27 research outputs found
Ambulatory assessment of psychophysiological stress among police officers: A proof-of-concept study.
Occupational stress has been widely recognized as a global challenge and has received increased attention by the academic community. Ambulatory Assessment methodologies, combining psychophysiological measures of stress, offer a promising avenue for future prevention and/or rehabilitation stress research. Considering that policing is well known for being a particularly stressful occupation, Emergency Responders Officers (EROs) stress levels were investigated. Particularly, this study analyzed: (i) physiological stress data obtained during shifts and compared these data with baseline levels (days off), as well as (ii) with normative values for healthy populations; (iii) stress symptoms differences from beginning to end of shift; (iv) stress events and events intensity and (v) the acceptability and feasibility of this proof-of-concept study in a highly stressful occupation. A Geo-location event system was used to help retrospective accounts of psychological stress, combined with electrocardiogram (ECG) data and mobile self-reports, that include stress symptoms, event types and event intensity. Results suggest that EROs experience high levels of stress (both on-duty and off duty) when compared to healthy populations. Stress symptoms increase from the beginning to end of the shift. However, the mean events intensity was very low. It can be concluded that stress may not always be diagnosed when using merely self-reports. These findings highlight the importance of combining both self-report and physiological stress measures in occupational health contexts. Finally, results confirm the acceptability and feasibility of the multi-method used. Key implications for policy makers and applied practitioners in the area of occupational health and future research directions are discussed
Cued to act on impulse: more impulsive choice and risky decision making by women susceptible to overeating after exposure to food stimuli
There is increasing evidence that individual differences in tendency to overeat relate to impulsivity, possibly by increasing reactivity to food-related cues in the environment. This study tested whether acute exposure to food cues enhanced impulsive and risky responses in women classified on tendency to overeat, indexed by scores on the three factor eating questionnaire disinhibition (TFEQ-D), restraint (TFEQ-R) and hunger scales. Ninety six healthy women completed two measures of impulsive responding (delayed discounting, DDT and a Go No-Go, GNG, task) and a measure of risky decision making (the balloon analogue risk task, BART) as well as questionnairemeasures of impulsive behaviour either after looking at a series of pictures of food or visually matched controls. Impulsivity (DDT) and risk-taking (BART) were both positively associated with TFEQ-D scores, but in both cases this effect was exacerbated by prior exposure to food cues. No effects of restraint were found. TFEQ-D scores were also related tomore commission errors on the GNG, while restrained women were slower on the GNG, but neither effect was modified by cue exposure. Overall these data suggest that exposure to food cues act to enhance general impulsive responding in women at risk of overeating and tentatively suggest an important interaction between tendency for impulsive decision making and food cues thatmay help explain a key underlying risk factor for overeating
Effects of elevated seawater pCO2 on gene expression patterns in the gills of the green crab, Carcinus maenas
Background: The green crab Carcinus maenas is known for its high acclimation potential to varying environmental
abiotic conditions. A high ability for ion and acid-base regulation is mainly based on an efficient regulation
apparatus located in gill epithelia. However, at present it is neither known which ion transport proteins play a key
role in the acid-base compensation response nor how gill epithelia respond to elevated seawater pCO2 as
predicted for the future. In order to promote our understanding of the responses of green crab acid-base
regulatory epithelia to high pCO2, Baltic Sea green crabs were exposed to a pCO2 of 400 Pa. Gills were screened
for differentially expressed gene transcripts using a 4,462-feature microarray and quantitative real-time PCR.
Results: Crabs responded mainly through fine scale adjustment of gene expression to elevated pCO2. However, 2%
of all investigated transcripts were significantly regulated 1.3 to 2.2-fold upon one-week exposure to CO2 stress.
Most of the genes known to code for proteins involved in osmo- and acid-base regulation, as well as cellular stress
response, were were not impacted by elevated pCO2. However, after one week of exposure, significant changes
were detected in a calcium-activated chloride channel, a hyperpolarization activated nucleotide-gated potassium
channel, a tetraspanin, and an integrin. Furthermore, a putative syntaxin-binding protein, a protein of the
transmembrane 9 superfamily, and a Cl-/HCO3
- exchanger of the SLC 4 family were differentially regulated. These
genes were also affected in a previously published hypoosmotic acclimation response study.
Conclusions: The moderate, but specific response of C. maenas gill gene expression indicates that (1) seawater
acidification does not act as a strong stressor on the cellular level in gill epithelia; (2) the response to hypercapnia
is to some degree comparable to a hypoosmotic acclimation response; (3) the specialization of each of the
posterior gill arches might go beyond what has been demonstrated up to date; and (4) a re-configuration of gill
epithelia might occur in response to hypercapnia
Psychosocial Factors Associated with Treatment Outcomes in Women with Obesity and Major Depressive Disorder who Received Behavioral Activation for Depression
Behavioral activation is an empirically supported treatment for depression, but much is unknown about factors associated with treatment response. The present study aimed to determine whether baseline levels and subsequent changes in psychosocial factors were associated with improvement in depression in women with comorbid obesity who received behavioral activation treatment for depression and a lifestyle intervention. Multilevel modeling was used to estimate the associations between psychosocial factors and change in depression scores during the first 10 weeks of treatment and associations between changes in psychosocial factors from baseline to 6-month follow-up and change in depression over the same time period. No baseline psychosocial factors were associated with depression improvement during treatment (p = 0.110-0.613). However, greater improvement in hedonic capacity (p = 0.001), environmental reward (p = 0.004), and social impairment (p = 0.012) were associated with greater reductions in depression over 6 months. Findings highlight the differential relationship specific psychosocial factors have with depression treatment outcomes
Deficits in autonomic indices of emotion regulation and reward processing associated with prescription opioid use and misuse
RATIONALE: Prescription opioid misuse and high dose opioid use may result in allostatic dysregulation of hedonic brain circuitry, leading to reduced emotion regulation capacity. In particular, opioid misuse may blunt the ability to experience and upregulate positive affect from natural rewards. OBJECTIVES: The purpose of this study was to examine associations between opioid use/misuse and autonomic indices of emotion regulation capability in a sample of chronic pain patients receiving prescription opioid pharmacotherapy. METHODS: Chronic pain patients taking long-term opioid analgesics (N = 40) completed an emotion regulation task while heart rate variability (HRV) was recorded, as well as self-report measures of opioid misuse, craving, pain severity, and emotional distress. Based on a validated cut-point on the Current Opioid Misuse Measure, participants were grouped as opioid misusers or non-misusers. Opioid misuse status and morphine equivalent daily dose (MEDD) were examined as predictors of HRV and self-reports of emotion regulation. RESULTS: Opioid misusers exhibited significantly less HRV during positive and negative emotion regulation, and significantly less positive affect, than non-misusers, after controlling for confounders including pain severity and emotional distress. MEDD was inversely associated with positive emotion regulation efficacy. CONCLUSION: Findings implicate the presence of reward processing deficits among chronic pain patients with opioid-misusing behaviors, and opioid dosage was associated with deficient emotion regulation, suggesting the presence of compromised top-down cognitive control over bottom-up hedonic processes. Emotion regulation among opioid misusers may represent an important treatment target