Previous studies have linked child abuse and opioid addiction in adulthood, but did not identify the specific cause of the opioid addiction.
For the new study, a team of researchers analyzed the results of a series of psychological tests given to 84 participants with a history of opioid abuse and childhood trauma.
The study showed childhood emotional abuse was more strongly connected to opioid misuse than sexual or physical abuse in childhood.
Children who had been emotionally abused were more likely to engage in risky behavior in adolescence and have post traumatic stress disorder, or PTSD, as adults, researchers said.
"If a person is being physically or sexually abused, it's easier to put the blame on the person doing the abuse," Matthew Price, assistant professor in the Department of Psychological Science at the University of Vermont, said in a press release. "With emotional abuse, the abuser is saying 'You are the problem.' Being called names, being told you're not good enough, being told no one cares about you undermines your ability to cope with difficult emotions. To protect themselves from strong emotions and from trauma cues that can bring on PTSD symptoms, people with this kind of childhood experience frequently adopt a strategy of avoidance, which can include opioid use."