scholarly journals Faculty Opinions recommendation of Early childhood deprivation is associated with alterations in adult brain structure despite subsequent environmental enrichment.

Author(s):  
Lutz Jäncke
2020 ◽  
Vol 117 (1) ◽  
pp. 641-649 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nuria K. Mackes ◽  
Dennis Golm ◽  
Sagari Sarkar ◽  
Robert Kumsta ◽  
Michael Rutter ◽  
...  

Early childhood deprivation is associated with higher rates of neurodevelopmental and mental disorders in adulthood. The impact of childhood deprivation on the adult brain and the extent to which structural changes underpin these effects are currently unknown. To investigate these questions, we utilized MRI data collected from young adults who were exposed to severe deprivation in early childhood in the Romanian orphanages of the Ceaușescu era and then, subsequently adopted by UK families; 67 Romanian adoptees (with between 3 and 41 mo of deprivation) were compared with 21 nondeprived UK adoptees. Romanian adoptees had substantially smaller total brain volumes (TBVs) than nondeprived adoptees (8.6% reduction), and TBV was strongly negatively associated with deprivation duration. This effect persisted after covarying for potential environmental and genetic confounds. In whole-brain analyses, deprived adoptees showed lower right inferior frontal surface area and volume but greater right inferior temporal lobe thickness, surface area, and volume than the nondeprived adoptees. Right medial prefrontal volume and surface area were positively associated with deprivation duration. No deprivation-related effects were observed in limbic regions. Global reductions in TBV statistically mediated the observed relationship between institutionalization and both lower intelligence quotient (IQ) and higher levels of attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder symptoms. The deprivation-related increase in right inferior temporal volume seemed to be compensatory, as it was associated with lower levels of attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder symptoms. We provide compelling evidence that time-limited severe deprivation in the first years of life is related to alterations in adult brain structure, despite extended enrichment in adoptive homes in the intervening years.


2021 ◽  
pp. 1-13
Author(s):  
Martha J. Farah ◽  
Saul Sternberg ◽  
Thomas A. Nichols ◽  
Jeffrey T. Duda ◽  
Terry Lohrenz ◽  
...  

Abstract Sustained differences in early life cognitive and linguistic stimulation were found to impact adult brain structure. Starting in infancy, groups of very low SES children were randomized to either 5 years of cognitively and linguistically stimulating high-quality center-based care or a comparison condition. The intervention resulted in large and statistically significant changes in brain structure measured in midlife, particularly for males. These findings are the first to extend the large literature on experimental environmental enrichment effects on animal brains to humans, and to demonstrate the effects of environmental features that matter uniquely for human development, such as linguistic stimulation.


Insects ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 11 (12) ◽  
pp. 886
Author(s):  
Silvana Piersanti ◽  
Manuela Rebora ◽  
Gianandrea Salerno ◽  
Sylvia Anton

Dragonflies are hemimetabolous insects, switching from an aquatic life style as nymphs to aerial life as adults, confronted to different environmental cues. How sensory structures on the antennae and the brain regions processing the incoming information are adapted to the reception of fundamentally different sensory cues has not been investigated in hemimetabolous insects. Here we describe the antennal sensilla, the general brain structure, and the antennal sensory pathways in the last six nymphal instars of Libellula depressa, in comparison with earlier published data from adults, using scanning electron microscopy, and antennal receptor neuron and antennal lobe output neuron mass-tracing with tetramethylrhodamin. Brain structure was visualized with an anti-synapsin antibody. Differently from adults, the nymphal antennal flagellum harbors many mechanoreceptive sensilla, one olfactory, and two thermo-hygroreceptive sensilla at all investigated instars. The nymphal brain is very similar to the adult brain throughout development, despite the considerable differences in antennal sensilla and habitat. Like in adults, nymphal brains contain mushroom bodies lacking calyces and small aglomerular antennal lobes. Antennal fibers innervate the antennal lobe similar to adult brains and the gnathal ganglion more prominently than in adults. Similar brain structures are thus used in L. depressa nymphs and adults to process diverging sensory information.


