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Stress Affects Brain Development in Children: Study

by Sheela Philomena on Jun 7 2012 11:16 AM

 Stress Affects Brain Development in Children: Study
In children, stress alters growth of a specific piece of the brain and abilities associated with it, suggests study.
The study was conducted by researchers at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.

"There has been a lot of work in animals linking both acute and chronic stress to changes in a part of the brain called the prefrontal cortex, which is involved in complex cognitive abilities like holding on to important information for quick recall and use," Jamie Hanson, a UW-Madison psychology graduate student, said.

"We have now found similar associations in humans, and found that more exposure to stress is related to more issues with certain kinds of cognitive processes," he said.

Children who had experienced more intense and lasting stressful events in their lives posted lower scores on tests of what the researchers refer to as spatial working memory.

According to the study, they had more trouble navigating tests of short-term memory such as finding a token in a series of boxes.

Brain scans revealed that the anterior cingulate, a portion of the prefrontal cortex believed to play key roles in spatial working memory, takes up less space in children with greater exposure to very stressful situations.

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"These are subtle differences, but differences related to important cognitive abilities," Hanson said.

However, they may not be irreversible differences.

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"We're not trying to argue that stress permanently scars your brain. We don't know if and how it is that stress affects the brain.

"We only have a snapshot - one MRI scan of each subject - and at this point we don't understand whether this is just a delay in development or a lasting difference. It could be that, because the brains is very plastic, very able to change, that children who have experienced a great deal of stress catch up in these areas," Hanson said.

The researchers determined stress levels through interviews with children ages 9 to 14 and their parents.

The research team, which included UW-Madison psychology professors Richard Davidson and Seth Pollak and their labs, collected expansive biographies of stressful events from slight to severe.

"Instead of focusing in on one specific type of stress, we tried to look at a range of stressors.

"We wanted to know as much as we could, and then use all this information to later to get an idea of how challenging and chronic and intense each experience was for the child," Hanson said.

Interestingly, there was little correlation between cumulative life stress and age. That is, children who had several more years of life in which to experience stressful episodes were no more likely than their younger peers to have accumulated a length stress resume.

Puberty, on the other hand, typically went hand-in-hand with heavier doses of stress.

The researchers, whose work was funded by the National Institutes of Health, also took note of changes in brain tissue known as white matter and gray matter. In the important brain areas that varied in volume with stress, the white and gray matter volumes were lower in tandem.

White matter, Hanson explained, is like the long-distance wiring of the brain. It connects separated parts of the brain so that they can share information.

Gray matter "does the math", Hanson said.

"It takes care of the processing, using the information that gets shared along the white matter connections," Hanson said.

Gray matter early in development appears to enable flexibility; children can play and excel at many different activities. But as kids age and specialize, gray matter thins. It begins to be "pruned" after puberty, while the amount of white matter grows into adulthood.

"For both gray and white matter, we actually see smaller volumes associated with high stress.

"Those kinds of effects across different kinds of tissue, those are the things we would like to study over longer periods of time. Understanding how these areas change can give you a better picture of whether this is just a delay in development or more lasting," Hanson added.

The study will be published in the Journal of Neuroscience.

Source-ANI


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