Child abuse may cause depression
Children who suffer or witness physical abuse undergo changes to their brain structure that may predispose them to depression and substance abuse later in life, a study said.
The finding holds promise for early detection and pre-emptive counselling already in adolescence – a crucial phase of physical and emotional development and brain maturation, say researchers in the United States.
Using a specialised MRI scanning technique, “we identified microstructural disruption at certain locations of the white matter tracts of adolescents who experienced maltreatment during childhood,” researcher Hao Huang said.
White matter tracts or nerve fibres, comparable to computer network cables, connect the grey matter in the brain’s different processing regions – transmitting signals to ensure they “talk” with each other efficiently.
Nineteen adolescents who had suffered physical or sexual abuse before the age of 10 or witnessed domestic violence that lasted six months or longer, took part in the study, as well as a control group of 13 with no abuse history.
Those in the abused group were physically and mentally healthy at the time they were recruited at an average age of 16, and were not abusing alcohol or drugs at the time. All the teenagers were followed at six-month intervals for up to five years.
“We found that adolescents with maltreatment history who had disrupted white matter tracts during the initial recruitment were more likely to develop depressive and addictive disorders,” said Dr Huang of the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Centre’s Advanced Imaging Research Centre.
Five of the 19 abuse victims developed depression later, compared to one in the control group, while four became substance abusers compared to one control teenager.
Two from the maltreated group developed both conditions, said the study published in the journal Neuropsychopharmacology.
The adolescents exposed to childhood abuse as well as those who later developed depression had significantly lower FA values – a measure of white matter efficiency.
1 Comment
Post comment
Please sign in or create your Account to post comments.
Charles Alamango
Aug 6th 2012, 16:03
So, get rid of the spiders not the web! Start treating the actions of the abusers harshly not with velvet gloves. Name and shame them. We now have an offender's register which should be made public to one and all. These criminals, some of whom are cultured and influential have a way of getting away and repeating their abuse with immunity. They are destroying young lives and should be treated with an iron hand.
Please choose the reason of your report below: