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Social support modulates the association between PTSD diagnosis and medial frontal volume in Chinese adults who lost their only child

Authors :
Rongfeng Qi
Yifeng Luo
Li Zhang
Yifei Weng
Wesley Surento
Neda Jahanshad
Qiang Xu
Yan Yin
Lingjiang Li
Zhihong Cao
Paul M. Thompson
Guang Ming Lu
Source :
Neurobiology of Stress, Vol 13, Iss , Pp 100227- (2020)
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Elsevier, 2020.

Abstract

Losing an only child is a devastating life event that a parent can experience and may lead to post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Social support could buffer against the negative influence of this trauma, but the neural mechanism underlying this alleviation effect remains poorly understood. In this study, voxel-based morphometry was conducted on brain MRI of 220 Han Chinese adults who had lost their only child. We performed multiple regression analysis to investigate the associations between social support scores – along with PTSD diagnosis, age, sex, body mass index (BMI) – and brain grey matter (GM) volumes in these bereaved parents. For all trauma-exposed adults, social support-by-diagnosis interaction was significantly associated with medial prefrontal volume (multiple comparisons corrected P ˂ 0.05), where positive correlation was found in adults with PTSD but not in those without PTSD. Besides, PTSD diagnosis was associated with decreased GM volume in medial and middle frontal gyri (P ˂ 0.001, uncorrected); older age was associated with widespread GM volume deficits; male sex was associated with lower GM volume in rolandic operculum, insular, postcentral gyrus (corrected P ˂ 0.05), and lower GM in thalamus but greater GM in parahippocampus (P ˂ 0.001, uncorrected); higher BMI was associated with GM deficits in occipital gyrus (corrected P ˂ 0.05) and precuneus (P ˂ 0.001, uncorrected). In conclusions, social support modulates the association between PTSD diagnosis and medial frontal volume, which may play an important role in the emotional disturbance in PTSD development in adults who lost their only child.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
23522895
Volume :
13
Issue :
100227-
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Neurobiology of Stress
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.3ad7b9e3db243ffb4185119f3c9139c
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ynstr.2020.100227