693 research outputs found
Depression and anxiety in adolescents and adults with cystic fibrosis in the UK: A cross-sectional study
Background
The International Depression/anxiety Epidemiological Study (TIDES) in the UK aimed: (i) to establish the prevalence of anxiety and depression amongst people with CF compared to a normative sample; (ii) to establish the association between mood, demographic and clinical variables; and (iii) to provide guidance for specialist-referral decision-making.
Methods
Patients (β₯ 12 years) completed the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS). CF-HADS scores, expressed as percentiles, were compared with a normative sample. Multiple-regression analysis explored associations between demographic, clinical and mood variables.
Results
Thirty-nine CF centres recruited 2065 patients. Adults with CF were similar in terms of anxiety and depression to the general population. Adolescents with CF were less anxious and depressed. For adult patients, older age, unemployment for health reasons and poor lung function were associated with disordered mood. Gender-specific CF-percentile scores were calculated.
Conclusion
Surveillance, with attention to gender and risk factors is advocated. This work provides unique benchmark scores to aid referral decision-making
Direct-to-consumer genetic testing
This is the final version. Available on open access from BMJ Publishing Group via the DOI in this recor
Occasional errors can benefit coordination
The chances solving a problem that involves coordination between people are increased by introducing robotic players that sometimes make mistakes. This finding has implications for real-world coordination problems
Cyclic game dynamics driven by iterated reasoning
Recent theories from complexity science argue that complex dynamics are
ubiquitous in social and economic systems. These claims emerge from the
analysis of individually simple agents whose collective behavior is
surprisingly complicated. However, economists have argued that iterated
reasoning--what you think I think you think--will suppress complex dynamics by
stabilizing or accelerating convergence to Nash equilibrium. We report stable
and efficient periodic behavior in human groups playing the Mod Game, a
multi-player game similar to Rock-Paper-Scissors. The game rewards subjects for
thinking exactly one step ahead of others in their group. Groups that play this
game exhibit cycles that are inconsistent with any fixed-point solution
concept. These cycles are driven by a "hopping" behavior that is consistent
with other accounts of iterated reasoning: agents are constrained to about two
steps of iterated reasoning and learn an additional one-half step with each
session. If higher-order reasoning can be complicit in complex emergent
dynamics, then cyclic and chaotic patterns may be endogenous features of
real-world social and economic systems.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures, and supplementary informatio
Framework, principles and recommendations for utilising participatory methodologies in the co-creation and evaluation of public health interventions
Background:
Due to the chronic disease burden on society, there is a need for preventive public health interventions to stimulate society towards a healthier lifestyle. To deal with the complex variability between individual lifestyles and settings, collaborating with end-users to develop interventions tailored to their unique circumstances has been suggested as a potential way to improve effectiveness and adherence. Co-creation of public health interventions using participatory methodologies has shown promise but lacks a framework to make this process systematic. The aim of this paper was to identify and set key principles and recommendations for systematically applying participatory methodologies to co-create and evaluate public health interventions.
Methods:
These principles and recommendations were derived using an iterative reflection process, combining key learning from published literature in addition to critical reflection on three case studies conducted by research groups in three European institutions, all of whom have expertise in co-creating public health interventions using different participatory methodologies.
Results:
Key principles and recommendations for using participatory methodologies in public health intervention co-creation are presented for the stages of: Planning (framing the aim of the study and identifying the appropriate sampling strategy); Conducting (defining the procedure, in addition to manifesting ownership); Evaluating (the process and the effectiveness) and Reporting (providing guidelines to report the findings). Three scaling models are proposed to demonstrate how to scale locally developed interventions to a population level.
Conclusions:
These recommendations aim to facilitate public health intervention co-creation and evaluation utilising participatory methodologies by ensuring the process is systematic and reproducible
Tumour necrosis factor gene polymorphism: a predictive factor for the development of post-transplant lymphoproliferative disease
EpsteinβBarr virus-positive post-transplant lymphoproliferative disease (PTLD) is a potentially lethal complication of iatrogenic immunosupression after transplantation. Predicting the development of PTLD allowing early and effective intervention is therefore of importance. Polymorphisms within cytokine genes are implicated in susceptibility to, and progression of, disease however the published data are often conflicting. We undertook investigation of polymorphic alleles within cytokine genes in PTLD and non-PTLD transplant cohorts to determine risk factors for disease.
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Methods:
SSP-PCR was used to analyse single nucleotide polymorphism within tumour necrosis factor (TNF)-Ξ±, interleukin- 1, -6, -10 and lymphotoxin-Ξ± genes. The TNF-Ξ± levels were measured by standard enzyme-linked immuno-absorbant assay.
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Results:
We show an association between variant alleles within the TNF-Ξ± promoter (β1031C (<i>P</i>=0.005)); β863A (<i>P</i>=0.0001) and TNF receptor I promoter regions (β201T (<i>P</i>=0.02)); β1135C (<i>P</i>=0.03) with the development of PTLD. We also show an association with TNF-Ξ± promoter haplotypes with haplotype-3 significantly increased (<i>P</i>=0.0001) and haplotype-1 decreased (P=0.02) in PTLD patients compared to transplant controls. Furthermore, we show a significant increase (<i>P</i>=0.02) in the level of TNF-Ξ± in PTLD patient plasma (range 0β97.97 pg ml<sup>β1</sup>) compared to transplant controls (0β8.147 pg ml<sup>β1</sup>), with the highest levels found in individuals carrying the variant alleles.
