| Literature DB >> 32298279 |
Monet Viljoen1, Rohan M Benecke1, Lindi Martin2, Rozanne C M Adams1,3, Soraya Seedat2, Carine Smith1.
Abstract
Although anxiety disorders are among the most prevalent of psychiatric disorders, childhood trauma-related studies seldom consider anxiety proneness as distinct aetiological contributor. We aimed to distinguish between trauma- and anxiety-associated physiological profiles. South African adolescent volunteers were categorised for trauma exposure (CTQ, mean score 39±11) and anxiety proneness (AP)(CASI, mean score 37±7, STAI-T, mean score 41±8). Circulating hormone and leukocyte glucocorticoid receptor levels, as well as leukocyte functional capacity, were assessed. AP was associated with lower DHEAs (P<0.05) and higher leukocyte GR expression (P<0.05). DHEAs was also negatively correlated with anxiety sensitivity (CASI, P<0.05). In conclusion, AP may have more predictive power than trauma in terms of health profile. Increased glucocorticoid sensitivity previously reported after trauma, may be a unique function of anxiety and not trauma exposure per se. DHEAs concentration was identified as potentially useful marker for monitoring progressive changes in HPA-axis sensitivity and correlated with psychological measures of anxiety.Entities:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32298279 PMCID: PMC7162495 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0230053
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Representative summary of literature illustrating contradictory results reported for anxiety and trauma in the context of physiological dysregulation.
| Title | Authors | Cohort | Diagnosis | Main finding | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Childhood Maltreatment And Response To Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT) Among Individuals With Social Anxiety Disorder | Bruce, Heimberg, Goldin, & Gross, 2013 [ | 68 treatment seeking out-patients | Generalized Social Anxiety Disorder (SAD) | No form of childhood maltreatment moderated response to CBT for SAD | no CTQ association with anxiety |
| Childhood Maltreatment Linked To Greater Symptom Severity And Poorer Quality Of Life And Function In Social Anxiety Disorder | Simon et al., 2009 [ | 103 individuals with GSAD (n = 72 male) | Participants who met DSM-IV criteria for GSAD | Emotional abuse and neglect are associated with greater anxiety symptom severity as well as deceased resilience and quality of life | Specific CTQ criteria correlated with anxiety |
| Childhood Life Events And Childhood Trauma In Adult Patients With Depressive, Anxiety And Comorbid Disorders Vs. Controls | Hovens et al., 2010 [ | n = 1931 Netherlands Study of Depression and Anxiety (NESDA) | Major depressive disorder, dysthymia, panic disorder with or without agoraphobia, social phobia and generalzed anxiety disorder | Emotional neglect, psychological abuse, physical abuse and sexual abuse were correlated with increased likelyhood of anxiety and depressive disorders | Specific CTQ criteria associated with anxiety, more pronounced in terms of depressive symptoms as well as in comorbid group |
| Glucocorticoid Receptor Gene Methylation Moderates The Association Of Childhood Trauma And Cortisol Stress Reactivity | Alexander et al., 2018 | 200 Caucasians (n = 100 female) | No psychiatric diagnosis, history of childhood trauma | DNA methylation of NR3C1 predicts HPA dysregulation in moderate to severe childhood trauma exposure | CTQ associated with stress pathway |
| Impact Of Physical Or Sexual Childhood Abuse On Plasma DHEA, DHEA-S And Cortisol In A Low-Dose Dexamethasone Suppression Test And On Cardiovascular Risk Parameters In Adult Patients With Major Depression Or Anxiety Disorders | Kellner et al., 2018 [ | 42 childhood trauma patients, 50 controls (n = 92) | Major depressive disorder or anxiety disorder, excluding current diagnosis of psychosis or substance-related disorder | Increase in DHEA levels could not be replicated, however predexamethasone levels were decreased with CT. Physical and sexual abuse were associated with increased TNF-α and IL-6 levels | Specific CTQ criteria linked to increase in stress biomarkers |
