학술논문

Childhood stress and midlife depression in women: the influence of diet quality
Document Type
article
Source
Nutritional Neuroscience. 25(12)
Subject
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Public Health
Health Sciences
Brain Disorders
Nutrition
Behavioral and Social Science
Mental Illness
Mental Health
Pediatric
Social Determinants of Health
Clinical Research
Prevention
Depression
2.3 Psychological
social and economic factors
Aetiology
Mental health
Good Health and Well Being
Adult
Child
Humans
Female
Child Abuse
Diet
Depressive Disorder
Diet
Healthy
adverse childhood experiences
diet quality
depression
childhood stress
nutritional psychiatry
moderation
high perceived stress
Healthy Eating Index (HEI)-2015
Alternate Healthy Eating Index (AHEI)-2010
psychosomatic health
Medical and Health Sciences
Neurology & Neurosurgery
Biomedical and clinical sciences
Health sciences
Language
Abstract
ObjectiveHow does diet quality (DQ) moderate associations between serious childhood stress exposures and adult depression?MethodsWe analyzed a cohort of Californian women at midlife (N=382; age 36-42). Serious childhood stress was defined as high perceived stress during childhood or adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) of physical abuse, sexual abuse, and/or household substance abuse. Women were dichotomized by current depression risk (high/low). The Healthy Eating Index (HEI)-2015 and Alternate Healthy Eating Index (AHEI)-2010 measured current DQ from 3-day food records. Interactions between childhood stress exposures and DQ indices were tested one-by-one in multivariable Poisson regression models.ResultsDepression risks associated with endorsing all 3 ACEs differed by HEI and AHEI scores, as did risks associated with endorsing high perceived stress, physical abuse, and sexual abuse by AHEI. Where DQ moderated stress-depression associations, predicted prevalences of high depression risk did not vary with DQ among women endorsing the particular childhood stressors. However, among non-endorsing women, predicted high depression risk prevalences were significantly lower with higher DQ compared to in their stress-exposed counterparts - e.g. at the 90th AHEI percentile, depression prevalences were ∼20% among 'non-childhood-stressed' women versus 48.8% (high perceived stress, sexual abuse), 52.0% (physical abuse), and 73.0% (3 ACEs) in 'childhood-stressed' women.ConclusionsHigher current DQ, particularly as aligned with chronic disease prevention guidelines, predicts lower depression risk in women with low childhood adversity. DQ did not buffer depression risk in women with high childhood stress. Further research is warranted to examine persistent pathways of depression risk and diet's role within.