139 results on '"Cooke, Megan"'
Search Results
2. Continuous Two-Zone In Vitro Co-culture Model of the Enthesis
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Park, Hyeree, Cooke, Megan E., Lacombe, Jean-Gabriel, Weber, Michael H., Martineau, Paul A., Nazhat, Showan N., and Rosenzweig, Derek H.
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- 2023
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3. Mechanical properties and in vitro modelling of the osteochondral unit
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Cooke, Megan Elin
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660 ,TP Chemical technology - Abstract
The osteochondral unit (OCU) comprises bone and cartilage, with a gradient interface between hard and soft tissues. Damage and diseases, such as osteoarthritis (OA), cause irreversible changes to the cartilage matrix. Early, clinically silent, matrix changes in OA were compared to healthy, post-mortem cartilage using mechanical and physicochemical techniques. It was found that degradation of matrix components leaves the superficial region susceptible to mechanical damage. Strategies to repair cartilage damage have focused on replication of the extracellular matrix using hydrogel scaffolds. Alginate is commonly used, and its positive effects on chondrocyte phenotype have been attributed to maintenance of a spherical cell morphology. Here, an alginate fluid gel was formed to enable the non-invasive delivery of chondrocytes. It was found, however, that a spherical morphology was insufficient for maintenance of chondrocyte phenotype and geometric confinement of chondrocytes in alginate played a significant role in phenotypic recovery and stability. Fluid gels were then utilised as support matrices for bioprinting of bi-layered structures to recapitulate the OCU. This support matrix could suspend low-viscosity hydrocolloid solutions prior to crosslinking to co-culture chondrocyte and osteoblast populations in spatially defined regions. Distinct chemical and mechanical environments allowed the maintenance of primary cell phenotypes and function.
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- 2019
4. Programming hydrogels to probe spatiotemporal cell biology
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Qazi, Taimoor H., Blatchley, Michael R., Davidson, Matthew D., Yavitt, F. Max, Cooke, Megan E., Anseth, Kristi S., and Burdick, Jason A.
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- 2022
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5. Association between adolescent alcohol use and cognitive function in young adulthood: A co‐twin comparison study.
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Cooke, Megan E., Stephenson, Mallory, Brislin, Sarah J., Latvala, Antti, Barr, Peter B., Piirtola, Maarit, Vuoksimaa, Eero, Rose, Richard J., Kaprio, Jaakko, Dick, Danielle M., and Salvatore, Jessica E.
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COGNITION disorder risk factors , *COMPLICATIONS of alcoholism , *RISK assessment , *MONOZYGOTIC twins , *SUBSTANCE abuse , *ALCOHOLIC intoxication , *COGNITIVE testing , *RESEARCH funding , *TWINS , *NICOTINE , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *COGNITION disorders , *COMPARATIVE studies , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *COMORBIDITY , *DISEASE complications , *ADOLESCENCE , *ADULTS - Abstract
Background and Aims: Studies on adolescent alcohol use and cognition are often unable to separate the potential causal effects of alcohol use on cognition from shared etiological influences, including genetic influences or other substance use comorbidities also known to be associated with cognition, such as nicotine use. The present study aimed to fill this gap and clarify the relationship between adolescent alcohol use and young adult cognition by accounting for both measured and unmeasured confounders. Design: A random effects model accounting for nesting in families was used to control for measured confounders. Next, co‐twin comparisons were conducted within the full sample and in monozygotic twin pairs (MZ) to control for unmeasured genetic and environmental confounders shared by co‐twins. Participants/Setting: Participants were 812 individuals (58.6% female, 361 complete pairs, 146 MZ pairs) from the longitudinal FinnTwin12 study in Finland. Measurements Adolescent alcohol use was indexed with measures of frequency of use and intoxication averaged across ages 14 and 17. Cognitive outcomes were measured at average age 22 and included Trail Making Test, California Stroop test, Wechsler Adult Intelligence subtests (Vocabulary, Block Design, Digit Symbol), Digit Span subtest of Wechsler Memory Scale, Mental Rotation Test and Object Location Memory test. Covariates included sex, parental education, general cognitive ability, current alcohol use and nicotine use. Findings Greater frequency of alcohol use and frequency of intoxication across adolescence was associated with decreased vocabulary scores in the co‐twin control [freq: stnd beta = −0.12, 95% confidence interval (CI) = −0.234, −0.013] and MZ only co‐twin control models (freq: stnd beta = −0.305, 95% CI = –0.523, −0.087; intox: stnd beta = −0.301, 95% CI = ‐0.528, −0.074). Conclusions: In Finland, there appears to be little evidence that adolescent alcohol use causes cognitive deficits in young adulthood, except modest evidence for association of higher adolescent alcohol use with lower young adult vocabulary scores. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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6. Childhood trauma is associated with developmental trajectories of EEG coherence, alcohol-related outcomes, and PTSD symptoms.
