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Study: Physical abuse changes kids’ brain structure

"Increased levels of physical abuse are associated with greater difficulty accessing the areas of the brain that regulate emotions"

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By Gwyn Wright via SWNS

Physical abuse in childhood actually changes the structure of the brain relating to the behavior and emotional control, scientists reveal.

Researchers found that white matter tracts - bundles of nerve cells that connect different parts of the brain - were less cohesive in students who had been physically abused as a child.

The white matter tracts affect the brain’s behavioral and emotional controls, memory processing, and how it relays sensory and motor signals.

Some of the changes were similar to ones found in earlier studies about the effects of verbal abuse and traumatic events, but others were unique to physical abuse.

For the study, 49 university students in the US undertook MRI scans, a demographic assessment and completed the Childhood Trauma Questionnaire, which asked them about the abuse they suffered.

Principal investigator Professor Hideo Suzuki, of the University of Nebraska-Lincoln, said: “Long after bruises fade and broken bones heal, the effects of childhood physical abuse linger in the brain.

“Our findings indicate that even among students who do not show overt trauma-related disorders, experiencing physical abuse as a child may negatively affect the brain’s emotional regulation functions.

“Increased levels of physical abuse are associated with greater difficulty accessing the areas of the brain that regulate emotions.

“Even though teachers or parents don’t see problematic behaviors among their children, our data indicates that experiencing physical abuse can change the white-matter microstructures of the brain and may influence how those children behave in the future.”

The findings were presented at the 2022 Association for Psychological Science Convention in Chicago.

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