115 research outputs found

    The buffering power of overt socially supportive and unsupportive behaviors from the significant other on posttraumatic stress disorder individuals’ emotional state

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    Social support is one of the three strongest predictors of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). In the present study, we aimed to assess the buffering power of overt socially supportive and unsupportive behaviors from the significant other, in a group with PTSD and a comparison group. Design and methods: A total of 46 individuals with PTSD and 42 individuals with obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) or panic disorder (PD) completed diagnostic interviews and an anxiety-oriented social interaction with a significant other. Heart rate of participants was continuously measured during this interaction and overt social behaviors from the significant other were recorded on videotape and coded using a validated system. Results: Changes in heart rate in PTSD participants correlated negatively with changes in overt socially supportive behaviors from their significant other (r from −.36 to −.50, p  .05). No such statistically significant association emerged in the group with OCD or PD (r from .01 to −.27, p > .05). Conclusions: This study sustain the buffering power of overt supportive behaviors from the significant other on heart rate changes in PTSD

    The effect of talking about psychological trauma with a significant other on heart rate reactivity in individuals with posttraumatic stress disorder

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    Individuals with posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) commonly make efforts to avoid trauma-oriented conversations with their significant others, which may interfere with the natural recovery process. Trauma-oriented conversations can be experienced as physiologically arousing, depending on the intensity of PTSD symptoms and perceptions of social support. In the current investigation, changes in heart rate responses to a trauma-oriented social interaction with a significant other were assessed. Perceived supportive and unsupportive or negative social interactions were examined as moderators of the association between heart rate changes to this context and intensity of PTSD symptoms. A total of 46 individuals with PTSD completed diagnostic interviews and self-report measures of symptoms and perceived supportive and negative social interactions during a trauma-oriented social interaction with a significant other. Heart rate was continuously measured during this interaction. Results showed that engagement in a trauma-oriented social interaction was predictive of elevations in heart rate that positively correlated with intensity of PTSD symptoms. The moderation hypothesis was partially supported. In addition, perceived negative social interactions positively correlated with elevations in heart rate. These findings can inform social intervention efforts for individuals with PTSD

    Exercise Intensity Modulation of Hepatic Lipid Metabolism

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    Lipid metabolism in the liver is complex and involves the synthesis and secretion of very low density lipoproteins (VLDL), ketone bodies, and high rates of fatty acid oxidation, synthesis, and esterification. Exercise training induces several changes in lipid metabolism in the liver and affects VLDL secretion and fatty acid oxidation. These alterations are even more conspicuous in disease, as in obesity, and cancer cachexia. Our understanding of the mechanisms leading to metabolic adaptations in the liver as induced by exercise training has advanced considerably in the recent years, but much remains to be addressed. More recently, the adoption of high intensity exercise training has been put forward as a means of modulating hepatic metabolism. The purpose of the present paper is to summarise and discuss the merit of such new knowledge

    Growth variations and scattering mechanisms in metamorphic In0.75Ga0.25As/In-0.75 Al0.25As quantum wells grown by molecular beam epitaxy

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    Modulation doped metamorphic In0.75Ga0.25As/In0.75Al0.25As quantum wells (QW) were grown on GaAs substrates by molecular beam epitaxy (MBE) with step-graded buffer layers. The electron mobility of the QWs has been improved by varying the MBE growth conditions, including substrate temperature, arsenic over pressure and modulation doping level. By applying a bias voltage to SiO2 insulated gates, the electron density in the QW can be tuned from 1×1011 to 5.3×1011 cm−2. A peak mobility of 4.3×105 cm2V−1s−1 is obtained at 3.7×1011 cm−2 at 1.5 K before the onset of second subband population. To understand the evolution of mobility, transport data is fitted to a model that takes into account scattering from background impurities, modulation doping, alloy disorder and interface roughness. According to the fits, scattering from background impurities is dominant while that from alloy disorder becomes more significant at high carrier density
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