| Childhood Emotional Neglect And Oxytocin Receptor Variants: Association With Limbic Brain Volumes | Womersley et al., 2019 | 63 Caucasian (n = 35 female) | Social anxiety disorder | Oxcytosin receptor polymorphism rs2254298 shows reduced hippocampal and amygdalar volume | Specific CTQ subtype linked to changes in anxiety-related brain regions |
| The Impact Of Early Life Stress On Anxiety Symptoms In Late Adulthood | Lähdepuro et al., 2019 | n = 1872 (n = 1082 male) | Participants completed anxiety questionnaire (Beck Anxiety Inventory) | Emotional and physical childhood trauma as well as low socioeconomic status was associated with higher anxiety levels in adulthood | Cumilative CTQ linked to increased anxiety symptoms in adulthood |
| Social Anxiety Disorder And Childhood Trauma In The Context Of Anxiety (Behavioural Inhibition), Impulsivity (Behavioural Activation) And Quality Of Life | Bruijnen, Young, Marx, & Seedat, 2019 | n = 102 total particicpants, n = 51 SAD and CT, n = 25 SAD, n = 26 age and gender matched controls | Social anxiety disorder | SAD symptom severity was correlated to childhood trauma exposure | |
| Childhood Abuse Predicts Affective Symptoms Via HPA Reactivity During Mother-Infant Stress | Kern & Laurent, 2019 | 47 Females | Participants had no psychosis and CTQ measurement was taken | CTQ correlated with increased cortisol reactivity | Increased CTQ linked to increase in anxiety pathway activity |
| Anxiety Disorders In Childhood Are Associated With Youth IL-6 Levels: A Mediation Study Including Metabolic Stress And Childhood Traumatic Events | de Baumont et al., 2019 | n = 73, n = 41 cases, n = 32 controls | Generalized anxiety disorder, social anxiety disorder, and seperation anxiety disorder | Anxiety disorder diagnosis was associated with higher levels of IL-6 and lower levels of BDNF. HDL cholesterol mediated IL-6 findings | Youth anxiety predicts adulthood stress hormone increase |
| Impact Of Childhood Life Events And Trauma On The Course Of Depressive And Anxiety Disorders | Hovens et al., 2012 [ | n = 1209 Netherlands Study of Depression and Anxiety (NESDA) | Major depressive disorder and Dysthymia. Panic disorder, Agoraphobia, Social Phobia and Generalized Anxiety Disorder | Emotional neglect, psychological and physical abuse predict comorbidity of depressive and anxiety disorders. However, childhood trauma had a larger effect on depressive outcomes | Specific CTQ criteria predicts comorbidity of anxiety and depression |
Accuracy of subject grouping is reflected by significant ANOVA main effects for trauma exposure (CTQ) and anxiety proneness (combined STAI-T and CASI) with subscales of each questionnaire in column 2 and 3.
| HI-HI Mean ± SD | HI-LO Mean ± SD | LO-HI Mean ± SD | LO-LO Mean ± SD | ANOVA effect of trauma exposure F(1,41); P-value | ANOVA effect of anxiety proneness F(1,41); P-value | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 52 ± 7 | 39 ± 3 | 46 ± 6 | 33 ± 6 | |||
| 42 ± 4 | 31 ± 4 | 45 ± 4 | 33 ± 7 | F = 0.61; p = 0.17 | ||
| CASI Social Concerns | 12 ± 1 | 9 ± 2 | 12 ± 1 | 10 ± 2 | F = 0.06; p = 0.87 | |
| CASI Psychological Concerns | 6 ± 1 | 5 ± 2 | 7 ± 2 | 4 ± 1 | F = 0.02; p = 0.93 | |
| CASI Physical Concerns | 23 ± 3 | 17 ± 3 | 26 ± 2 | 18 ± 3 | F = 1.39, p = 0.24 | |
| 50 ± 11 | 44 ± 9 | 33 ± 8 | 31 ± 5 | F = 1.54; p = 0.22 | ||
| CTQ Physical neglect | 10 ± 3 | 9 ± 4 | 8 ± 3 | 6 ± 1 | F = 1.23; p = 0.27 | |
| CTQ Emotional abuse | 12 ± 5 | 9 ± 4 | 6 ± 2 | 6 ± 1 | F = 1.73; p = 0.20 | |
| CTQ Emotional neglect | 13 ± 4 | 13 ± 5 | 9 ± 4 | 8 ± 3 | F = 0.14; p = 0.72 | |
| CTQ Physical abuse | 9 ± 4 | 7 ± 3 | 5 ± 0 | 5 ± 0 | F = 1.24; p = 0.27 | |
| CTQ Sexual abuse | 6 ± 2 | 6 ± 1 | 5 ± 0 | 5 ± 1 | F = 0.00; p = 1.00 |
Statistical data is presented as F-values; P-values. NS = no significant effect
Fig 1Consistent effect of anxiety proneness on glucocorticoid receptor (GR) expression in leukocyte subpopulations.