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Neale, Zoe E., Bountress, Kaitlin, Sheerin, Christina, Viteri, Stacey Saenz de, Cusack, Shannon, Chorlian, David, Barr, Peter B., Kaplan, Isabelle, Pandey, Gayathri, Osipenko, Kristina A., McCutcheon, Vivia, Kuo, Sally I-Chun, Cooke, Megan E., Brislin, Sarah J., Salvatore, Jessica E., Kamarajan, Chella, Porjesz, Bernice, Amstadter, Ananda B., Meyers, Jacquelyn L., and Investigators, COGA
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Background Associations between childhood trauma, neurodevelopment, alcohol use disorder (AUD), and posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) are understudied during adolescence. Methods Using 1652 participants (51.75% female, baseline M age = 14.3) from the Collaborative Study of the Genetics of Alcoholism, we employed latent growth curve models to (1) examine associations of childhood physical, sexual, and non-assaultive trauma (CPAT, CSAT, and CNAT) with repeated measures of alpha band EEG coherence (EEGc), and (2) assess whether EEGc trajectories were associated with AUD and PTSD symptoms. Sex-specific models accommodated sex differences in trauma exposure, AUD prevalence, and neural development. Results In females, CSAT was associated with higher mean levels of EEGc in left frontocentral (LFC, ß = 0.13, p = 0.01) and interhemispheric prefrontal (PFI, ß = 0.16, p < 0.01) regions, but diminished growth in LFC (ß = −0.07, p = 0.02) and PFI (ß = −0.07, p = 0.02). In males, CPAT was associated with lower mean levels (ß = −0.17, p = 0.01) and increased growth (ß = 0.11, p = 0.01) of LFC EEGc. Slope of LFC EEGc was inversely associated with AUD symptoms in females (ß = −1.81, p = 0.01). Intercept of right frontocentral and PFI EEGc were associated with AUD symptoms in males, but in opposite directions. Significant associations between EEGc and PTSD symptoms were also observed in trauma-exposed individuals. Conclusions Childhood assaultive trauma is associated with changes in frontal alpha EEGc and subsequent AUD and PTSD symptoms, though patterns differ by sex and trauma type. EEGc findings may inform emerging treatments for PTSD and AUD. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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7. Multi‐Material Volumetric Additive Manufacturing of Hydrogels using Gelatin as a Sacrificial Network and 3D Suspension Bath.
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Riffe, Morgan B., Davidson, Matthew D., Seymour, Gabriel, Dhand, Abhishek P., Cooke, Megan E., Zlotnick, Hannah M., McLeod, Robert R., and Burdick, Jason A.
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- 2024
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8. Evidence of Intrinsic Impairment of Osteoblast Phenotype at the Curve Apex in Girls With Adolescent Idiopathic Scoliosis
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Pearson, Mark J., Philp, Ashleigh M., Haq, Hirah, Cooke, Megan E., Nicholson, Thomas, Grover, Liam M., Newton Ede, Matthew, and Jones, Simon W.
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- 2019
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9. General functional connectivity: Shared features of resting-state and task fMRI drive reliable and heritable individual differences in functional brain networks
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Elliott, Maxwell L., Knodt, Annchen R., Cooke, Megan, Kim, M. Justin, Melzer, Tracy R., Keenan, Ross, Ireland, David, Ramrakha, Sandhya, Poulton, Richie, Caspi, Avshalom, Moffitt, Terrie E., and Hariri, Ahmad R.
