February 20, 2008

Response to Stress in Children Depends on Family Environment

Many schizophrenia researchers we have spoken to have identified stress as an important factor in increasing risk for, and triggering schizophrenia and other mental illnesses. We've covered some of the research in this area in this story on how children and teens are very sensitive to stress, and how different types of ongoing or long-term stresses seem to increase the risk - including immigration stress, social stress and family stress. Its important to note that these stresses don't "cause" schizophrenia by themselves - research suggests that its only when a person has the biological or genetic predisposition that these factors seem to significantly increase the risk of schizophrenia. Research suggests that no single factor causes mental illness - it takes a combination of genetic and biological factors, as well as prenatal and other environmental factors (for more information see causes of schizophrenia).

Now, a new study reveals more about how ongoing stress impacts children. In this study conducted on 346 19-month-old twins by an international team led by Université Laval professor of psychology Michel Boivin learned that the genetic and environmental bases of hormonal response to stress depend on the context in which a child grows up. This is the first time such an effect has been reported in young humans.

The study shows that, for children growing up in a favorable family environment, genetics account for 40% of the individual differences in cortisol response to unfamiliar situations. Cortisol is a stress hormone produced in new, unpredictable or uncontrollable contexts. In contrast, if children are raised in difficult family circumstances, the environment completely overrides the genetic effect as if it had established a programmed hormonal conditioning to stress.

The researchers already assumed that variability in cortisol production among individuals exposed to the same stressful conditions depended on both genetic and environmental factors. In order to estimate precisely these genetic and environmental contributions, they studied 130 identical twins who share 100% of their genes and 216 fraternal twins who share close to 50% of their genetic makeup. Each child, accompanied by its mother, was brought into a room, and then successively exposed to a clown and a noisy robot. “These are not traumatic events, but they are sufficient to cause behavioral changes in most children of that age,” explained Professor Boivin.

The researchers measured cortisol levels in the children’s saliva before and after this experience and analyzed this data as a function of each child’s family environment. Specific risk factors—tobacco use during pregnancy, low family income, low education level, single parenthood, very early parenthood, low birth weight, maternal hostility toward the child—have known effects on cortisol levels in children. Almost a quarter of the families who participated in the study had at least four of these risk factors and were classified in the “difficult family context” category. The data indicate that genetic factors account for 40% of the individual variability in cortisol response among children from a favorable family background, but this contribution drops to zero in children growing up in difficult family circumstances.

The authors of the research stated that they believe that this study confirms the importance of intervening early with families to reduce the risk of a disrupted conditioned stress response in young children. “A transient rise in cortisol level is a normal response to stress. But continuously high levels of this hormone could be harmful to the child’s development in the long run,” warns the researcher.

Source: Variations in Heritability of Cortisol Reactivity to Stress as a Function of Early Familial Adversity Among 19-Month-Old Twins (Archives of General Psychiatry)

Related Reading:

Stress and Pregnancy; Lower Stress Results in Healthier Brain Development

High Stress Early in Life Changes Stress Response for Many Years Afterward

Blood Pressure Drug May be a "Vaccine" for Stress-related Mental Illness and Minimize Brain Damage

Maternal Depression and Controlling Behavior Cause High Stress for Infants



Comments

I agree that a person who has higher genetic predisposition would have lower environmental stress threshold for schizophrenia. However, I find no study supports your following statement: "It's important to note that these stresses don't 'cause' schizophrenia – it's only in a person that has the biological or genetic predisposition that these factors seem to significantly increase the risk of schizophrenia." It is more like a personal belief (an assumption) rather than a fact.

Personally, I believe no one is immune from schizophrenia.

Posted by: JD05 at February 20, 2008 04:47 PM

Hi JD05 - you may be right about "no one is immune to schizophrenia". The researchers tell us that in most cases they believe that there are multiple risk factors involved in someone getting schizophrenia. The more risk factors - the more likely you are to get it. At the same time - increasingly research is showing that when it comes to mental illness - these genes only become active when they are exposed to certain environmental factors - if you have the genes and don't experience the environment, then the likelihood of getting mental illness is low, also - if you get are exposed to the environment but don't have the genes - then the likelihood that you develop a mental illness is very low.

But what I've said is not contrary to what you've said - it may be that some genes are very common (or even everyone may have them) to some level. So if even a person with very low genetic risk, could be exposed to such a high dose of "environmental" factors (from prenatal factors to young adult social stresses and street drugs) that eventually it triggers mental illness or schizophrenia.

Posted by: Szwebmaster at February 21, 2008 08:48 AM

Personally, I do believe that genetics and environment both contribute to mental illness.

In my own daughter I suspect our family dynamics may have contributed to her mental illness.

No doubt that Cassie was born as a very sensitive human being.

The fact that her own father never showed any interest in her and then a stepfather basically told her he didn't love her damaged her fragile psychological make-up.

There are many regrets I have and if I could do it over again I would have protected her more from a negative environment and made sure that more kindness and love was shown in the family and not just from me. Both mother and father have to show real love, caring, sensitivity and caring. It is absolutely crucial to our fragile sons and daughters.

Yaya

Posted by: yaya99 at February 21, 2008 08:45 PM

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