2017
DOI: 10.1016/j.bbi.2016.10.006
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Relationship of childhood adversity and neighborhood violence to a proinflammatory phenotype in emerging adult African American men: An epigenetic link

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Cited by 110 publications
(99 citation statements)
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“…Coincidently, these two inflammatory indicators were elevated in different types of life stress. For instance, severe levels of childhood abuse were associated with a more elevated acute stress-induced IL-6 response, possibly due to reduced methylation of the IL-6 promoter (Janusek et al, 2017). Adults who had greater childhood adversity was reported to have more depressive symptoms and elevated concentrations of CRP (Janusek et al, 2017).…”
Section: Stress Inflammation and Diseasesmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Coincidently, these two inflammatory indicators were elevated in different types of life stress. For instance, severe levels of childhood abuse were associated with a more elevated acute stress-induced IL-6 response, possibly due to reduced methylation of the IL-6 promoter (Janusek et al, 2017). Adults who had greater childhood adversity was reported to have more depressive symptoms and elevated concentrations of CRP (Janusek et al, 2017).…”
Section: Stress Inflammation and Diseasesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For instance, severe levels of childhood abuse were associated with a more elevated acute stress-induced IL-6 response, possibly due to reduced methylation of the IL-6 promoter (Janusek et al, 2017). Adults who had greater childhood adversity was reported to have more depressive symptoms and elevated concentrations of CRP (Janusek et al, 2017). Recent studies have suggested that CRP and IL-6 are mechanisms by which early adversity may contribute to CVD (Ridker et al, 2002; Albert et al, 2006; Graham et al, 2006).…”
Section: Stress Inflammation and Diseasesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Furthermore, evidence suggests that childhood adversity, particularly severe physical and sexual abuse, confers risk for cardiovascular events, particularly among women (Garad et al 2017). Similarly, among adults with greater childhood adversity/trauma, elevated risk for depressive symptoms, higher serum CRP, reduced methylation of the IL-6 promoter, and higher serum IL-6 have been observed (Janusek et al 2017). These results shed light on potential epigenetic mechanisms that could link childhood adversity to disproportionally elevated risks of inflammatory disease in adulthood.…”
Section: Stress and Cardiovascular Diseasementioning
confidence: 99%
“…To our knowledge, only a handful of studies to date have examined this. In these studies, early adversity, depressive symptoms, and clinical depression were related to heightened inflammatory reactivity to an acute stressor among healthy adults (Carpenter et al, 2010; Fagundes et al, 2013; Janusek et al, 2017; Pace et al, 2006). The dearth of studies focusing on inflammatory reactivity to psychosocial threat is particularly surprising in light of past theoretical work suggesting that early adversity and depression may increase biological and psychological sensitivity to stress, and that repeated exaggerated inflammatory reactivity to stress over time contributes to low-grade chronic inflammation and increases risk for poor health-related outcomes (Brydon and Steptoe, 2005; Chiang et al, 2015b; Danese and Lewis, 2017; Fagundes and Way, 2014; McEwen and Seeman, 1999; Nusslock and Miller, 2016; O’Hara et al, 2014).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%