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Adipositas, eines der großen gesundheitlichen Risiken und Herausforderungen der heutigen
Zeit, kann in Folge von Essstörungen entstehen. Essstörungen, die mit einer übermäßigen
Aufnahme kaloriendichter Nahrung einhergehen, stellen ein erlerntes Verhaltensmuster dar,
welches den Zweck erfüllt, negative Emotionen zu reduzieren. Dieses erlernte Muster kann als eine maladaptive Copingstrategie auf traumatische Ereignisse in der Kindheit angesehen werden. Eine sichere Bindung in der Kindheit gilt als protektiver Faktor gegenüber der Entwicklung von Psychopathologien. Erfahren Kinder durch ihre Bezugsperson Vernachlässigung, emotionale Gewalt oder Missbrauch, so hat dies schädlichen Einfluss auf ihre Überzeugungen und ihre Erwartungen an sich selbst und andere (Teicher & Samson, 2013). Insbesondere emotionaler Missbrauch und emotionale Vernachlässigung scheinen hier eine große Rolle zu spielen: Emotionaler Missbrauch, ein Verhalten welches einem Kind durch Abwertung und Demütigung das Gefühl gibt, wertlos und mangelhaft zu sein und nur bei Erfüllung der Bedürfnisse anderer geschätzt zu werden, konnte mit Impulskontrollstörungen und einer verringerten Stresstoleranz in Verbindung gebracht werden (Burns et al., 2010; van Harmelen et al., 2010). Traumatisierungen in der Kindheit können zu Problemen der Emotionsregulation führen. Insbesondere beim Empfinden intensiv negativer Emotionen weisen traumatisierte Individuen gehäuft Probleme der Selbstkontrolle auf (Gilbert, 2009). Selbstlenkungsfähigkeit, als Maß für Selbstbestimmtheit und Willenskraft, wurde in bisherigen Studien mit einem hohen Selbstwertgefühl assoziiert (Cloninger et al., 1993; Sariyska et al., 2014). Einen hohen Selbstwert weisen Individuen auf, deren Eltern oder Bezugspersonen ihren Kindern eine sichere Bindung gewährleisten (Cassidy, 1988; Gecas & Schwalbe, 1986). An dieser Stelle möchte die vorliegende Arbeit ansetzen und in einem Patientenkollektiv in einer Klinik für Psychiatrie und Psychotherapie die Zusammenhänge zwischen dem Vorliegen einer Adipositas, erfahrener Traumatisierung in der Kindheit und den möglichen Einfluss der Selbstlenkungsfähigkeit genauer untersuchen.
Mendelian randomization indicates causal effects of estradiol levels on kidney function in males
(2023)
Context: Chronic kidney disease (CKD) is a public health burden worldwide. Epidemiological studies observed an association between sex hormones, including estradiol, and kidney function.
Objective: We conducted a Mendelian randomization (MR) study to assess a possible causal effect of estradiol levels on kidney function in males and females.
Design: We performed a bidirectional two-sample MR using published genetic associations of serum levels of estradiol in men (n = 206,927) and women (n = 229,966), and of kidney traits represented by estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR, n = 567,460), urine albumin-to-creatinine ratio (UACR, n = 547,361), and CKD (n = 41,395 cases and n = 439,303 controls) using data obtained from the CKDGen Consortium. Additionally, we conducted a genome-wide association study using UK Biobank cohort study data (n = 11,798 men and n = 6,835 women) to identify novel genetic associations with levels of estradiol, and then used these variants as instruments in a one-sample MR.
Results: The two-sample MR indicated that genetically predicted estradiol levels are significantly associated with eGFR in men (beta = 0.077; p = 5.2E-05). We identified a single locus at chromosome 14 associated with estradiol levels in men being significant in the one-sample MR on eGFR (beta = 0.199; p = 0.017). We revealed significant results with eGFR in postmenopausal women and with UACR in premenopausal women, which did not reach statistical significance in the sensitivity MR analyses. No causal effect of eGFR or UACR on estradiol levels was found.
Conclusions: We conclude that serum estradiol levels may have a causal effect on kidney function. Our MR results provide starting points for studies to develop therapeutic strategies to reduce kidney disease.
