Childhood Trauma Associated With Smaller Hippocampal Volume in Women With Major Depression
Emory University · National Institute of Mental Health · +2 more institutions
Abstract
Smaller hippocampal volume has been reported only in some but not all studies of unipolar major depressive disorder. Severe stress early in life has also been associated with smaller hippocampal volume and with persistent changes in the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis. However, prior hippocampal morphometric studies in depressed patients have neither reported nor controlled for a history of early childhood trauma. In this study, the volumes of the hippocampus and of control brain regions were measured in depressed women with and without childhood abuse and in healthy nonabused comparison subjects. METHOD: Study participants were 32 women with current unipolar major depressive disorder-21 with a history of prepubertal physical and/or sexual abuse and 11 without a history of prepubertal abuse-and 14 healthy nonabused female volunteers. The volumes of the whole hippocampus, temporal lobe, and whole brain were measured on coronal MRI scans by a single rater who was blind to the subjects' diagnoses.
The depressed subjects with childhood abuse had an 18% smaller mean left hippocampal volume than the nonabused depressed subjects and a 15% smaller mean left hippocampal volume than the healthy subjects. Right hippocampal volume was similar across the three groups. The right and left hippocampal volumes in the depressed women without abuse were similar to those in the healthy subjects.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 7.90
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 69
Authors
12- MVMeena VythilingamCorresponding
Emory University, National Institute of Mental Health
- CHChristine Heim
Emory University, Yale University, Utrecht University
- DJD. Jeffrey Newport
Emory University, Yale University, Utrecht University
- AHAndrew H. Miller
Emory University, Yale University, Utrecht University
- EAEric Anderson
Emory University, Utrecht University, Yale University
Topics & keywords
- Depression (economics)
- Hippocampal formation
- Psychology
- Medicine
- Psychiatry
- Clinical psychology
- Neuroscience