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Conclusion:
We suggest that genetic variation within TNF-Ξ± loci and the level of plasma cytokine could be used as a predictive risk factor for the development of PTLD
Excitotoxicity Triggered by Neurobasal Culture Medium
Neurobasal defined culture medium has been optimized for survival of rat embryonic hippocampal neurons and is now widely used for many types of primary neuronal cell culture. Therefore, we were surprised that routine medium exchange with serum- and supplement-free Neurobasal killed as many as 50% of postnatal hippocampal neurons after a 4 h exposure at day in vitro 12β15. Minimal Essential Medium (MEM), in contrast, produced no significant toxicity. Detectable Neurobasal-induced neuronal death occurred with as little as 5 min exposure, measured 24 h later. D-2-Amino-5-phosphonovalerate (D-APV) completely prevented Neurobasal toxicity, implicating direct or indirect N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptor-mediated neuronal excitotoxicity. Whole-cell recordings revealed that Neurobasal but not MEM directly activated D-APV-sensitive currents similar in amplitude to those gated by 1 Β΅M glutamate. We hypothesized that L-cysteine likely mediates the excitotoxic effects of Neurobasal incubation. Although the original published formulation of Neurobasal contained only 10 Β΅M L-cysteine, commercial recipes contain 260 Β΅M, a concentration in the range reported to activate NMDA receptors. Consistent with our hypothesis, 260 Β΅M L-cysteine in bicarbonate-buffered saline gated NMDA receptor currents and produced toxicity equivalent to Neurobasal. Although NMDA receptor-mediated depolarization and Ca2+ influx may support survival of young neurons, NMDA receptor agonist effects on development and survival should be considered when employing Neurobasal culture medium
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Optimistic irrationality and overbidding in private value auctions
Bidding oneβs value in a second-price, private-value auction is a weakly dominant solution (Vickrey in J Finance 16(1):8β37, 1961), but repeated experimental studies find more overbidding than underbidding. We propose a model of optimistically irrational bidders who understand that there are possible gains and losses associated with higher bids but who may overestimate the additional probability of winning and/or underestimate the potential losses when bidding above value. These bidders may fail to discover the dominant strategyβdespite the fact that the dominant strategy only requires rationality from biddersβbut respond in a common sense way to out-of-equilibrium outcomes. By varying the monetary consequences of losing money in experimental auctions we observe more overbidding when the cost to losing money is low, and less overbidding when the cost is high. Our findings lend themselves to models in which less than fully rational bidders respond systematically to out-of-equilibrium incentives, and we find that our model better fits the effects of our manipulations than most of the existing models we consider
The degradation of p53 and its major E3 ligase Mdm2 is differentially dependent on the proteasomal ubiquitin receptor S5a.
p53 and its major E3 ligase Mdm2 are both ubiquitinated and targeted to the proteasome for degradation. Despite the importance of this in regulating the p53 pathway, little is known about the mechanisms of proteasomal recognition of ubiquitinated p53 and Mdm2. In this study, we show that knockdown of the proteasomal ubiquitin receptor S5a/PSMD4/Rpn10 inhibits p53 protein degradation and results in the accumulation of ubiquitinated p53. Overexpression of a dominant-negative deletion of S5a lacking its ubiquitin-interacting motifs (UIM)s, but which can be incorporated into the proteasome, also causes the stabilization of p53. Furthermore, small-interferring RNA (siRNA) rescue experiments confirm that the UIMs of S5a are required for the maintenance of low p53 levels. These observations indicate that S5a participates in the recognition of ubiquitinated p53 by the proteasome. In contrast, targeting S5a has no effect on the rate of degradation of Mdm2, indicating that proteasomal recognition of Mdm2 can be mediated by an S5a-independent pathway. S5a knockdown results in an increase in the transcriptional activity of p53. The selective stabilization of p53 and not Mdm2 provides a mechanism for p53 activation. Depletion of S5a causes a p53-dependent decrease in cell proliferation, demonstrating that p53 can have a dominant role in the response to targeting S5a. This study provides evidence for alternative pathways of proteasomal recognition of p53 and Mdm2. Differences in recognition by the proteasome could provide a means to modulate the relative stability of p53 and Mdm2 in response to cellular signals. In addition, they could be exploited for p53-activating therapies. This work shows that the degradation of proteins by the proteasome can be selectively dependent on S5a in human cells, and that this selectivity can extend to an E3 ubiquitin ligase and its substrate
Magnetic support of the optical emission line filaments in NGC 1275
The giant elliptical galaxy NGC 1275, at the centre of the Perseus cluster,
is surrounded by a well-known giant nebulosity of emission-line filaments,
which are plausibly about >10^8 yr old. The filaments are dragged out from the
centre of the galaxy by the radio bubbles rising buoyantly in the hot
intracluster gas before later falling back. They act as dramatic markers of the
feedback process by which energy is transferred from the central massive black
hole to the surrounding gas. The mechanism by which the filaments are
stabilized against tidal shear and dissipation into the surrounding 4x10^7 K
gas has been unclear. Here we report new observations that resolve thread-like
structures in the filaments. Some threads extend over 6 kpc, yet are only 70 pc
wide. We conclude that magnetic fields in the threads, in pressure balance with
the surrounding gas, stabilize the filaments, so allowing a large mass of cold
gas to accumulate and delay star formation.Comment: Published in Nature, includes supplementary information, high
resolution images available at http://www-xray.ast.cam.ac.uk/papers/ngc1275
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