Autonomic reactivity and psychopathology in middle childhood

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Abstract

Background: Better indicators are needed for identifying children with early signs of developmental psychopathology. Aims: To identify measures of autonomic nervous system reactivity that discriminate children with internalising and externalising behavioural symptoms. Method: Across-sectional study of 122 children aged 6-7 years examined sympathetic and parasympathetic reactivity to standardised field-laboratory stressors as predictors of parent- and teacher-reported mental health symptoms. Results: Measures of autonomic reactivity discriminated between children with internalising behaviour problems, externalising behaviour problems and neither. Internalisers showed high reactivity relative to low-symptom children, principally in the parasympathetic branch, while externalisers showed low reactivity, in both autonomic branches. Conclusions: School-age children with mental health symptoms showed a pattern of autonomic dimorphism in their reactivity to standardised challenges. This observation may be of use in early identification of children with presyndromal psychopathology.

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APA

Boyce, W. T., Quas, J., Alkon, A., Smider, N. A., Essex, M. J., Kupfer, D. J., … Steinberg, L. (2001). Autonomic reactivity and psychopathology in middle childhood. British Journal of Psychiatry, 179(AUG.), 144–150. https://doi.org/10.1192/bjp.179.2.144

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