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Birth weight and perceived stress reactivity in older age

Birth weight and perceived stress reactivity in older age
Birth weight and perceived stress reactivity in older age
Stress reactivity is a disposition that underlies individual differences in stress responses, thereby affecting vulnerability for the development of disease. Besides genetic and early postnatal environmental factors, stress reactivity has been shown to be influenced by an adverse prenatal developmental environment, but it is unclear if such effects persist into older age. We tested associations between fetal growth and perceived stress reactivity in 421 participants from the Hertfordshire Cohort at age 66-75?years. Regression analysis showed a U-shaped association between birth weight and perceived stress reactivity with increased levels of stress reactivity at the lower and upper end of the birth weight distribution. These effects were stable after adjustment for markers of early adversity and recent adversity and chronic stress. Although the effects were small, they are consistent with findings from studies in younger cohorts, and demonstrate that such effects can persist into older age.

1532-3005
56-63
Schlotz, W.
49499d5e-4ff4-4ad3-b5f7-eec11b25b5db
Phillips, D.I.
29b73be7-2ff9-4fff-ae42-d59842df4cc6
Schlotz, W.
49499d5e-4ff4-4ad3-b5f7-eec11b25b5db
Phillips, D.I.
29b73be7-2ff9-4fff-ae42-d59842df4cc6

Schlotz, W. and Phillips, D.I. (2013) Birth weight and perceived stress reactivity in older age. Stress and Health, 29 (1), 56-63. (doi:10.1002/smi.2425). (PMID:22396064)

Record type: Article

Abstract

Stress reactivity is a disposition that underlies individual differences in stress responses, thereby affecting vulnerability for the development of disease. Besides genetic and early postnatal environmental factors, stress reactivity has been shown to be influenced by an adverse prenatal developmental environment, but it is unclear if such effects persist into older age. We tested associations between fetal growth and perceived stress reactivity in 421 participants from the Hertfordshire Cohort at age 66-75?years. Regression analysis showed a U-shaped association between birth weight and perceived stress reactivity with increased levels of stress reactivity at the lower and upper end of the birth weight distribution. These effects were stable after adjustment for markers of early adversity and recent adversity and chronic stress. Although the effects were small, they are consistent with findings from studies in younger cohorts, and demonstrate that such effects can persist into older age.

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Published date: February 2013
Organisations: Faculty of Health Sciences

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 350466
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/350466
ISSN: 1532-3005
PURE UUID: ce857959-4e5d-4422-842e-c4f8659f8dd4

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Date deposited: 27 Mar 2013 11:39
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 13:25

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Contributors

Author: W. Schlotz
Author: D.I. Phillips

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