In 1998, Vincent Felitti and Robert Anda published findings from 17,421 participants in the Kaiser Permanente health appraisal programme in San Diego. The data showed something that no one in mainstream medicine had thought to measure: that what happened to a person in the first eighteen years of life predicted, with remarkable precision, what would happen to their body in the decades that followed. Heart disease, cancer, autoimmune disorders, depression, obesity, substance use, suicide attempts — all followed a graded, dose-dependent curve tied to the number of adverse experiences a child had endured. The ACE Study, as it became known, was a seismic event in public health research. But what has happened in the twenty-five years since may be even more significant. Researchers across multiple disciplines — epigenetics, neuroscience, immunology, endocrinology — have begun to answer the question that Felitti and Anda could only pose: how, precisely, does childhood adversity get into the body?
Beyond the ACE Study: What We've Learned Since 1998
The original ACE Study established the correlation. It demonstrated, with a sample size and methodological rigour that left little room for dispute, that childhood adversity and adult disease were linked in a dose-dependent manner. But correlation, as every undergraduate learns, is not causation. The mechanistic question — how does an experience in childhood produce cardiovascular disease or metabolic dysfunction forty years later? — remained unanswered.
The intervening decades have supplied those answers, and they have come from disciplines that were, at the time of the original study, still in their infancy. Epigenetic research has shown that childhood stress alters not the DNA sequence itself but the way genes are expressed — effectively turning certain genes on or off in ways that persist across the lifespan and may even transmit across generations. Neuroimaging has revealed structural and functional differences in the brains of adults with high ACE scores, including reduced prefrontal cortical volume and heightened amygdala reactivity. Telomere research, building on Nobel Prize-winning work by Elizabeth Blackburn at the University of California, San Francisco, has linked childhood adversity to accelerated cellular ageing. And immunological research has established that early-life stress produces chronic, low-grade inflammation that operates as a biological pathway to multiple disease states.
Taken together, these findings represent a fundamental shift. The ACE Study told us that childhood trauma predicts adult disease. The subsequent science tells us why — and, critically, whether the process can be reversed.
How Childhood Adversity Gets Into the Body
The body's stress response system — the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis, or HPA axis — is not fully formed at birth. It is calibrated during the early years of life, shaped by the environment the child encounters. In a safe, predictable environment with responsive caregivers, the HPA axis develops the capacity to mount an appropriate stress response and then return to baseline. The system learns, in effect, that threats are temporary and manageable. In an environment characterised by chronic threat, unpredictability, or absence of responsive care, the calibration shifts. The system learns that threats are constant and that resources for recovery are unavailable. The thermostat, to use the most common analogy, gets set too high — or, in some cases, too low, producing a blunted cortisol response that is equally pathological.
Michael Meaney's laboratory at McGill University produced one of the most influential findings in behavioural epigenetics. Meaney demonstrated that rat pups who received high levels of maternal licking and grooming in the first week of life showed increased expression of the glucocorticoid receptor gene in the hippocampus — the receptor that allows cortisol to be cleared from the system efficiently. Pups who received low levels of maternal care showed decreased expression of the same gene, resulting in chronically elevated cortisol and heightened anxiety throughout life. The mechanism was epigenetic: methyl groups attached to the gene's promoter region, effectively silencing it. Critically, Meaney's cross-fostering experiments demonstrated that these changes were driven by environment, not genetics — and that they could be reversed when the environment changed.
Meaney's work, published initially in Nature Neuroscience in 2004, established a principle that has since been confirmed across multiple species and contexts: early experience physically modifies gene expression through epigenetic mechanisms, and these modifications shape the stress response system for years or decades to come. In humans, Moshe Szyf, also at McGill, has demonstrated that adults who experienced childhood abuse show different methylation patterns on the glucocorticoid receptor gene compared with those who did not — a finding that directly mirrors the animal research.
The telomere research adds another dimension. Telomeres are the protective caps at the ends of chromosomes; they shorten with each cell division, and their length serves as a marker of biological age. Elizabeth Blackburn, who shared the 2009 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for her work on telomerase, collaborated with Elissa Epel at UCSF to examine whether psychological stress could accelerate telomere shortening. Their research demonstrated that it could — and subsequent studies have shown that childhood adversity, specifically, is associated with shorter telomeres in adulthood, even after controlling for adult stress, health behaviours, and socioeconomic status. The body of a forty-year-old with a high ACE score may be, at the cellular level, meaningfully older than the body of a peer with a low score.
