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. 2024 Dec 15:367:49-57.
doi: 10.1016/j.jad.2024.08.146. Epub 2024 Aug 25.

Maternal adverse childhood experiences and infant visual-limbic white matter development

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Free article

Maternal adverse childhood experiences and infant visual-limbic white matter development

Catherine H Demers et al. J Affect Disord. .
Free article

Abstract

Background: Maternal adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) are robust predictors of mental health for both the exposed individual and the next generation; however, the pathway through which such intergenerational risk is conferred remains unknown. The current study evaluated the association between maternal ACEs and infant brain development, including an a priori focus on circuits implicated in emotional and sensory processing.

Methods: The sample included 101 mother-infant dyads from a longitudinal study. Maternal ACEs were assessed with the Adverse Childhood Questionnaire dichotomized into low (0 or 1) and high (≥2) groups. White matter microstructure, as indexed by fractional anisotropy (FA), was assessed using structural magnetic resonance imaging in infants (41.6-46.0 weeks' postconceptional age) within a priori tracts (the cingulum, fornix, uncinate, inferior frontal occipital fasciculus, and inferior longitudinal fasciculus). Exploratory analyses were also conducted across the whole brain.

Results: High maternal ACEs (≥2) were associated with decreased infant left inferior longitudinal fasciculus (ILF) FA (F(1,94) = 7.78, p < .006) relative to infants of low ACE mothers. No group difference was observed within the right ILF following correction for multiple comparisons (F(1,95) = 4.29, p < .041). Follow-up analyses within the left ILF demonstrated associations between high maternal ACEs and increased left radial diffusivity (F(1,95) = 5.10, p < .006). Exploratory analyses demonstrated preliminary support for differences in visual processing networks (e.g., optic tract) as well as additional circuits less frequently examined in the context of early life adversity exposure (e.g., corticothalamic tract).

Conclusions: Maternal ACEs predict neural circuit development of the inferior longitudinal fasciculus. Findings suggest that early developing sensory circuits within the infant brain are susceptible to maternal adverse childhood experiences and may have implications for the maturation of higher-order emotional and cognitive circuits.

Keywords: DoHAD; Fractional anisotropy; Intergenerational transmission; Maternal adverse childhood experiences; White matter microstructure.

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Conflict of interest statement

Declaration of competing interest CNE was an investigator for a multisite clinical trial conducted by Sage Therapeutics. She is also a consultant to EmbarkNeuro, Skyland Trail, and Health Rhythms and a member of the scientific advisory board of Babyscripts. No funding or involvement from these entities was used to support the current work, and all views expressed are solely those of the authors. All other authors have no conflicts of interest or relevant disclosures.

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