Statistics: # = ANOVA main effect of AP, Abbreviations: AU, arbitrary units; MFI, mean fluorescent intensity.
Correlations of glucocorticoid receptor expression with trait anxiety, anxiety sensitivity (and subscales) and trauma (and subscales).
| Parameter | STAI-T | CASI Social concerns | CASI Psychologi-cal concerns | CASI Physical concerns | CASI total | CTQ Physical neglect | CTQ Emotional abuse | CTQ Emotional neglect | CTQ Physical abuse | CTQ Sexual abuse | CTQ total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| B lymph GR: MFI | 0.23 (0.135) | -0.01 (0.972) | 0.12 (0.443) | 0.28 (0.071) | 0.22 (0.154) | 0.09 (0.545) | -0.21 (0.171) | -0.14 (0.368) | -0.23 (0.137) | -0.21 (0.173) | |
| NK GR: MFI | 0.16 (0.156) | -0.01 (0.948) | 0.13 (0.413) | 0.29 (0.059) | 0.23 (0.131) | -0.29 (0.055) | 0.06 (0.069) | -0.23 (0.133) | -0.20 (0.208) | -0.23 (0.141) | -0.25 (0.111) |
| T Lymph GR: MFI | 0.16 (0.306) | -0.04 (0.792) | 0.09 (0.550) | 0.26 (0.088) | 0.20 (0.201) | 0.04 (0.812) | -0.26 (0.096) | -0.16 (0.318) | -0.23 (0.139) | -0.26 (0.090) | |
| Mono GR: MFI | 0.22 (0.156) | 0.03 (0.857) | 0.17 (0.28) | 0.26 (0.094) | 0.24 (0.122) | -0.19 (0.222) | 0.10 (0.512) | -0.22 (0.149) | -0.14 (0.369) | -0.16 (0.297) | -0.18 (0.242) |
Data is presented as Spearman r-values (P-values). Significant values and trends are indicated in bold font.
GR = glucocorticoid MFI = mean fluorescent intensity; NK = natural killer cell; T lymph = T lymphocyte; Mono = monocyte
Fig 2Effect of anxiety proneness and trauma exposure on serum dehydroepiandrosterone-sulfate (DHEAs), cortisol and prolactin levels.
Correlations between circulating hormone levels with trait anxiety, anxiety sensitivity (and subscales) and trauma (and subscales).
| STAI-T | CASI Social concerns | CASI Psychologi-cal concerns | CASI Physical concerns | CASI total | CTQ Physical neglect | CTQ Emotional abuse | CTQ Emotional neglect | CTQ Physical abuse | CTQ Sexual abuse | CTQ total | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Prolactin (ug/L) | 0.09 (0.577) | 0.02 (0.892) | 0.01 (0.938) | -0.15 (0.356) | -0.07 (0.657) | -0.00 (0.993) | 0.12 (0.437) | -0.09 (0.555) | 0.21 (0.172) | 0.13 (0.405) | |
| DHEAS (umol/L) | -0.22 (0.147) | -0.01 (0.183) | -0.10 (0.532) | 0.17 (0.267) | -0.02 (0.902) | 0.10 (0.525) | 0.03 (0.832) | 0.03 (0.852) | |||
| Cortisol (nmol/L) | -0.01 (0.954) | 0.11 (0.481) | -0.10 (0.514) | -0.10 (0.532) | -0.06 (0.711) | 0.03 (0.863) | -0.05 (0.751) | 0.12 (0.433) | -0.06 (0.698) | 0.24 (0.133) | 0.07 (0.665) |
Data is presented as Spearman r-values (P-values), Degrees of freedom, n = 41. Significant values and trends are indicated in bold font.