Stress and Growth in Children and Adolescents

The infantile, childhood, and adolescent periods of growth and development also represent times of increased vulnerability to stressors. Growth velocity in each period is dependent on the interplay of genetic, environmental, dietary, socioeconomic, developmental, behavioral, nutritional, metabolic,...

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Published inHormone research in paediatrics Vol. 96; no. 1; p. 25
Main Authors Mousikou, Maria, Kyriakou, Andreas, Skordis, Nicos
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Switzerland 01.03.2023
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ISSN1663-2826
DOI10.1159/000521074

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Abstract The infantile, childhood, and adolescent periods of growth and development also represent times of increased vulnerability to stressors. Growth velocity in each period is dependent on the interplay of genetic, environmental, dietary, socioeconomic, developmental, behavioral, nutritional, metabolic, biochemical, and hormonal factors. A stressor may impact growth directly through modulation of the growth hormone axis or indirectly through other factors. The adaptive response to stressors culminates in behavioral, physiological, and biochemical responses which together support survival and conservation of energy. The immediate response involves activation of the sympathetic nervous system and the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis. The time-limited stress response is at once antigrowth, antireproductive, and catabolic with no lasting adverse consequences. However, chronic activation of the stress system and hypercortisolism have consequential negative impacts on growth, thyroid function, reproduction-puberty, and metabolism. High cortisol suppresses growth hormone-insulin-like growth factor 1, hypothalamic-pituitary-gonadal, and thyroid axes and has been reported to be responsible for an increase in visceral adiposity, a decrease in lean mass, suppression of osteoblastic activity with risk of osteoporosis, and induction of insulin resistance. Early-life adversities, emotional or physical, have been associated with long-term negative physical and mental health outcomes. Existing models of chronic stress corroborate that early-life adversities can affect growth and have consequences in other aspects of well-being throughout the lifespan. Targeted interventions to reduce stress during infancy, childhood, and adolescence can have far-reaching benefits to long-term health as well as attaining adequate growth. In this review, we describe the neuroendocrinology of the stress response, the factors influencing growth, and the impact of chronic stress on growth during critical periods of infancy, childhood, and puberty with particular reference to growth, thyroid, and gonadal axis.
AbstractList The infantile, childhood, and adolescent periods of growth and development also represent times of increased vulnerability to stressors. Growth velocity in each period is dependent on the interplay of genetic, environmental, dietary, socioeconomic, developmental, behavioral, nutritional, metabolic, biochemical, and hormonal factors. A stressor may impact growth directly through modulation of the growth hormone axis or indirectly through other factors. The adaptive response to stressors culminates in behavioral, physiological, and biochemical responses which together support survival and conservation of energy. The immediate response involves activation of the sympathetic nervous system and the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis. The time-limited stress response is at once antigrowth, antireproductive, and catabolic with no lasting adverse consequences. However, chronic activation of the stress system and hypercortisolism have consequential negative impacts on growth, thyroid function, reproduction-puberty, and metabolism. High cortisol suppresses growth hormone-insulin-like growth factor 1, hypothalamic-pituitary-gonadal, and thyroid axes and has been reported to be responsible for an increase in visceral adiposity, a decrease in lean mass, suppression of osteoblastic activity with risk of osteoporosis, and induction of insulin resistance. Early-life adversities, emotional or physical, have been associated with long-term negative physical and mental health outcomes. Existing models of chronic stress corroborate that early-life adversities can affect growth and have consequences in other aspects of well-being throughout the lifespan. Targeted interventions to reduce stress during infancy, childhood, and adolescence can have far-reaching benefits to long-term health as well as attaining adequate growth. In this review, we describe the neuroendocrinology of the stress response, the factors influencing growth, and the impact of chronic stress on growth during critical periods of infancy, childhood, and puberty with particular reference to growth, thyroid, and gonadal axis.
Author Mousikou, Maria
Skordis, Nicos
Kyriakou, Andreas
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  givenname: Andreas
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  fullname: Kyriakou, Andreas
  organization: Department of Paediatric Endocrinology, Makarios Children's Hospital, Nicosia, Cyprus
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  givenname: Nicos
  surname: Skordis
  fullname: Skordis, Nicos
  organization: School of Medicine, University of Nicosia, Nicosia, Cyprus
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Keywords Normal growth
Chronic stress
Neuroendocrinology of stress response
Early-life adversities
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Snippet The infantile, childhood, and adolescent periods of growth and development also represent times of increased vulnerability to stressors. Growth velocity in...
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StartPage 25
SubjectTerms Adolescent
Child
Growth Hormone
Humans
Hypothalamo-Hypophyseal System
Pituitary Gland
Pituitary-Adrenal System
Puberty
Stress, Physiological
Stress, Psychological - metabolism
Title Stress and Growth in Children and Adolescents
URI https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34814153
Volume 96
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