The moderating effect of lifetime physical activity on brain alterations related to adverse childhood experiences
Lemye Zehirlioglu, Traute Demirakca, Richard Nkrumah, Lennart Ettingshausen, Yasmin Grauduszus, Claudius von Schröder, Melissa Feichtmair, Nikolaus Kleindienst, Gabriele Ende, Christian Schmahl

TL;DR
This study shows that physical activity can reduce the impact of childhood trauma on the amygdala, a brain region linked to stress and emotion.
Contribution
The study reveals that lifetime physical activity moderates the relationship between childhood adversity and amygdala volume.
Findings
Lifetime physical activity significantly moderates the effect of ACEs on amygdala volume.
Only individuals with low physical activity showed increased amygdala volume due to ACEs.
The interaction explained 7.9% of the variance in amygdala volume.
Abstract
Adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) can cause morphological brain alterations across the lifespan, contributing to increased vulnerability to mental and physical disorders. Despite extensive research on ACEs-related brain alterations, the protective or augmenting role of modifiable lifestyle factors such as physical activity has been largely underexplored, representing a key gap in our understanding of trauma-related neuroplasticity. To close this gap, we aimed to investigate how lifetime physical activity (LPA) influences the relationship between ACEs and morphological brain alterations. Moderation analyses using Hayes’ PROCESS macro examined the interaction between ACEs and LPA on the volume of limbic system-related regions – hippocampus, amygdala, anterior cingulate cortex (n = 81). While LPA showed no moderating effect on hippocampal or anterior cingulate volume, the model…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAttention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder · Infant Development and Preterm Care · Cognitive Abilities and Testing
