3 research outputs found
Psychometric attributes of the DISC Predictive Scales
Introduction: This study was designed to evaluate the psychometric attributes and screening efficiency of a Spanish version of the Children Predictive Scales (DPS) against the Spanish Diagnostic Interview Schedule for Children (DISC-IV). Method: This pilot cross-sectional study included 61 children aged 9 to 14 years in a mainstream school. The following psychometric attributes were analyzed: acceptability, scale assumptions, internal consistency, and precision, as well the predictive validity (AUC). Results: The scale did not show ceiling or floor effects (6.4%, 1.3%, respectively). The internal consistency was high (α±=0.92), and the standard error of measurement was adequate (SEM=1.54). The overall DPS AUC was 0.72 against DISC IV corresponding diagnosis. Conclusion: The Spanish version of the DPS-4.32 seems to be a reliable and precise tool for screening mental health disorders in a school-age population
Brain IGF-I regulates hippocampal neurogenesis, synaptic plasticity, and sexual dimorphic behaviour
Comunicación presentada a SSii 2022 Spanish Symposium on IGFs and Insulin 2022: Implications in Physiology and DiseaseInsulin-like growth factor-I (IGF-I) exerts multiple actions, regulating body growth, cell proliferation, adult neurogenesis, neuronal and glial differentiation, synaptic plasticity and behaviour, among other processes. Both circulating and locally synthesized IGF-I are active, although the role of IGF-I from different sources is poorly understood. We previously found that brain IGF-I plays a major role in promoting the correct generation, migration and maturation of neurons from neural stem cells during postnatal adult hippocampal neurogenesis (Nieto-Estévez et al., 2016), although electrophysiological or behavioural phenotypes were not investigated in that study. Here we show that the lack of brain IGF-I almost completely abrogates hippocampal LTP, as well as altering sex-dependent behaviour and causing major changes in the hippocampal proteome.
We suggest that the disruptions to the hippocampal proteome of conditional knockout Igf-I mice may partially underlie the changes observed in synaptic plasticity and behaviour
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Prenatal and Perinatal Morbidity in Children with Tic Disorders: A Mainstream School-based Population Study in Central Spain
<p><strong>Background</strong>: While current research suggests that genetic factors confer the greatest risk for the development of tic disorders, studies of environmental factors are relatively few, with a lack of consistent risk factors across studies. Our aim is to analyze the association of tic disorders with exposure to prenatal and perinatal morbidity.</p><p><strong> Methods</strong>: This was a nested case–control study design. Cases and controls were selected and identified from a mainstream, school-based sample. The diagnosis of tic disorders was assigned by a movement disorder neurologist using ‘Diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders, 4th edition, text revision’ criteria, and neuropsychiatric comorbidities were screened using the Spanish computerized version of the Diagnostic Interview Schedule for Children Predictive Scale. Information regarding the exposure to pre-perinatal risk factors was collected by a retrospective review of the birth certificates. Logistic regression analyses were then performed to test the association of tic disorders with pre-perinatal risk factors.</p><p><strong>Results</strong>: Out of 407 participants, complete pre-perinatal data were available in 153 children (64 with tics and 89 without tics);. After adjusting for family history of tics, neonatal respiratory distress syndrome, body mass index, prenatal infection, and coexisting comorbid neuropsychiatric disturbances, tic disorders were associated with prenatal exposure to tobacco (odds ratio [OR] = 3.07, 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.24–7.60, p = 0.007), and cesarean section (OR = 5.78, 95% CI 1.60–20.91, p = 0.01).</p><p><strong>Discussion</strong>: This nested case–control study of children with tic disorders demonstrates higher adjusted odds for tics in children with exposure to cesarean delivery and maternal smoking. Longitudinal, population-based samples are required to confirm these results.</p