  

Year:  2018        PMID: 29767624     DOI: 10.1503/jpn.170026

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Psychiatry Neurosci        ISSN: 1180-4882            Impact factor:   6.186


  56 in total

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2.  Exaggerated and disconnected insular-amygdalar blood oxygenation level-dependent response to threat-related emotional faces in women with intimate-partner violence posttraumatic stress disorder.

Authors:  Gregory A Fonzo; Alan N Simmons; Steven R Thorp; Sonya B Norman; Martin P Paulus; Murray B Stein
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5.  Intergenerational continuity in child maltreatment: mediating mechanisms and implications for prevention.

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6.  The long-term sequelae of child and adolescent abuse: a longitudinal community study.

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Review 7.  Childhood maltreatment and psychopathology: A case for ecophenotypic variants as clinically and neurobiologically distinct subtypes.

Authors:  Martin H Teicher; Jacqueline A Samson
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8.  The effects of child sexual abuse in later family life; mental health, parenting and adjustment of offspring.

Authors:  Ron Roberts; Tom O'Connor; Judy Dunn; Jean Golding
Journal:  Child Abuse Negl       Date:  2004-05

9.  Childhood Poverty Predicts Adult Amygdala and Frontal Activity and Connectivity in Response to Emotional Faces.

Authors:  Arash Javanbakht; Anthony P King; Gary W Evans; James E Swain; Michael Angstadt; K Luan Phan; Israel Liberzon
Journal:  Front Behav Neurosci       Date:  2015-06-12       Impact factor: 3.558

10.  Childhood Adversity Is Associated with Adult Theory of Mind and Social Affiliation, but Not Face Processing.

Authors:  Laura Germine; Erin C Dunn; Katie A McLaughlin; Jordan W Smoller
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2015-06-12       Impact factor: 3.240

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