The inflammatory pathway may be the most consequential. Andrea Danese, a professor of child and adolescent psychiatry at King's College London, has published a series of studies demonstrating that childhood maltreatment is associated with elevated C-reactive protein and other inflammatory markers in adulthood. This association persists after controlling for adult stress, body mass index, smoking, and socioeconomic status. The implication is stark: childhood adversity produces a state of chronic, systemic inflammation that operates independently of adult circumstances and contributes to cardiovascular disease, metabolic syndrome, autoimmune conditions, and depression.
“The body of a forty-year-old with a high ACE score may be, at the cellular level, meaningfully older than the body of a peer who experienced no childhood adversity.”
The Weight Connection
Felitti's original observation — that his most successful obesity patients were the ones most likely to drop out of treatment — remains one of the most important clinical insights in modern medicine. The woman who had lost over fifty kilograms and then rapidly regained the weight after being propositioned by a colleague was not demonstrating a lack of willpower. She was demonstrating that, for her, the excess weight served a protective function. Its absence made her feel unsafe in a way that was neurologically intolerable.
The ACE Study data confirmed this was not an isolated case. The dose-response relationship between ACE scores and obesity was robust: adults with four or more ACEs were significantly more likely to develop severe obesity than those with none. But the mechanism is not simply that distressed people overeat. The pathways are more numerous, more deeply embedded, and more biologically determined than the popular understanding of weight gain allows.
Approximately two-thirds of the adult population has experienced at least one adverse childhood experience. More than one in five adults reports three or more ACEs. An ACE score of four or more is associated with a 1.4 to 1.6 times greater likelihood of severe obesity, a 4.6 times greater risk of depression, a 12 times greater risk of suicide attempt, and a reduction in life expectancy of up to twenty years. These figures have been replicated across more than forty countries and six continents.
There are at least four distinct pathways from childhood adversity to adult weight gain. The first is neuroendocrine: chronic cortisol elevation, driven by a dysregulated HPA axis, directly promotes visceral fat deposition regardless of caloric intake. The body stores fat around the organs because the stress response system has signalled that a crisis is underway or imminent. The second pathway is neurophysiological: eating — particularly chewing and swallowing — activates the vagus nerve, which signals the parasympathetic nervous system to calm the body. Food becomes the fastest available nervous system regulator, not because the person lacks discipline, but because the biology of vagal activation makes it so. The third is dissociative: the dorsal vagal shutdown state, described in Stephen Porges' polyvagal theory, can produce trance-like eating in which large quantities of food are consumed with minimal conscious awareness. The fourth is epigenetic: the metabolic programming established in early life, through alterations in cortisol receptor expression and metabolic gene regulation, changes how the body processes and stores energy at a fundamental level.
These pathways are explored in greater detail in Childhood Trauma and Weight Gain: The Research They Don't Talk About and Emotional Eating After Trauma.
The Mental Health Connection
The ACE Study documented steep dose-response relationships between childhood adversity and depression, anxiety, post-traumatic stress disorder, and substance use. These findings are well established and widely cited. What is less widely discussed is the way these diagnostic categories may obscure a more fundamental process.
Depression, anxiety, and PTSD are diagnostic labels. They describe clusters of symptoms. But from a neurobiological perspective, many of these symptoms can be understood as expressions of a single underlying condition: chronic autonomic dysregulation. A nervous system calibrated by childhood adversity to detect threat continuously, to remain in sympathetic activation or dorsal vagal shutdown, will produce the symptoms that get labelled as depression (dorsal collapse, fatigue, anhedonia, withdrawal), anxiety (sympathetic hyperactivation, hypervigilance, panic), and PTSD (oscillation between the two, with intrusive re-experiencing). The diagnoses describe what the person experiences. The dysregulation describes why.
“The diagnostic labels describe what the person experiences. Nervous system dysregulation describes why they experience it — and, crucially, suggests a different approach to treatment.”
This reframing is not merely academic. It has direct implications for treatment. If depression is understood as a biochemical imbalance, the logical intervention is pharmacological. If it is understood as a state of autonomic collapse in a nervous system that never learned to regulate safely, the intervention must address the nervous system itself — through body-based, bottom-up approaches that target the subcortical structures where the dysregulation is encoded. A fuller examination of this framework appears in Nervous System Dysregulation.
Is the Damage Permanent?
For years, the implicit message of ACE research was fatalistic: what happened to you in childhood has permanently altered your biology. The science of the past decade has begun to challenge that narrative — not by minimising the severity of the biological changes, but by demonstrating that many of them are modifiable.
