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The neural, stress hormone and inflammatory correlates of childhood deprivation and threat in psychosis: A systematic review

Megan Thomas, Divyangana Rakesh, Sarah Whittle, Margaret A. Sheridan, Rachel Upthegrove, Vanessa Cropley

2023Psychoneuroendocrinology15 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Childhood adversity increases the risk of developing psychosis, but the biological mechanisms involved are unknown. Disaggregating early adverse experiences into core dimensions of deprivation and threat may help to elucidate these mechanisms. We therefore systematically searched the literature investigating associations between deprivation and threat, and neural, immune and stress hormone systems in individuals on the psychosis spectrum. Our search yielded 74 articles, from which we extracted and synthesized relevant findings. While study designs were heterogeneous and findings inconsistent, some trends emerged. In psychosis, deprivation tended to correlate with lower global cortical volume, and some evidence supported threat-related variation in prefrontal cortex morphology. Greater threat exposure was also associated with higher C-reactive protein, and higher and lower cortisol measures. When examined, associations in controls were less evident. Overall, findings indicate that deprivation and threat may associate with partially distinct biological mechanisms in the psychosis spectrum, and that associations may be stronger than in controls. Dimensional approaches may help disentangle the biological correlates of childhood adversity in psychosis, but more studies are needed.

Topics & Concepts

PsychosisPsychologyMaternal deprivationPrefrontal cortexClinical psychologyDevelopmental psychologyNeurosciencePsychiatryCognitionStress Responses and CortisolTryptophan and brain disordersNeuroendocrine regulation and behavior
The neural, stress hormone and inflammatory correlates of childhood deprivation and threat in psychosis: A systematic review | Litcius