1. Associations of trauma and posttraumatic stress disorder with aldosterone in women
- Author
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Nishimi, Kristen, Adler, Gail K, Roberts, Andrea L, Sumner, Jennifer A, Jung, Sun Jae, Chen, Qixuan, Tworoger, Shelley, Koenen, Karestan C, and Kubzansky, Laura D
- Subjects
Clinical and Health Psychology ,Psychology ,Brain Disorders ,Clinical Research ,Mental Health ,Anxiety Disorders ,Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) ,Aging ,Cardiovascular ,Good Health and Well Being ,Aldosterone ,Female ,Humans ,Middle Aged ,Psychological Trauma ,Stress Disorders ,Post-Traumatic ,Posttraumatic stress disorder ,Trauma ,Women ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Psychiatry ,Biomedical and clinical sciences - Abstract
BackgroundPosttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) has been associated with increased cardiovascular risk, however, underlying mechanisms have not been fully specified. PTSD is associated with stress-related hormones, including dysregulated glucocorticoid activity. Dysregulation of aldosterone, a mineralocorticoid activated by psychological stress and implicated in cardiovascular damage, may be a relevant pathway linking PTSD and cardiovascular risk. Few studies to date have evaluated the association between PTSD and aldosterone, none with repeated measures of aldosterone. We examined if trauma and PTSD were associated with altered aldosterone levels relative to women unexposed to trauma.MethodsThe association of trauma exposure and chronic PTSD with plasma aldosterone levels was investigated in 521 middle-aged women in the Nurses' Health Study II. Aldosterone was assessed at two time points, 10-16 years apart, and trauma exposure and PTSD were also ascertained for both time points. Regarding exposure assessment, women were characterized based on a structured diagnostic interview as: having chronic PTSD (PTSD at both time points; n = 174); being trauma-exposed (trauma exposure at first time point but no PTSD; n = 174); and being unexposed (no trauma exposure at either time point; reference group for all analyses; n = 173). Linear mixed models examined associations of trauma and PTSD status with log-transformed aldosterone levels, adjusting for covariates and health-related variables that may confound or lie on the pathway between PTSD and altered aldosterone levels.ResultsAcross the sample, mean aldosterone concentration decreased over time. Adjusting for covariates, women with chronic PTSD had significantly lower aldosterone levels averaged over time, compared to women unexposed to trauma (β = - 0.08, p = 0.04). Interactions between trauma/PTSD group and time were not significant, indicating change in aldosterone over time did not differ by trauma/PTSD status. Post-hoc exploratory analyses suggested that menopausal status partially mediated the relationship between chronic PTSD status and aldosterone level, such that postmenopausal status explained 7% of the effect of PTSD on aldosterone.ConclusionsThese findings indicate that PTSD is associated with lower levels of aldosterone. Further work is needed to understand implications of this type of dysregulation in a key biological stress system for cardiovascular and other health outcomes previously linked with PTSD.
- Published
- 2021