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Coping under stress: Prefrontal control predicts stress burden during the COVID-19 crisis

Monninger, Maximilian; Pollok, Tania M; Aggensteiner, Pascal-M; Kaiser, Anna; Reinhard, Iris; Hermann, Andrea; Meyer-Lindenberg, Andreas; Brandeis, Daniel; Banaschewski, Tobias; Holz, Nathalie E (2021). Coping under stress: Prefrontal control predicts stress burden during the COVID-19 crisis. medRxiv 21259570, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory.

Abstract

BackgroundThe coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic has confronted millions of people around the world with an unprecedented stressor, affecting physical and mental health. Accumulating evidence suggests that emotional and cognitive self-regulation is particularly needed to effectively cope with stress. Therefore, we investigated the predictive value of affective and inhibitory prefrontal control for stress burden during the COVID-19 crisis.MethodPhysical and mental health burden were assessed using an online survey, which was administered to 104 participants of an ongoing German at-risk birth cohort during the first wave in April 2020. Two follow-ups were carried out during the pandemic, one capturing the relaxation during summer and the other the beginning of the second wave of the crisis. Prefrontal activity during emotion regulation and inhibitory control were assessed prior to the COVID-19 crisis.ResultsIncreased inferior frontal gyrus activity during emotion regulation predicted lower stress burden at the beginning of the first and the second wave of the crisis. In contrast, inferior and medial frontal gyrus activity during inhibitory control predicted effective coping only during the summer, when infection rates decreased but stress burden remained unchanged. These findings remained significant when controlling for sociodemographic and clinical confounders such as stressful life events prior to the crisis or current psychopathology.ConclusionsWe demonstrate that differential stress-buffering effects are predicted by the neural underpinnings of emotion regulation and cognitive regulation at different stages during the pandemic. These findings may inform future prevention strategies to foster stress coping in unforeseen situations.HighlightsHealth threatening stressors, such as the COVID-19 pandemic, significantly worsen well-being.Results reveal high levels of stress during the course of the pandemic with an increase of stress burden towards the second wave.Self-regulation is an important coping strategy to restore allostasis.Higher prefrontal activity during emotion regulation predicted less stress during the peaks of infection rates in the first and second waveHigher prefrontal inhibitory control predicted less stress burden between both waves when infection rates were low.Our findings highlight the importance of prefrontal regulation as effective coping mechanisms in the face of unprecedented stressors.

Additional indexing

Item Type:Working Paper
Communities & Collections:04 Faculty of Medicine > Psychiatric University Hospital Zurich > Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry
04 Faculty of Medicine > Neuroscience Center Zurich
04 Faculty of Medicine > Zurich Center for Integrative Human Physiology (ZIHP)
Dewey Decimal Classification:610 Medicine & health
Uncontrolled Keywords:COVID-19, stress, fMRI, longitudinal study, affective control, cognitive control, COVID
Language:English
Date:2 July 2021
Deposited On:10 Feb 2022 10:11
Last Modified:19 Feb 2024 11:54
Series Name:medRxiv
ISSN:0959-535X
OA Status:Green
Free access at:Publisher DOI. An embargo period may apply.
Publisher DOI:https://doi.org/10.1101/2021.06.28.21259570
Related URLs:https://www.zora.uzh.ch/id/eprint/215488/
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  • Content: Published Version
  • Language: English
  • Licence: Creative Commons: Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0)

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