From childhood trauma to hyperarousal in adults: The mediating effect of maladaptive shame coping and insomnia

Front Hum Neurosci. 2023 Feb 16:17:990581. doi: 10.3389/fnhum.2023.990581. eCollection 2023.

Abstract

Introduction: A new line of insomnia research focuses on the developmental trajectories from early live stress to insomnia in adulthood. Adverse childhood experiences (ACE's) might create a vulnerability for later maladaptive coping with distress, as seen in chronic hyperarousal or insomnia. In an functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) study, failure to dissociate the neurobiological components of shame from autobiographical shameful memories in insomnia was reflected by continued activation of the dorsal anterior cingulate cortex (dACC), which may be a result of maladaptive coping in the wake of ACE's. Following up on that study, the current pilot study explores the relation between ACE's, shame coping-styles, adult insomnia, hyperarousal, and neurobiology of autobiographical memory.

Methods: We used existing data (N = 57) from individuals with insomnia (N = 27) and controls (N = 30), and asked these participants to complete the childhood trauma questionnaire (CTQ). Two structural equation models were used to test the hypotheses that shame-coping styles and insomnia symptom severity mediate the association between ACE's and (1) self-rated hyperarousal symptoms and (2) dACC activation to recall of autobiographical memories.

Results: For the association between ACE's and hyperarousal, there was a significant mediation of shame-coping style (p < 0.05). This model also indicated worse shame coping with more ACE's (p < 0.05) and worse insomnia symptoms with more ACES's (p < 0.05), but no association between shame coping and insomnia symptoms (p = 0.154). In contrast, dACC activation to recall of autobiographical memories could only be explained by its direct association with ACE's (p < 0.05), albeit that in this model more ACE's were also associated with worse insomnia symptoms.

Discussion: These findings could have an implication for the approach of treatment for insomnia. It could be focused more on trauma and emotional processing instead of conventional sleep interventions. Future studies are recommended to investigate the relationship mechanism between childhood trauma and insomnia, with additional factors of attachment styles, personality, and temperament.

Keywords: adverse childhood experiences (ACEs); childhood trauma; dorsal anterior cingulate cortex (dACC); hyperarousal; insomnia; shame.

Grants and funding

This work was supported by the ZONMW Neuropsychoanalysis Fund Grant 16.561.0001 (to FS and EV), and VICI Grant 453.07.001 (to EV), all part of the Netherlands Organization of Scientific Research (NWO); by the Grant 253/2012 of the Bial Foundation (to EV); by the European Research Council Grants ERC-ADG-2014–671084 INSOMNIA and ERC-2016-PoC-737634 INSOMNIA BEAT IT (to EV), and the Australian National Health and Medical Research Council Investigator Grants GNT1196636 (to RW).