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Maternal Childhood Maltreatment, Internal Working Models, and Perinatal Substance Use: Is There a Role for Hyperkatifeia? A Systematic Review

The parent-infant relationship is critical for socioemotional development and is adversely impacted by perinatal substance use. This systematic review posits that the mechanisms underlying these risks to mother-infant relationships center on 3 primary processes: (1) mothers’ childhood maltreatment e...

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Autores principales: Olsavsky, Aviva K., Chirico, Isabella, Ali, Diab, Christensen, Hannah, Boggs, Brianna, Svete, Lillian, Ketcham, Katherine, Hutchison, Kent, Zeanah, Charles, Tottenham, Nim, Riggs, Paula, Epperson, C. Neill
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: SAGE Publications 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10354827/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37476500
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/11782218231186371
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author Olsavsky, Aviva K.
Chirico, Isabella
Ali, Diab
Christensen, Hannah
Boggs, Brianna
Svete, Lillian
Ketcham, Katherine
Hutchison, Kent
Zeanah, Charles
Tottenham, Nim
Riggs, Paula
Epperson, C. Neill
author_facet Olsavsky, Aviva K.
Chirico, Isabella
Ali, Diab
Christensen, Hannah
Boggs, Brianna
Svete, Lillian
Ketcham, Katherine
Hutchison, Kent
Zeanah, Charles
Tottenham, Nim
Riggs, Paula
Epperson, C. Neill
author_sort Olsavsky, Aviva K.
collection PubMed
description The parent-infant relationship is critical for socioemotional development and is adversely impacted by perinatal substance use. This systematic review posits that the mechanisms underlying these risks to mother-infant relationships center on 3 primary processes: (1) mothers’ childhood maltreatment experiences; (2) attachment styles and consequent internal working models of interpersonal relationships; and (3) perinatal substance use. Further, the review considers the role of hyperkatifeia, or hypersensitivity to negative affect which occurs when people with substance use disorders are not using substances, and which drives the negative reinforcement in addiction. The authors performed a systematic review of articles (published 2000-2022) related to these constructs and their impact on mother-infant relationships and offspring outcomes, including original clinical research articles addressing relationships between these constructs, and excluding case studies, reviews, non-human animal studies, intervention studies, studies with fewer than 30% female-sex participants, clinical guidelines, studies limited to obstetric outcomes, mechanistic/biological studies, and studies with methodological issues precluding interpretation. Overall 1844 articles were screened, 377 were selected for full text review, and data were extracted from 157 articles. Results revealed strong relationships between mothers’ childhood maltreatment experiences, less optimal internal working models, and increased risk for perinatal substance use, and importantly, all of these predictors interacted with hyperkatifeia and exerted a marked impact on mother-infant relationships with less data available on offspring outcomes. These data strongly support the need for future studies addressing the additive impact of maternal childhood maltreatment experiences, suboptimal internal working models, and perinatal substance use, with hyperkatifeia as a potential moderator, and their interacting effects on mother-infant socioemotional outcomes.
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spelling pubmed-103548272023-07-20 Maternal Childhood Maltreatment, Internal Working Models, and Perinatal Substance Use: Is There a Role for Hyperkatifeia? A Systematic Review Olsavsky, Aviva K. Chirico, Isabella Ali, Diab Christensen, Hannah Boggs, Brianna Svete, Lillian Ketcham, Katherine Hutchison, Kent Zeanah, Charles Tottenham, Nim Riggs, Paula Epperson, C. Neill Subst Abuse Child and Adolescent Addictions The parent-infant relationship is critical for socioemotional development and is adversely impacted by perinatal substance use. This systematic review posits that the mechanisms underlying these risks to mother-infant relationships center on 3 primary processes: (1) mothers’ childhood maltreatment experiences; (2) attachment styles and consequent internal working models of interpersonal relationships; and (3) perinatal substance use. Further, the review considers the role of hyperkatifeia, or hypersensitivity to negative affect which occurs when people with substance use disorders are not using substances, and which drives the negative reinforcement in addiction. The authors performed a systematic review of articles (published 2000-2022) related to these constructs and their impact on mother-infant relationships and offspring outcomes, including original clinical research articles addressing relationships between these constructs, and excluding case studies, reviews, non-human animal studies, intervention studies, studies with fewer than 30% female-sex participants, clinical guidelines, studies limited to obstetric outcomes, mechanistic/biological studies, and studies with methodological issues precluding interpretation. Overall 1844 articles were screened, 377 were selected for full text review, and data were extracted from 157 articles. Results revealed strong relationships between mothers’ childhood maltreatment experiences, less optimal internal working models, and increased risk for perinatal substance use, and importantly, all of these predictors interacted with hyperkatifeia and exerted a marked impact on mother-infant relationships with less data available on offspring outcomes. These data strongly support the need for future studies addressing the additive impact of maternal childhood maltreatment experiences, suboptimal internal working models, and perinatal substance use, with hyperkatifeia as a potential moderator, and their interacting effects on mother-infant socioemotional outcomes. SAGE Publications 2023-07-18 /pmc/articles/PMC10354827/ /pubmed/37476500 http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/11782218231186371 Text en © The Author(s) 2023 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/) which permits non-commercial use, reproduction and distribution of the work without further permission provided the original work is attributed as specified on the SAGE and Open Access pages (https://us.sagepub.com/en-us/nam/open-access-at-sage).
spellingShingle Child and Adolescent Addictions
Olsavsky, Aviva K.
Chirico, Isabella
Ali, Diab
Christensen, Hannah
Boggs, Brianna
Svete, Lillian
Ketcham, Katherine
Hutchison, Kent
Zeanah, Charles
Tottenham, Nim
Riggs, Paula
Epperson, C. Neill
Maternal Childhood Maltreatment, Internal Working Models, and Perinatal Substance Use: Is There a Role for Hyperkatifeia? A Systematic Review
title Maternal Childhood Maltreatment, Internal Working Models, and Perinatal Substance Use: Is There a Role for Hyperkatifeia? A Systematic Review
title_full Maternal Childhood Maltreatment, Internal Working Models, and Perinatal Substance Use: Is There a Role for Hyperkatifeia? A Systematic Review
title_fullStr Maternal Childhood Maltreatment, Internal Working Models, and Perinatal Substance Use: Is There a Role for Hyperkatifeia? A Systematic Review
title_full_unstemmed Maternal Childhood Maltreatment, Internal Working Models, and Perinatal Substance Use: Is There a Role for Hyperkatifeia? A Systematic Review
title_short Maternal Childhood Maltreatment, Internal Working Models, and Perinatal Substance Use: Is There a Role for Hyperkatifeia? A Systematic Review
title_sort maternal childhood maltreatment, internal working models, and perinatal substance use: is there a role for hyperkatifeia? a systematic review
topic Child and Adolescent Addictions
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10354827/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37476500
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/11782218231186371
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