Background
Lower cortisol concentrations in adulthood were repeatedly associated with more severe childhood maltreatment. Additionally, childhood maltreatment was reported to promote health risk behavior, such as smoking or alcohol consumption, and to increase the risk of mental and somatic diseases during adulthood, such as major depressive disorders or obesity. The present study investigated if health risk behavior and disease symptoms in adults mediate the associations between past childhood maltreatment and present basal serum cortisol concentrations.
Methods
Data from two independent adult cohorts of the general population-based Study of Health in Pomerania (SHIP-TREND-0: N = 3,517; SHIP-START-2: N = 1,640) was used. Childhood maltreatment was assessed via the Childhood Trauma Questionnaire (CTQ). Cortisol concentrations were measured in single-point serum samples. Health risk behavior and mental and physical symptoms were used as mediators. Mediation analyses were calculated separately for both cohorts; results were integrated via meta-analyses.
Results
In mediator-separated analyses, associations between childhood maltreatment and basal serum cortisol concentrations were partly mediated by depressive symptoms (BDI-II: βindirect effect = -.011, pFDR = .017, 21.0% mediated) and subjective somatic health complaints (somatic complaints: βindirect effect = -.010, pFDR = .005, 19.4% mediated). In the second step, both mediators were simultaneously integrated into one mediation model. The model replicated the mediation effects of the subjective somatic health complaints (whole model: βindirect effect = -.014, p = .001, 27.6% mediated; BDI-II: βindirect effect = -.006, p = .163, 11.4% mediated, somatic complaints: βindirect effect = -.020, p = .020, 15.5% mediated).
Conclusion
The results support the hypothesis that the long-lasting effects of childhood maltreatment on the stress response system are partly mediated through self-perceived disease symptoms. However, no mediation was found for health risk behavior or physically measured mediators. Mediation models with multiple simultaneous mediators pointed to a relevant overlap between the potential mediators. This overlap should be focused on in future studies.
Orale Kontrazeptiva wurden 1960 zugelassen und erfreuen sich seitdem einer großen Beliebtheit. So gelten sie als eine der sichersten Verhütungsmethoden und haben auch weitere positive Effekte wie zum Beispiel eine Zyklusregulation und Abschwächen von Menstruationsbeschwerden. Nichtsdestotrotz leiden auch viele Nutzerinnen an Nebenwirkungen. In unserer und weiteren Studien konnte gezeigt werden, dass die Einnahme von oralen Kontrazeptiva die Serumcortisolkonzentration erhöht. Cortisol ist ein Steroidhormon, welches in Stresssituationen nötig ist, um die Homöostase beizubehalten und hat somit einen Einfluss auf den Stoffwechsel. Metabolite sind messbare Bestandteile des Stoffwechsels, da sie als Substrate und Produkte von Stoffwechselwegen Auskunft über die Prozesse des Körpers geben können. Sie unterliegen den vielfältigsten Einflussgrößen. Daher behandelt diese Dissertation den Einfluss von oralen Kontrazeptiva auf die Serumcortisolkonzentration und die Veränderung des Metaboloms. In einem weiteren Schritt wurde die Beeinflussung des Effekts von oralen Kontrazeptiva auf das Metabolom durch Cortisol berechnet.
Die Teilnehmerinnen der Studie waren prämenopausale Frauen, die im Rahmen einer Datenerhebung in der Durchschnittsbevölkerung im Nordosten Deutschlands rekrutiert wurden und zwei unabhängigen Stichproben angehörten (SHIP-TREND und SHIP-2).
Auch hier zeigten sich erhöhte Serumcortisolkonzentrationen bei Frauen, die orale Kontrazeptiva einnahmen. Des Weiteren konnten Metabolitveränderungen festgestellt werden, wie zum Beispiel 12 erhöhte Phosphatidylcholine, fünf erniedrigte und ein erhöhtes Lysophosphatidylcholine, fünf erniedrigte Aminosäuren und ein Carnitin, sowie ein erhöhtes Sphingomyelin. Auf den Großteil dieser Veränderungen hatte Cortisol einen signifikanten Einfluss in der Mediationsanalyse, wogegen die Menstruation nicht als Einflussfaktor nachgewiesen werden konnte.
