A negative association between brainstem pontine grey-matter volume, well-being and resilience in healthy twins

Associations between well-being, resilience to trauma and the volume of grey-matter regions involved in affective processing (e.g., threat/reward circuits) are largely unexplored, as are the roles of shared genetic and environmental factors derived from multivariate twin modelling. This study presen...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of psychiatry & neuroscience 2018-11, Vol.43 (5), p.170125-395
Hauptverfasser: Gatt, Justine M, Burton, Karen L O, Routledge, Kylie M, Grasby, Katrina L, Korgaonkar, Mayuresh S, Grieve, Stuart M, Schofield, Peter R, Harris, Anthony W F, Clark, C Richard, Williams, Leanne M
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container_end_page 395
container_issue 5
container_start_page 170125
container_title Journal of psychiatry & neuroscience
container_volume 43
creator Gatt, Justine M
Burton, Karen L O
Routledge, Kylie M
Grasby, Katrina L
Korgaonkar, Mayuresh S
Grieve, Stuart M
Schofield, Peter R
Harris, Anthony W F
Clark, C Richard
Williams, Leanne M
description Associations between well-being, resilience to trauma and the volume of grey-matter regions involved in affective processing (e.g., threat/reward circuits) are largely unexplored, as are the roles of shared genetic and environmental factors derived from multivariate twin modelling. This study presents, to our knowledge, the first exploration of well-being and volumes of grey-matter regions involved in affective processing using a region-of-interest, voxel-based approach in 263 healthy adult twins (60% monozygotic pairs, 61% females, mean age 39.69 yr). To examine patterns for resilience (i.e., positive adaptation following adversity), we evaluated associations between the same brain regions and well-being in a trauma-exposed subgroup. We found a correlated effect between increased well-being and reduced grey-matter volume of the pontine nuclei. This association was strongest for individuals with higher resilience to trauma. Multivariate twin modelling suggested that the common variance between the pons volume and well-being scores was due to environmental factors. We used a cross-sectional sample; results need to be replicated longitudinally and in a larger sample. Associations with altered grey matter of the pontine nuclei suggest that basic sensory processes, such as arousal, startle, memory consolidation and/or emotional conditioning, may have a role in well-being and resilience.
doi_str_mv 10.1503/jpn.170125
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subjects Adaptation
Arousal
Brain
Brain stem
Child abuse & neglect
Cognitive ability
Environmental factors
Mental depression
Mental disorders
Mental health care
Pons
Pontine nuclei
Psychopathology
Reinforcement
Statistical analysis
Stress
Substantia grisea
Trauma
Twins
Well being
title A negative association between brainstem pontine grey-matter volume, well-being and resilience in healthy twins
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