11 research outputs found
Correlates of preferring a passive role in decision-making among patients with schizophrenia or bipolar disorder
© 2023.This document is made available under the CC-BY-NC-ND 4.0 license http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
This document is the accepted version of a published work that appeared in final form in
Patient Education and CounselingObjective: To assess the factors associated with the persistence of clinician-led style in the therapeutic relationship in cases of serious mental illness, and the conditioning factors that the patients identify as determinants of their health.
Method: Assessment of preferences in the decision-making process and health-related control locus of 107 outpatients with DSM-5 diagnosis of schizophrenia or bipolar disorder. Demographic and clinical information was also obtained through review of available records and using several scales.
Results: 64.4 % patients preferred to adopt a passive role in the therapeutic relationship. In the multivariate analysis, the preference of playing a passive role in the decision-making process was significantly associated with the elderly, being disabled, or the view that one's health depends on doctors (AUC ROC value: 0.80).
Conclusions: Patients with severe mental illness more frequently preferred a passive role in the decision-making process. We found several factors associated with a preference for the "expert role" model.
Practice implications: The identified factors may permit care to be tailored to the most probable expectations as regard decision-making. Since the populations concerned may be vulnerable and suffer inequalities in the provision of health services, promoting participation in the care process could help improve clinical parameters ethically
KIR2DL2/S2 and KIR2DS5 in alcoholic cirrhotic patients undergoing liver transplantation
Introduction: The molecular mechanisms underlying alcoholic liver fibrosis
and cirrhosis are not completely understood. Hepatic fibrosis involves the
interplay of diverse cells and factors, including hepatic stellate cells (HSCs),
Kupffer, NK cells, and T-lymphocyte subsets. Killer-cell immunoglobulin-like
receptors (KIR) are membrane receptors involved in mediation between NK
and activated HSCs, regulating NK cell function through their interaction
with HLA-I molecules. The aim of this study was to analyse the genetic association
between KIR genes and the susceptibility to or protection from
alcoholic cirrhosis (AC) in a cohort of male AC patients undergoing liver
transplantation (LT) with and without concomitant viral infections.
Material and methods: KIR genotyping was performed in nuclear DNA extracted
from 281 AC patients and compared with 319 male controls.
Results: Significant differences between total AC patients and healthy controls
were only found in the case of KIR2DL2 and KIR2DS5. KIR2DL2 was significantly
underrepresented in non-viral AC patients (52.6% vs. 63.3%; p =
0.015), while patients heterozygous for KIR2DL2 were also underrepresented
in the non-viral AC group compared with controls (p = 0.034). KIR2DS5 was
overrepresented in this group compared with healthy controls (p = 0.002). All
these observations were only evident in AC patients older than 54 years old.
Conclusions: Our data suggest a contrary effect of KIR2DL2 and KIR2DS5
in AC patients older than 54 years, in whom the presence of KIR2DL2 appears
to be protective against AC, whereas the presence of KIR2DS5 seems
to promote the fibrotic process, particularly in patients with no associated
viral infection