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Physiological markers of anxiety are increased in children of abused mothers

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TLDR
It is demonstrated that children of mothers who have history of childhood physical and emotional abuse have higher dark-enhanced startle as well as greater sympathetic nervous system activation than children of Mother’s Day, and emphasize the utility of physiological measures as pervasive biomarkers of psychopathology that can easily be measured in children.
Abstract
Background: A growing number of studies indicate that low income, African American men and women living in urban environments are at high risk for trauma exposure, which may have intergenerational effects. The current study employed psychophysiological methods to describe biomarkers of anxiety in children of traumatized mothers. Methods: Study participants were recruited from a highly traumatized urban population, comprising mother–child pairs (n = 36) that included school-age children. Mothers were assessed for childhood abuse with the Childhood Trauma Questionnaire, as well as symptoms of depression and posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). The children were measured for dark-enhanced startle responses and heart-rate variability. Results: Dark-enhanced startle was found to be higher in children whose mothers had high levels of childhood physical abuse, as compared to children whose mothers had low levels of physical abuse. During the habituation phase of the startle experiment, children whose mothers had high levels of childhood emotional abuse had higher sympathetic system activation compared to children of mothers with low emotional abuse. These effects remained significant after accounting for maternal symptoms of PTSD and depression, as well as for the child’s trauma exposure. Conclusion: These results demonstrate that children of mothers who have history of childhood physical and emotional abuse have higher dark-enhanced startle as well as greater sympathetic nervous system activation than children of mothers who do not report a history of childhood physical and emotional abuse, and emphasize the utility of physiological measures as pervasive biomarkers of psychopathology that can easily be measured in children. Keywords: Child abuse, maternal trauma, child anxiety, startle response, heart-rate variability.

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Parental olfactory experience influences behavior and neural structure in subsequent generations

TL;DR: Using olfactory molecular specificity, the inheritance of parental traumatic exposure is examined and a framework for addressing how environmental information may be inherited transgenerationally at behavioral, neuroanatomical and epigenetic levels is provided.
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Child abuse and neglect.

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Intergenerational transmission of trauma effects: putative role of epigenetic mechanisms.

TL;DR: Elucidating the role of epigenetic mechanisms in intergenerational effects through prospective, multi‐generational studies may ultimately yield a cogent understanding of how individual, cultural and societal experiences permeate the authors' biology.
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Depression and resting state heart rate variability in children and adolescents - A systematic review and meta-analysis.

TL;DR: Random-effects meta-analysis on group differences revealed significant effects that were associated with a moderate effect size and lower resting state HF-HRV among clinically depressed children/adolescents compared to healthy controls, consistent with findings among adults.
Journal ArticleDOI

Intergenerational Transmission of Maternal Childhood Maltreatment Exposure: Implications for Fetal Brain Development

TL;DR: The authors posit that the period of embryonic and fetal life represents a particularly sensitive time for intergenerational transmission, and that stress-sensitive maternal-placental-fetal biological (endocrine, immune) pathways represent leading candidate mechanisms of interest.
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