
Childhood
poverty and chronic stress may lead to problems regulating emotions as
an adult, according to research published online in the Proceedings of
the National Academy of Sciences.
“Our findings suggest that the
stress-burden of growing up poor may be an underlying mechanism that
accounts for the relationship between poverty as a child and how well
your brain works as an adult,” said Dr. K. Luan Phan, professor of
psychiatry at University of Illinois at Chicago College of Medicine and
senior author of the study.
The study was conducted by researchers at UIC, Cornell University, University of Michigan and University of Denver.
The researchers found that test subjects
who had lower family incomes at age 9 exhibited, as adults, greater
activity in the amygdala, an area in the brain known for its role in
fear and other negative emotions. These individuals showed less activity
in areas of the prefrontal cortex, an area in the brain thought to
regulate negative emotion.
Amygdala and prefrontal cortex
dysfunction has been associated with mood disorders including
depression, anxiety, impulsive aggression and substance abuse, according
to the authors.
Phan said it is well known that the
negative effects of poverty can set up “a cascade of increasing risk
factors” for children to develop physical and psychological problems as
an adult. But it has not been known how childhood poverty might affect
brain function, particularly in emotional regulation. The ability to
regulate negative emotions can provide protection against the physical
and psychological health consequences of acute and chronic stress, he
said.
The study examined associations between
childhood poverty at age 9, exposure to chronic stressors during
childhood, and neural activity in areas of the brain involved in
emotional regulation at age 24.
The 49 participants were part of a
longitudinal study of childhood poverty. Data on family income, stressor
exposures, physiological stress responses, socio-emotional development,
and parent-child interactions were collected. About half the
participants were from low-income families.
Using functional magnetic resonance
imaging, the researchers evaluated the participants’ brain activity as
they performed an emotional-regulation task. Subjects were asked to try
to suppress negative emotions while viewing pictures, using a cognitive
coping strategy.
“This serves as a brain-behavioural
index of a person’s day-to-day ability to cope with stress and negative
emotions as they encounter them,” Phan said.
Source: sciencedaily.com
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