1. Sensitivity to psychosocial chronic stressors and adolescents' externalizing problems
- Author
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Catharina A. Hartman, Andrea Dietrich, Pieter J. Hoekstra, Edwin R. van den Heuvel, Anna Roos Eva Zandstra, Johan Ormel, Stochastic Operations Research, Statistics, Interdisciplinary Centre Psychopathology and Emotion regulation (ICPE), and Clinical Cognitive Neuropsychiatry Research Program (CCNP)
- Subjects
Parents ,Male ,Root mean squared successive difference ,Parental psychiatric history ,Chronic stressors ,Vulnerability ,BAROREFLEX SENSITIVITY ,Neuropsychological Tests ,Cohort Studies ,0302 clinical medicine ,Psychiatric history ,Heart Rate ,Heart rate variability ,Medicine ,Longitudinal Studies ,Child ,General Neuroscience ,Mental Disorders ,INDIVIDUAL-LIVES SURVEY ,TRAILS ,PSYCHOPATHOLOGY ,ANTISOCIAL-BEHAVIOR ,Moderation ,Stress, Psychological/physiopathology ,Adolescence ,CONDUCT PROBLEMS ,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology ,Cohort ,Female ,Psychosocial ,Clinical psychology ,Psychopathology ,Parents/psychology ,Adult ,General vulnerability ,Adolescent ,Externalizing problems ,DIFFERENTIAL SUSCEPTIBILITY ,Stress ,ENVIRONMENTAL-INFLUENCES ,03 medical and health sciences ,BIOLOGICAL SENSITIVITY ,Humans ,business.industry ,Psychosocial adversity ,Stressor ,Sensitivity to the environment ,RATE-VARIABILITY ,Psychological/physiopathology ,Resting heart rate ,030227 psychiatry ,Chronic Disease ,Linear Models ,Mental Disorders/psychology ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Stress, Psychological - Abstract
From the literature it is not clear whether low resting heart rate (HR) reflects low or high sensitivity to the detrimental effects of adverse environments on externalizing problems. We studied parental psychiatric history (PH), reflecting general vulnerability, as possible moderator explaining these inconsistencies. Using Linear Mixed Models, we analyzed data from 1914 subjects, obtained in three measurement waves (mean age 11, 13.5, and 16 years) from the TRacking Adolescents’ Individual Lives Survey population-based cohort and the parallel clinic-referred cohort. As hypothesized, more chronic stressors predicted more externalizing problems in vulnerable individuals with high resting HR but not in those with low resting HR, suggesting high vs. low sensitivity, respectively, to adverse environmental influences. Low sensitivity to adverse environmental influences in vulnerable individuals exposed to high stressor levels was additionally confirmed by high heart rate variability (Root Mean Squared Successive Difference; RMSSD). In adolescents with low vulnerability, in contrast, the association between chronic stressors and externalizing problems did not substantially differ by resting HR and RMSSD. Future research may demonstrate whether our findings extend to other adverse, or beneficial, influences. Notwithstanding their theoretical interest, the effects were small, only pertained to parent-reported externalizing problems, refer to a small subset of respondents in our sample, and are in need of replication. We conclude that HR and RMSSD are unlikely to be strong moderators of the association between stressors and externalizing problems.
- Published
- 2018