2020 ◽  
Vol 61 (9) ◽  
pp. 1043-1053
Author(s):  
Dennis Golm ◽  
Barbara Maughan ◽  
Edward D. Barker ◽  
Jonathan Hill ◽  
Mark Kennedy ◽  
...  

2012 ◽  
Vol 2012 ◽  
pp. 1-10 ◽  
Author(s):  
José Fernando Maya-Vetencourt ◽  
Laura Baroncelli ◽  
Alessandro Viegi ◽  
Ettore Tiraboschi ◽  
Eero Castren ◽  
...  

The central nervous system architecture is markedly modified by sensory experience during early life, but a decline of plasticity occurs with age. Recent studies have challenged this dogma providing evidence that both pharmacological treatments and paradigms based on the manipulation of environmental stimulation levels can be successfully employed as strategies for enhancing plasticity in the adult nervous system. Insulin-like growth factor 1 (IGF-1) is a peptide implicated in prenatal and postnatal phases of brain development such as neurogenesis, neuronal differentiation, synaptogenesis, and experience-dependent plasticity. Here, using the visual system as a paradigmatic model, we report that IGF-1 reactivates neural plasticity in the adult brain. Exogenous administration of IGF-1 in the adult visual cortex, indeed, restores the susceptibility of cortical neurons to monocular deprivation and promotes the recovery of normal visual functions in adult amblyopic animals. These effects were accompanied by a marked reduction of intracortical GABA levels. Moreover, we show that a transitory increase of IGF-1 expression is associated to the plasticity reinstatement induced by environmental enrichment (EE) and that blocking IGF-1 action by means of the IGF-1 receptor antagonist JB1 prevents EE effects on plasticity processes.


2001 ◽  
Vol 46 (2) ◽  
pp. 73-88 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. Callaerts ◽  
S. Leng ◽  
J. Clements ◽  
C. Benassayag ◽  
D. Cribbs ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. Roger ◽  
P. Vannasing ◽  
J. Tremblay ◽  
M. L. Bringas Vega ◽  
C. P. Bryce ◽  
...  

AbstractAccording to the World Health Organization, 45% of deaths among children under 5 years of age are caused by childhood malnutrition, which affects 224 million children worldwide. The Barbados Nutrition Study (BNS) is a 50+year longitudinal study on a Barbadian cohort (N=258) with histories of moderate to severe protein-energy malnutrition (PEM) in the first year of life and healthy controls. Interestingly, a recent BNS publication used quantitative electroencephalography (EEG) to show differences in brain function (lower alpha1 activity and higher theta, alpha2 and beta activity) in children who suffered from early PEM compared to healthy controls. However, the adult brain function following early childhood PEM has not been reported in this cohort. In the current study, EEG recordings were undertaken during a Go-No-Go task on a subsample of the BNS cohort (n=55) at ages 45-51 years. Evoked-related potentials (ERP) analyses show that, compared to the control group (n=29), participants with histories of early PEM (n=24) presented with lower N2 amplitudes and a higher omission error rates, associated with conflict monitoring and attention deficits, respectively. These results may be linked to the attention and executive impairments that have been previously reported in this cohort.


2000 ◽  
Vol 176 (5) ◽  
pp. 412-413 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ian H. Robertson

Those involved in research or clinical work related to brain function will be used to the dinner party question “we only use 50% of the brain, don't we?” The scientist's dismissive sneer is usually well enough concealed, depending on how much he or she has had to drink. Where on earth did this lay myth arise, we chuckle over coffee in the common room on Monday morning? But scientists and clinicians are not immune to myths also. For many decades, neuroscientists preached the doctrine that the adult brain is ‘hard-wired’. Perhaps in very early childhood, we conceded, plastic changes in the brain were possible, but after the age of three or four years connections were indelibly made.


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