Background: Prior studies have suggested that inhibited temperament may be associated with an increased risk for developing anxiety or mood disorder, including bipolar disorder. However, the neurobiological basis for this increased risk is unknown. The aim of this study was to examine temperament in symptomatic and asymptomatic child offspring of parents with bipolar disorder (OBD) and to investigate whether inhibited temperament is associated with aberrant hippocampal volumes compared with healthy control (HC) youth.
Methods: The OBD group consisted of 45 youth, 24 of whom had current psychiatric symptoms (OBDs) and 21 without any psychiatric symptoms (OBDs), and were compared with 24 HC youth. Temperament characteristics were measured by using the Revised Dimensions of Temperament Survey. Magnetic resonance imaging was used to measure hippocampal volumes. The association between temperament and hippocampal volumes was tested by using multiple regression analysis.
Results: Compared with the OBDs group, the OBDs group had significantly more inhibited temperament traits, less flexibility, more negative mood, and less regular rhythm in their daily routines. In contrast, the OBDs group was more likely to approach novel situations compared with OBDs or HC groups. Within the OBDs group, a more inhibited temperament was associated with smaller right hippocampal volumes.
Conclusions: In this study, symptomatic OBD were characterized by an inhibited temperament that was inversely correlated with hippocampal volume. Additional longitudinal studies are needed to determine whether inverse correlations between hippocampal volume and inhibited temperament represent early markers of risk for later developing bipolar disorder.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1089/cap.2016.0086 | DOI Listing |
Psychol Belg
December 2024
Faculty of Psychology and Educational Sciences, KU Leuven, Leuven, Belgium.
Self- and other-oriented harmful behaviors are common among emerging adults. Individuals who engage in both forms of behavior, termed dual-harm, experience more adverse outcomes in comparison to individuals who engage in either. This study examines temperamental traits, defined as reactive and regulative temperament, as transdiagnostic factors underlying engagement in self-oriented, other-oriented, and dual-harmful behaviors.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEast Asian Arch Psychiatry
December 2024
Department of Pathology, All India Institute of Medical Sciences-Madurai, Ramanthapuram, Tamil Nadu, India.
Background: Endophenotypes aid in studying the complex genetic basis of bipolar disorder. We aimed to compare first-degree relatives of patients with bipolar I disorder in a hospital in India with unrelated healthy controls in terms of neurocognition and affective temperament METHODS. This cross-sectional study was conducted between August and November 2012 at a tertiary hospital in India.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCurr Top Behav Neurosci
December 2024
Department of Psychology, University of California, Davis, CA, USA.
Children with extreme behavioral inhibition (BI) are at a significantly greater risk to develop anxiety disorders later in life. We and others have identified similar early-life temperamental BI in nonhuman primates (NHPs), including rhesus monkeys. NHP models of BI provide a unique opportunity to study the neurobiology of BI in a species that shares biological, developmental, and socioemotional similarities with humans.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDev Sci
January 2025
IDeA Research Center for Individual Development and Adaptive Education of Children at Risk, Frankfurt am Main, Germany.
The concepts of executive function (EF) and effortful control (EC) are strikingly similar. EF originates from neurocognitive research and is described as an accumulation of cognitive processes that serve the goal-oriented self-regulation of an individual. EC originates from temperament research and is defined as the efficiency of executive attention, including the ability to inhibit a dominant response, activate a subdominant response, proceed in a planned manner, and recognize conflicts or errors.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAdv Psychiatry Behav Health
September 2024
McCourtney Professor of Child Studies, Department of Psychology, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, Pennsylvania.
Anxiety runs in families, likely reflecting shared genetic risk and shared exposure to signals of threat and fear messaging. Children begin to internalize these signals from the earliest months of life, providing a causal or treatment mechanism that is tractable to intervention. The data suggest that while temperamentally fearful children differentially respond to parental verbal and nonverbal signaling, the impact may be more powerful prior to early childhood.
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