Affiliation:
1. Department of Psychology, University of California, Los Angeles.
2. Department of Psychology, Dickinson College.
3. Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Rush University Medical Center.
4. Fralin Biomedical Research Institute. Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University.
Abstract
Abstract
Objective
Parental trauma exposure and trauma-related distress can increase risk for adverse health outcomes in offspring, but the pathways implicated in intergenerational transmission are not fully explicated. Accelerated biological aging may be one mechanism underlying less favorable health in trauma-exposed individuals and their offspring. This study examines associations of preconception maternal and paternal posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) symptoms with child telomere length, and maternal prenatal C-reactive protein (CRP) as a biological mechanism.
Methods
Mothers (n = 127) and a subset of the fathers (n = 84) reported on PTSD symptoms before conception. Mothers provided blood spots in the second and third trimester that were assayed for CRP. At age 4, children provided buccal cells for measurement of telomere length. Models adjusted for parental age, socioeconomic status, maternal pre-pregnancy BMI, child biological sex, and child age.
Results
Mothers’ PTSD symptoms were significantly associated with shorter child telomere length (β = -0.22, SE = 0.10, p = .023). Fathers’ PTSD symptoms were also inversely associated with child telomere length (β = -0.21, SE = 0.11), though nonsignificant (p = .065). There was no significant indirect effect of mothers’ PTSD symptoms on child telomere length through CRP in pregnancy, but higher second trimester CRP was significantly associated with shorter child telomere length (β = -0.35, SE = 0.18, p = .048).
Conclusions
Maternal symptoms of PTSD prior to conception and second trimester inflammation were associated with shorter telomere length in offspring in early childhood, independent of covariates. Findings indicate intergenerational transmission of parental trauma may occur in part through accelerated biological aging processes and provide further evidence that prenatal pro-inflammatory processes program child telomere length.
Open Science Framework Pre-registration:
https://osf.io/7c2d5/?view_only=cd0fb81f48db4b8f9c59fc8bb7b0ef97
Publisher
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health,Applied Psychology
Cited by
2 articles.
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