早期生活压力的神经生物学:临床研究。

C. Heim, C. Nemeroff
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引用次数: 288

摘要

在过去的几年里,越来越多的临床研究评估了早期发育压力(如儿童虐待和忽视或失去父母)对神经生物学的直接和长期影响。这篇综述总结并讨论了在有早期生活压力史,有或没有精神疾病的儿童或成人中进行的神经内分泌(下丘脑-垂体-肾上腺轴,其他神经内分泌轴),神经化学(儿茶酚胺,血清素,其他神经递质),心理生理学(自主神经功能,惊吓反应,脑电活动)和神经影像学研究(脑结构,功能)的现有发现。人类早期发育压力似乎与神经生物学改变有关,这与早期生活压力动物模型的许多发现相似,并且可能代表了精神病理风险增加的生物学基础。临床研究正在开始探索不同类型的早期生活应激和存在的关键发育时期的潜在差异神经生物学效应,这些时期可能对特定应激源的神经生物学效应敏感。此外,在确定个体对早期生活压力的神经生物学影响的脆弱性或恢复力时,许多调节和中介因素的作用应该得到解决。这些研究的结果可能最终有助于预防现代社会中暴露于早期生活压力的儿童数量之多令人无法接受的有害神经生物学和精神病理学后果。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Neurobiology of early life stress: clinical studies.
A burgeoning number of clinical studies have evaluated the immediate and long-term neurobiological effects of early developmental stress, eg, child abuse and neglect or parental loss, in the past years. This review summarizes and discusses the available findings from neuroendocrine (hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis, other neuroendocrine axes), neurochemical (catecholamines, serotonin, other neurotransmitters), psychophysiological (autonomic function, startle reactivity, brain electrical activity) and neuroimaging studies (brain structure, function) conducted in children or adults with a history of early life stress, with or without psychiatric disorders. Early developmental stress in humans appears to be associated with neurobiological alterations that are similar to many findings in animal models of early life stress, and likely represent the biological basis of an enhanced risk for psychopathology. Clinical studies are now beginning to explore potentially differential neurobiological effects of different types of early life stress and the existence of critical developmental periods, which may be sensitive to the neurobiological effects of specific stressors. In addition, the role of a multitude of moderating and mediating factors in the determination of individual vulnerability or resilience to the neurobiological effects of early life stress should be addressed. Findings from such studies may ultimately help to prevent the deleterious neurobiological and psychopathological consequences in the unacceptably high number of children exposed to early life stress in modern society.
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