Female adolescents’ early life stress and body mass index: Differential effects of anger and anxiety in response to rejection

Author:

Lee Sharon Y.12ORCID,Jao Nancy C.3,Gaffey Allison E.45,Reid Brie M.12,Vergara‐Lopez Chrystal12,Bublitz Margaret H.167,Stroud Laura R.12

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychiatry and Human Behavior, Warren Alpert Medical School Brown University Providence Rhode Island USA

2. Center for Behavioral and Preventive Medicine The Miriam Hospital Providence Rhode Island USA

3. Department of Psychology Rosalind Franklin University of Medicine and Science North Chicago Illinois USA

4. Department of Internal Medicine (Cardiovascular Medicine) Yale School of Medicine New Haven Connecticut USA

5. VA Connecticut Healthcare System West Haven Connecticut USA

6. Department of Medicine, Warren Alpert Medical School Brown University Providence Rhode Island USA

7. Women's Medicine Collaborative The Miriam Hospital Providence Rhode Island USA

Abstract

AbstractIntroductionEarly life stress is linked to childhood obesity. As children enter adolescence, early life stress may be associated with increased rejection sensitivity, resulting in activation of behavioral and physiological changes that contribute to higher body mass index (BMI). Understanding the potential influence of rejection sensitivity on the association between early life stress and BMI is important to examine in female adolescents. For this secondary data analysis, we hypothesized that female adolescents with greater early life stress and greater rejection sensitivity would exhibit higher BMI‐for‐age 12 months later.MethodsSeventy‐eight adolescents (Mage = 13.1 years; 100% female sex; MBMI = 23.2 kg/m2) in the United States completed study procedures from 2012 to 2016. Among these procedures, the Psychosocial Schedule was used to assess cumulative early life stress and the Children's Rejection Sensitivity Questionnaire was used to assess anger and anxiety in response to rejection. Twelve months later, height and weight were measured to derive BMI‐for‐age.ResultsHigher early life stress was associated with higher BMI‐for‐age among female adolescents with low rejection‐provoked anger (1 SD below the mean). However, this association was not observed among female adolescents with high rejection‐provoked anger (1 SD above the mean). Finally, there was no significant interaction between early life stress and rejection‐provoked anxiety in predicting BMI‐for‐age.ConclusionsExperiencing early life stress may interact with rejection‐provoked anger, but not anxiety, to predict BMI‐for‐age. Findings inform a developmental perspective of how rejection sensitivity may influence the association between early life stress and early cardiometabolic risk.

Funder

American Heart Association

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

Wiley

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