The most direct evidence comes from Meaney's own laboratory. The cross-fostering experiments that established the epigenetic mechanism also demonstrated its reversibility. Rat pups born to low-licking mothers, who showed the expected epigenetic silencing of the glucocorticoid receptor gene, could have their methylation patterns normalised when they were cross-fostered to high-licking mothers. The environment that set the pattern could be overridden by a new environment. This does not mean that the effects of human childhood adversity can be erased by a simple intervention. But it does establish a principle: epigenetic changes are not genetic mutations. They are, by their nature, potentially reversible.
The biological effects of childhood adversity — epigenetic modifications, HPA axis dysregulation, chronic inflammation, autonomic nervous system imbalance — were once assumed to be permanent. Emerging research indicates that many of these changes are modifiable. Meaney's cross-fostering experiments demonstrated epigenetic reversal. Human studies show that meditation and mindfulness practices can alter methylation patterns on stress-related genes. Vagal tone, a key marker of autonomic regulation, responds to targeted interventions including controlled breathing, cold exposure, and safe social connection. The damage is real. But the science increasingly suggests it is not irreversible.
In humans, the evidence for reversibility is still emerging but increasingly compelling. A 2017 study published in Translational Psychiatry demonstrated that an eight-week mindfulness-based stress reduction programme produced measurable changes in methylation patterns on genes associated with the stress response. Research on vagal tone, the measurable marker of parasympathetic nervous system function, has shown that it can be improved through specific interventions: controlled breathing that extends the exhalation, cold water exposure, vocal exercises, and safe social co-regulation. These are not wellness platitudes. They are neurophysiologically grounded interventions that directly modify the biological systems altered by childhood adversity.
The critical insight is that recovery must operate at the level where the patterns were originally encoded. Cognitive approaches — understanding one's history, reframing one's narrative — are valuable but insufficient when the dysregulation is subcortical and autonomic. The body does not respond to arguments. It responds to experiences that contradict its stored predictions about the world. These concepts are explored further in Reprogramming the Subconscious Mind and The Nervous System Reset.
Trauma-Informed vs Standard Approaches
Standard health advice — eat less, move more, manage stress, get adequate sleep — is not wrong. It is, however, built on an assumption that is wrong for a large portion of the population: the assumption that the person receiving the advice has a regulated nervous system and a history of safety. For someone with a low ACE score and a generally secure developmental history, these recommendations can be implemented with relative ease. The nervous system provides a stable platform from which intentional behaviour change is possible.
For someone with a high ACE score, the assumption collapses. Dietary restriction activates a survival response in a nervous system already calibrated for scarcity. Forced exercise adds sympathetic load to a system already in sympathetic overdrive. Stress management techniques that require cognitive control assume prefrontal cortex capacity that chronic stress has diminished. Sleep hygiene protocols do not address hypervigilance. The advice is physiologically counterproductive — not because it is bad science, but because it is science applied to the wrong biological context.
Trauma-informed approaches reverse the sequence. Rather than beginning with behavioural targets — weight, diet, exercise, sleep — they begin with the nervous system. Safety is established first. The autonomic state is addressed before the behaviour. Bottom-up interventions that work at the level of the body and the subconscious are prioritised over top-down interventions that require cognitive effort. Weight shifts, sleep improvements, and reductions in emotional eating emerge as byproducts of nervous system regulation rather than as direct targets of willpower-based programmes.
“Standard health advice assumes a regulated nervous system and a history of safety. For ACE survivors, that assumption is not merely incorrect — it is the reason the advice fails.”
This distinction is not trivial. It represents a fundamentally different model of health, one in which the question shifts from "Why can't you follow the plan?" to "What happened to your nervous system that makes the plan feel threatening?" When that question is asked — and when the answer is taken seriously at the biological level — the possibility of genuine recovery becomes visible. Not recovery from personal failure, because there was never a personal failure to recover from. Recovery from a biological adaptation that was, at the time it was formed, the best available response to an impossible situation.
Twenty-five years after Felitti and Anda published their findings, the science has moved from correlation to mechanism to, tentatively, reversibility. The body that learned to protect itself in childhood can, under the right conditions, learn that the threat has passed. The research suggests that this learning does not happen through willpower, argumentation, or discipline. It happens through interventions that speak the language of the nervous system — through safety, repetition, and the gradual rewriting of the body's most deeply held predictions about the world.