4,525 research outputs found

    Hopelessness the ‘active ingredient’? : associations of hopelessness and depressive symptoms with Interleukin-6.

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    Objective: Previous research has revealed a relationship of depressive symptoms and hopelessness with cardiovascular diseases (CVDs) which are associated with elevated levels of interleukin-6 (IL-6). The objective of this study was to explore whether depressive symptoms and hopelessness are independent predictors of IL-6 levels. Method: Hopelessness, depressive symptoms, and IL-6 were measured in 45 Swedish adults (26 women and 19 men; age range: 31-65 years). Two separated linear regressions were conducted with hopelessness and depressive symptoms serving as individual predictors of IL-6. Another regression analysis examined whether the two predictors predict IL-6 when controlling for each other. The regression coefficients of the models with one predictor and with both predictors were compared. Results: As predicted, after adjusting for age, BMI, illness, smoking, and gender, more depressive symptoms and more hopelessness predicted higher IL-6 levels in independent regressions. When controlling for each other, hopelessness, but not depressive symptoms, predicted IL-6 levels. Finally, when controlling for hopelessness, the regression between depressive symptoms and IL-6 level was significantly reduced; however, there was no significant change in the regression between hopelessness and IL-6 level when controlling for depressive symptoms. Conclusions: Thus, these results suggest that depressive symptoms and hopelessness are not independent predictors of IL-6 levels. Future research should explore the interplay of hopelessness and depressive symptoms on other risk factors of CVDs

    Associations of depression status and hopelessness with breast cancer.

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    This study extended the literature by examining whether three profiles of depression predicted breast cancer status. In 1076 women of the Baltimore Epidemiologic Catchment Area study, depression status and hopelessness were measured at baseline and breast cancer status was ascertained 24 years later. Double depression, but not major depression or dysthymia, was associated with breast cancer. Hopelessness predicted fewer new cases of breast cancer. When double depression and hopelessness were simultaneously entered as predictors, the regression weights of both predictors increased. The role of severe and extended duration depression as well as possible explanations for unexpected findings are discussed

    Early surgery versus initial conservative treatment in patients with traumatic intracerebral haemorrhage [STITCH(Trauma)] : the first randomized trial

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    Acknowledgements This project was funded by the NIHR Health Technology Assessment programme (project number 07/37/16). The views and opinions expressed therein are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect those of the HTA programme, NIHR, NHS or the Department of Health.Peer reviewedPublisher PD

    Game story space of professional sports: Australian rules football

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    Sports are spontaneous generators of stories. Through skill and chance, the script of each game is dynamically written in real time by players acting out possible trajectories allowed by a sport\u27s rules. By properly characterizing a given sport\u27s ecology of game stories, we are able to capture the sport\u27s capacity for unfolding interesting narratives, in part by contrasting them with random walks. Here we explore the game story space afforded by a data set of 1310 Australian Football League (AFL) score lines. We find that AFL games exhibit a continuous spectrum of stories rather than distinct clusters. We show how coarse graining reveals identifiable motifs ranging from last-minute comeback wins to one-sided blowouts. Through an extensive comparison with biased random walks, we show that real AFL games deliver a broader array of motifs than null models, and we provide consequent insights into the narrative appeal of real games

    Do depressive symptoms predict the incidence of myocardial infarction independent of hopelessness?

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    Depression and hopelessness predict myocardial infarction (MI), but it is unclear whether depression and hopelessness are independent predictors of MI incidents. Hopelessness, depression, and MI incidence rate 18 years later were measured in 2005 men. Cox regressions were conducted with hopelessness and depression serving as individual predictors of MI. Another Cox model examined whether the two predictors predict MI when adjusting for each other. Depression and hopelessness predicted MI in independent regressions but when adjusting for each other, hopelessness, but not depression, predicted MI incidents. Thus, these results suggest that depression and hopelessness are not independent predictors of MI

    Hand ischemia associated with elbow trauma in children

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    ObjectivesPrevious observational studies suggest that children with hand ischemia following elbow trauma can be safely observed if Doppler signals are present in the wrist arteries (pink pulseless hand, PPH). Nonoperative management of PPH is predicated on the assumption that PPH results from local arterial spasm, but the mechanism of arterial compromise has not been investigated. We hypothesized that PPH signifies a brachial artery injury that requires surgical repair.MethodsRetrospective review of operations performed on children with hand ischemia following elbow trauma at a level I trauma center pediatric hospital.ResultsBetween 2003 and 2010, 12 children (seven males, mean age 7.4 years) underwent brachial artery exploration for hand ischemia following elbow trauma (11 supracondylar fractures, one elbow dislocation) due to falls (n = 10) or motor vehicle crashes (n = 2). At presentation, three subjects had normal radial pulses, eight subjects had Doppler signals but no palpable pulses, and one had weak Doppler flow with advanced hand ischemia. Six of the nine subjects without palpable pulses also had neurosensory changes. All 12 subjects underwent brachial artery exploration either initially (n = 2) or following orthopedic fixation (n = 10) due to persistent pulselessness. At operation, eight of 12 patients (67%) had focal brachial artery thrombosis due to intimal flaps, and four had brachial artery and median nerve entrapment within the pinned fracture site. At discharge, all 12 subjects had palpable radial pulses, but three with entrapment had dense median nerve deficits. One of the three subjects with dense neurologic deficit had complete recovery of neurologic function at ten months. The other two subjects had residual median nerve deficits with partial recovery at 5 and 6 months follow-up, respectively. No patient developed Volkman's contracture.ConclusionsBrachial artery injuries should be anticipated in children with hand ischemia associated with elbow trauma. Neurovascular entrapment at the fracture site is a possible complication of orthopedic fixation. Absence of palpable wrist pulses after orthopedic fixation should prompt immediate brachial artery exploration. PPH should not be considered a consequence of arterial spasm in these patients

    Neighborhood regulation by lncRNA promoters, transcription, and splicing

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    Mammalian genomes are pervasively transcribed to produce thousands of spliced long noncoding RNAs (lncRNAs), whose functions remain poorly understood. Because recent evidence has implicated several specific lncRNA loci in the local regulation of gene expression, we sought to determine whether such local regulation is a property of many lncRNA loci. We used genetic manipulations to dissect 12 genomic loci that produce lncRNAs and found that 5 of these loci influence the expression of a neighboring gene in cis. Surprisingly, however, none of these effects required the specific lncRNA transcripts themselves and instead involved general processes associated with their production, including enhancer-like activity of gene promoters, the process of transcription, and the splicing of the transcript. Interestingly, such effects are not limited to lncRNA loci: we found similar effects on local gene expression at 4 of 6 protein-coding loci. These results demonstrate that 'crosstalk' among neighboring genes is a prevalent phenomenon that can involve multiple mechanisms and cis regulatory signals, including a novel role for RNA splicing. These mechanisms may explain the function and evolution of some genomic loci that produce lncRNAs
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