Timing of Early-Life Stress and the Development of Brain-Related Capacities

Early-life stress (ELS) poses risks for developmental and mental health problems throughout the lifespan. More research is needed regarding how specific ELS experiences influence specific aspects of neurodevelopment. We examined the association between ELS, defined as severe adversity (e.g., domesti...

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Main Authors: Erin P. Hambrick, Thomas W. Brawner, Bruce D. Perry
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2019-08-01
Series:Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fnbeh.2019.00183/full
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spelling doaj-0744f5dcaf3a421aa99c85e56a889e332020-11-24T21:18:27ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience1662-51532019-08-011310.3389/fnbeh.2019.00183457568Timing of Early-Life Stress and the Development of Brain-Related CapacitiesErin P. Hambrick0Erin P. Hambrick1Thomas W. Brawner2Thomas W. Brawner3Bruce D. Perry4Bruce D. Perry5Bruce D. Perry6The ChildTrauma Academy, Houston, TX, United StatesLab PANDA, Department of Psychology, University of Missouri—Kansas City, Kansas City, MO, United StatesThe ChildTrauma Academy, Houston, TX, United StatesCenter for Research Methods and Data Analysis, University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS, United StatesThe ChildTrauma Academy, Houston, TX, United StatesDepartment of Psychiatry, Feinberg School of Medicine, Northwestern University, Chicago, IL, United StatesSchool of Allied Health, College of Science, Health and Engineering, La Trobe University, Melbourne, VIC, AustraliaEarly-life stress (ELS) poses risks for developmental and mental health problems throughout the lifespan. More research is needed regarding how specific ELS experiences influence specific aspects of neurodevelopment. We examined the association between ELS, defined as severe adversity (e.g., domestic violence, caregiver drug use) and severe relational poverty (e.g., caregiver neglect, lack of caregiver attunement), occurring during the first 2 months of life and a variety of brain-related, clinician-rated functions, including self-regulation and relational capacities. Interdisciplinary clinicians using the Neurosequential Model of Therapeutics (NMT), an approach to clinical problem solving, reported on the timing and type of treatment-seeking children’s (N = 2,155; 8–10 years) stressful experiences during four developmental periods: Perinatal (0–2 months), Infancy (2–12 months), Early Childhood (13 months to 4 years), and Childhood (4–11 years). They also reported on children’s current functioning in 32 brain-related domains (e.g., sleep, arousal, impulsivity, empathy, concrete cognition). Non-negative matrix factorization (NMF) was conducted on the 32 brain-related domains to identify latent factors, yielding four factors comprising Sensory Integration, Self-Regulation, Relational, and Cognitive functioning. Regularized hierarchical models were then used to identify associations between ELS and each latent factor while controlling for stress occurring during subsequent developmental periods, and children’s current degree of relational health. ELS (stress occurring during the first 2 months of life), specifically a severe lack of positive relational experiences (e.g., caregiver neglect, lack of caregiver attunement), was associated with the Sensory Integration and Self-Regulation factors. The Relational factor was better explained by stress occurring during childhood, and the Cognitive factor by stress occurring during infancy and childhood. Implications for how the timing and type of stress experiences may influence brain-related outcomes that are observed in clinical settings are discussed. Future directions include longitudinal follow-ups and greater specification of environmental variables, such as types of interventions received and when they were received, that may interact with ELS experiences to influence brain-related outcomes.https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fnbeh.2019.00183/fulldevelopmental origins of health and diseaseearly-life stresschild traumaadverse childhood experiencesbrain programmingself-regulation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Erin P. Hambrick
Erin P. Hambrick
Thomas W. Brawner
Thomas W. Brawner
Bruce D. Perry
Bruce D. Perry
Bruce D. Perry
spellingShingle Erin P. Hambrick
Erin P. Hambrick
Thomas W. Brawner
Thomas W. Brawner
Bruce D. Perry
Bruce D. Perry
Bruce D. Perry
Timing of Early-Life Stress and the Development of Brain-Related Capacities
Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience
developmental origins of health and disease
early-life stress
child trauma
adverse childhood experiences
brain programming
self-regulation
author_facet Erin P. Hambrick
Erin P. Hambrick
Thomas W. Brawner
Thomas W. Brawner
Bruce D. Perry
Bruce D. Perry
Bruce D. Perry
author_sort Erin P. Hambrick
title Timing of Early-Life Stress and the Development of Brain-Related Capacities
title_short Timing of Early-Life Stress and the Development of Brain-Related Capacities
title_full Timing of Early-Life Stress and the Development of Brain-Related Capacities
title_fullStr Timing of Early-Life Stress and the Development of Brain-Related Capacities
title_full_unstemmed Timing of Early-Life Stress and the Development of Brain-Related Capacities
title_sort timing of early-life stress and the development of brain-related capacities
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience
issn 1662-5153
publishDate 2019-08-01
description Early-life stress (ELS) poses risks for developmental and mental health problems throughout the lifespan. More research is needed regarding how specific ELS experiences influence specific aspects of neurodevelopment. We examined the association between ELS, defined as severe adversity (e.g., domestic violence, caregiver drug use) and severe relational poverty (e.g., caregiver neglect, lack of caregiver attunement), occurring during the first 2 months of life and a variety of brain-related, clinician-rated functions, including self-regulation and relational capacities. Interdisciplinary clinicians using the Neurosequential Model of Therapeutics (NMT), an approach to clinical problem solving, reported on the timing and type of treatment-seeking children’s (N = 2,155; 8–10 years) stressful experiences during four developmental periods: Perinatal (0–2 months), Infancy (2–12 months), Early Childhood (13 months to 4 years), and Childhood (4–11 years). They also reported on children’s current functioning in 32 brain-related domains (e.g., sleep, arousal, impulsivity, empathy, concrete cognition). Non-negative matrix factorization (NMF) was conducted on the 32 brain-related domains to identify latent factors, yielding four factors comprising Sensory Integration, Self-Regulation, Relational, and Cognitive functioning. Regularized hierarchical models were then used to identify associations between ELS and each latent factor while controlling for stress occurring during subsequent developmental periods, and children’s current degree of relational health. ELS (stress occurring during the first 2 months of life), specifically a severe lack of positive relational experiences (e.g., caregiver neglect, lack of caregiver attunement), was associated with the Sensory Integration and Self-Regulation factors. The Relational factor was better explained by stress occurring during childhood, and the Cognitive factor by stress occurring during infancy and childhood. Implications for how the timing and type of stress experiences may influence brain-related outcomes that are observed in clinical settings are discussed. Future directions include longitudinal follow-ups and greater specification of environmental variables, such as types of interventions received and when they were received, that may interact with ELS experiences to influence brain-related outcomes.
topic developmental origins of health and disease
early-life stress
child trauma
adverse childhood experiences
brain programming
self-regulation
url https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fnbeh.2019.00183/full
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