1. Hair glucocorticoids are associated with childhood adversity, depressive symptoms and reduced global and lobar grey matter in Generation Scotland
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Claire Green, Aleks Stolicyn, Mathew A. Harris, Xueyi Shen, Liana Romaniuk, Miruna C. Barbu, Emma L. Hawkins, Joanna M. Wardlaw, J. Douglas Steele, Gordon D. Waiter, Anca-Larisa Sandu, Archie Campbell, David J. Porteous, Jonathan R. Seckl, Stephen M. Lawrie, Rebecca M. Reynolds, Jonathan Cavanagh, Andrew M. McIntosh, and Heather C. Whalley
- Subjects
Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 - Abstract
Abstract Hypothalamic–pituitary–adrenal (HPA) axis dysregulation has been commonly reported in major depressive disorder (MDD), but with considerable heterogeneity of results; potentially due to the predominant use of acute measures of an inherently variable/phasic system. Chronic longer-term measures of HPA-axis activity have yet to be systematically examined in MDD, particularly in relation to brain phenotypes, and in the context of early-life/contemporaneous stress. Here, we utilise a temporally stable measure of cumulative HPA-axis function (hair glucocorticoids) to investigate associations between cortisol, cortisone and total glucocorticoids with concurrent measures of (i) lifetime-MDD case/control status and current symptom severity, (ii) early/current-life stress and (iii) structural neuroimaging phenotypes, in N = 993 individuals from Generation Scotland (mean age = 59.1 yrs). Increased levels of hair cortisol were significantly associated with reduced global and lobar brain volumes with reductions in the frontal, temporal and cingulate regions (β range = −0.057 to −0.104, all P FDR
- Published
- 2021
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