Diese Studie stellt einen ersten Schritt zur Charakterisierung des Metaboloms bei der Einnahme von oralen Kontrazeptiva dar. Orale Kontrazeptiva haben einen systemischen Effekt und das Profil des Metaboloms könnte bei einer immer weiter individualisierten Medizin dazu beitragen, Frauen mit einem erhöhten Risiko für starke Nebenwirkungen der oralen Kontrazeptiva zu identifizieren, was zu einer Einnahme von besser geeigneten alternativen Verhütungsmethoden führen könnte.
Introduction
Heart rate variability (HRV), defined as the variability of consecutive heart beats, is an important biomarker for dysregulations of the autonomic nervous system (ANS) and is associated with the development, course, and outcome of a variety of mental and physical health problems. While guidelines recommend using 5 min electrocardiograms (ECG), recent studies showed that 10 s might be sufficient for deriving vagal-mediated HRV. However, the validity and applicability of this approach for risk prediction in epidemiological studies is currently unclear to be used.
Methods
This study evaluates vagal-mediated HRV with ultra-short HRV (usHRV) based on 10 s multichannel ECG recordings of N = 4,245 and N = 2,392 participants of the Study of Health in Pomerania (SHIP) from two waves of the SHIP-TREND cohort, additionally divided into a healthy and health-impaired subgroup. Association of usHRV with HRV derived from long-term ECG recordings (polysomnography: 5 min before falling asleep [N = 1,041]; orthostatic testing: 5 min of rest before probing an orthostatic reaction [N = 1,676]) and their validity with respect to demographic variables and depressive symptoms were investigated.
Results
High correlations (r = .52–.75) were revealed between usHRV and HRV. While controlling for covariates, usHRV was the strongest predictor for HRV. Furthermore, the associations of usHRV and HRV with age, sex, obesity, and depressive symptoms were similar.
Conclusion
This study provides evidence that usHRV derived from 10 s ECG might function as a proxy of vagal-mediated HRV with similar characteristics. This allows the investigation of ANS dysregulation with ECGs that are routinely performed in epidemiological studies to identify protective and risk factors for various mental and physical health problems.
Objective
Alexithymia is associated with various mental and physical disorders. Some rare evidence also suggested high alexithymia to affect the HPA axis based on small and selective samples. It was aimed to investigate the impact of alexithymia on basal cortisol levels in a large population-based cohort.
Methods
In a sample of N = 3444 individuals from the Study of Health in Pomerania (SHIP-TREND-0), the effect of alexithymia on basal serum cortisol levels was investigated in a cross-sectional design.
Multiple linear regressions utilizing cortisol levels as the response variable and alexithymia as the predictor of interest were calculated, while adjusting for conven-tional confounding covariates including depression. Multiple stratified, moderation and mediation analyses were performed to validate the results.
Results
Alexithymia was not significantly associated with basal cortisol levels (b = 0.23, 95 percent confidence interval (CI) of [-0.24, 0.69]; sr2 = 0.00, CI: [-0.00, 0.00]).
Sex- and age-stratified regression analyses as well as dichotomized models of non-alexithymic and alexithymic individuals substantiated the non-significance.
Additional mediation analyses with (1) depression and (2) physical health (R2 > 1 in both cases) and moderation analysis regarding the interaction of physical health and alexithymia (b = -1.45, 95 percent confidence interval (CI) of [-6.13, 3.32]; sr2 = 0.00, CI: [-0.00, 0.00]) corroborated the results.
Conclusion
This study does not support previous findings as it shows no association between alexithymia and basal cortisol; however, a consideration of the circadian rhythm, stress exposure or specific sample compositions heeding the methodological design should be the subject of further research.
