Echoes of childhood trauma: the relationship between adverse childhood experiences, brain structure, and mental health in aging adults
Anne Klimesch, Leonie Ascone, Götz Thomalla, Bastian Cheng, Marvin Petersen, Ingo Schäfer, Jürgen Gallinat, Simone Kühn

TL;DR
Childhood trauma is linked to mental health issues and brain changes in older adults, with more severe trauma causing wider brain effects.
Contribution
This study provides evidence of long-term brain structural changes linked to childhood trauma in aging adults.
Findings
ACEs are associated with mental health symptoms in mid- to late adulthood.
Individuals with 3 or more ACEs show significant grey matter volume reductions in limbic and frontal regions.
More severe ACE exposure (4 or more) leads to widespread neuroanatomical alterations.
Abstract
Adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) are associated with persistent mental health risks and brain structural differences across adulthood, yet their long-term neurobiological relevance in aging populations remains unclear. Given that ACEs are common and societies are aging, understanding how early adversity relates to mental and brain health across the lifespan is an important goal. This preregistered study examined whether ACEs are associated with mental health symptoms in mid- to late adulthood, and whether regional brain structure may account for part of this relationship. Cross-sectional data of the Hamburg City Health Study were used, involving participants aged 46–78 years with available magnetic resonance imaging data (Ntotal = 2 624; eligible: nanalysis sample = 1 900). Mental health status was quantified using the Patient Health Questionnaire-9 and the General Anxiety…
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Taxonomy
TopicsChild Abuse and Trauma · Child Abuse and Related Trauma · Posttraumatic Stress Disorder Research
