1. Depression Severity Over 27 Months in Adolescent Girls Is Predicted by Stress-Linked Cortical Morphology
- Author
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Daniel N. Klein, Elizabeth Bartlett, Christine DeLorenzo, Kaiqiao Li, Greg Perlman, and Roman Kotov
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Stressor ,Precuneus ,Cortical morphology ,Dysphoria ,03 medical and health sciences ,030104 developmental biology ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Stress (linguistics) ,medicine ,Biomarker (medicine) ,Anxiety ,medicine.symptom ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Biological Psychiatry ,Depression (differential diagnoses) - Abstract
Background Evidence supports the notion that early-life stress and trauma impact cortical development and increase vulnerability to depression. However, it remains unclear whether common stressful life events in community-dwelling adolescents have similar consequences for cortical development. Methods A total of 232 adolescent girls (mean age 15.29 ± 0.65 years) were assessed with the Stressful Life Events Schedule (a semistructured interview of stressors in the previous 9 months) and underwent a magnetic resonance imaging scan. FreeSurfer 5.3.0 was used to perform whole-brain surface-based morphometry. Dysphoria was assessed at the time of imaging and prospectively at three 9-month follow-up appointments using the Inventory of Depression and Anxiety Symptoms II. Results At least one stressful life event was reported in 90% of the adolescent participants during the 9 months preceding imaging. Greater burden of recent life stress was associated with less left precuneus and left postcentral cortical thickness and smaller left superior frontal and right inferior parietal volume (all p Conclusions Consistent with evidence from imaging studies of trauma-exposed youths and preclinical stress models, a heavy burden of recent common life stress in community-dwelling adolescent girls was associated with altered frontal/parietal cortical morphology. Stress-linked precuneus cortical thickness represents a candidate prospective biomarker of adolescent depression.
- Published
- 2019
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