Complex problem solving (CPS) can be interpreted as the number of psychological mechanisms that allow us to reach our targets in difficult situations, that can be classified as complex, dynamic, non-transparent, interconnected, and multilayered, and also polytelic. The previous results demonstrated associations between the personality dimensions neuroticism, conscientiousness, and extraversion and problem-solving performance. However, there are no studies dealing with personality disorders in connection with CPS skills. Therefore, the current study examines a clinical sample consisting of people with personality and/or depressive disorders. As we have data for all the potential personality disorders and also data from each patient regarding to potential depression, we meet the whole range from healthy to impaired for each personality disorder and for depression. We make use of a unique operationalization: CPS was surveyed in a simulation game, making use of the microworld approach. This study was designed to investigate the hypothesis that personality traits are related to CPS performance. Results show that schizotypal, histrionic, dependent, and depressive persons are less likely to successfully solve problems, while persons having the additional behavioral characteristics of resilience, action orientation, and motivation for creation are more likely to successfully solve complex problems.
Figural matrices tasks are one of the most prominent item formats used in intelligence tests, and their relevance for the assessment of cognitive abilities is unquestionable. However, despite endeavors of the open science movement to make scientific research accessible on all levels, there is a lack of royalty-free figural matrices tests. The Open Matrices Item Bank (OMIB) closes this gap by providing free and unlimited access (GPLv3 license) to a large set of empirically validated figural matrices items. We developed a set of 220 figural matrices based on well-established construction principles commonly used in matrices tests and administered them to a sample of N = 2572 applicants to medical schools. The results of item response models and reliability analyses demonstrate the excellent psychometric properties of the items. In the discussion, we elucidate how researchers can already use the OMIB to gain access to high-quality matrices tests for their studies. Furthermore, we provide perspectives for features that could additionally improve the utility of the OMIB.
Although the common pathology of Alzheimer’s disease (AD) and white matter hyperintensities (WMH) is disputed, the gene TREML2 has been implicated in both conditions: its whole-blood gene expression was associated with WMH volume and its missense variant rs3747742 with AD risk. We re-examined those associations within one comprehensive dataset of the general population, additionally searched for cross-relations and illuminated the role of the apolipoprotein E (APOE) ε4 status in the associations. For our linear regression and linear mixed effect models, we used 1949 participants from the Study of Health in Pomerania (Germany). AD was assessed using a continuous pre-symptomatic MRI-based score evaluating a participant’s AD-related brain atrophy. In our study, increased whole-blood TREML2 gene expression was significantly associated with reduced WMH volume but not with the AD score. Conversely, rs3747742-C was significantly associated with a reduced AD score but not with WMH volume. The APOE status did not influence the associations. In sum, TREML2 robustly associated with WMH volume and AD-related brain atrophy on different molecular levels. Our results thus underpin TREML2’s role in neurodegeneration, might point to its involvement in AD and WMH via different biological mechanisms, and highlight TREML2 as a worthwhile target for disentangling the two pathologies.
Zur Messqualität des Beck-Depressionsinventars (BDI-II) in
unterschiedlichen klinischen Stichproben
(2022)
Theoretischer Hintergrund: Das BDI-II ist ein Selbstbeurteilungsinstrument zur Erfassung des Schweregrads einer Depression. Es liegen kaum Analysen mit Modellen aus der Item-Response-Theorie (IRT) vor. Fragestellung: Wie hoch ist die Messgenauigkeit des BDI-II über die unterschiedlichen Ausprägungen des latenten Traits (Depressivität) hinweg und sind die Kategorien der Items jeweils aufsteigend geordnet? Methode: Anhand von sechs großen Datensätzen aus verschiedenen klinischen Bereichen wurden psychometrische Analysen mit dem Graded Response Model durchgeführt. Ergebnisse: In allen Stichproben fand sich eine hohe interne Konsistenz. Die Schwellenwerte waren mit Ausnahme von Item 6 („Bestrafungsgefühle“) geordnet. Gemäß Testinformationsfunktion misst das BDI-II im mittleren bis hohen Depressionsbereich sehr gut (Reliabilität > .90) und im unteren Bereich gut. Schlussfolgerung: Für das BDI-II ergibt sich eine hohe und relativ gleichbleibende Messpräzision über einen weiten Bereich des latenten Traits, weshalb es insbesondere im klinischen, aber auch im nicht klinisch relevanten Wertebereich zur Erhebung des Schweregrades einer Depression gut geeignet ist.