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- 2019
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10. Matrix degradation in osteoarthritis primes the superficial region of cartilage for mechanical damage
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Cooke, Megan E., Lawless, Bernard M., Jones, Simon W., and Grover, Liam M.
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- 2018
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11. Thermosensitive hydrogel as an in situ gelling antimicrobial ocular dressing
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Mohammed, S., Chouhan, Gurpreet, Anuforom, Olachi, Cooke, Megan, Walsh, Anna, Morgan-Warren, Peter, Jenkins, Mike, and de Cogan, Felicity
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- 2017
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12. Electronic cigarette use and uptake of cigarette smoking: A longitudinal examination of U.S. college students
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Spindle, Tory R., Hiler, Marzena M., Cooke, Megan E., Eissenberg, Thomas, Kendler, Kenneth S., and Dick, Danielle M.
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- 2017
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13. Dynamic viscoelastic characterisation of human osteochondral tissue: understanding the effect of the cartilage-bone interface
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Mountcastle, Sophie E., Allen, Piers, Mellors, Ben O. L., Lawless, Bernard M., Cooke, Megan E., Lavecchia, Carolina E., Fell, Natasha L. A., Espino, Daniel M., Jones, Simon W., and Cox, Sophie C.
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- 2019
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14. A Nanoporous 3D-Printed Scaffold for Local Antibiotic Delivery.
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Ahangar, Pouyan, Li, Jialiang, Nkindi, Leslie S., Mohammadrezaee, Zohreh, Cooke, Megan E., Martineau, Paul A., Weber, Michael H., Saade, Elie, Nateghi, Nima, and Rosenzweig, Derek H.
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ORTHOPEDIC implants ,DRUG resistance in microorganisms ,TISSUE engineering ,POLYVINYL alcohol ,ANTIBIOTICS ,POLYMER blends - Abstract
Limitations of bone defect reconstruction include poor bone healing and osteointegration with acrylic cements, lack of strength with bone putty/paste, and poor osteointegration. Tissue engineering aims to bridge these gaps through the use of bioactive implants. However, there is often a risk of infection and biofilm formation associated with orthopedic implants, which may develop anti-microbial resistance. To promote bone repair while also locally delivering therapeutics, 3D-printed implants serve as a suitable alternative. Soft, nanoporous 3D-printed filaments made from a thermoplastic polyurethane and polyvinyl alcohol blend, LAY-FOMM and LAY-FELT, have shown promise for drug delivery and orthopedic applications. Here, we compare 3D printability and sustained antibiotic release kinetics from two types of commercial 3D-printed porous filaments suitable for bone tissue engineering applications. We found that both LAY-FOMM and LAY-FELT could be consistently printed into scaffolds for drug delivery. Further, the materials could sustainably release Tetracycline over 3 days, independent of material type and infill geometry. The drug-loaded materials did not show any cytotoxicity when cultured with primary human fibroblasts. We conclude that both LAY-FOMM and LAY-FELT 3D-printed scaffolds are suitable devices for local antibiotic delivery applications, and they may have potential applications to prophylactically reduce infections in orthopedic reconstruction surgery. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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15. The Role of Social, Familial, and Individual‐Level Factors on Multiple Alcohol Use Outcomes During the First Year of University
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Cooke, Megan E., Neale, Zoe E., Barr, Peter B., Myers, John, Dick, Danielle M., Kendler, Kenneth S., and Edwards, Alexis C.
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- 2017
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16. Development and experimental validation of a dynamic numerical model for human articular cartilage.
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Mellors, Ben, Allen, Piers, Lavecchia, Carolina E, Mountcastle, Sophie, Cooke, Megan E, Lawless, Bernard M, Cox, Sophie C, Jones, Simon, and Espino, Daniel M
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The purpose of this study was to create a preliminary set of experimentally validated Finite Element Analysis (FEA) models, in order to predict the dynamic mechanical behaviour of human articular cartilage (AC). Current models consider static loading with limited independent experimental validation, while the models for this study assess dynamic loading of AC, with direct comparison and validation to physical testing. Three different FEA models of AC were constructed, which considered both linear elastic and hyperelastic models; Neo-Hookean and Ogden. Models were validated using the data collected from compression testing of human femoral heads across 0–1.7 MPa (quasi-static tests and dynamic mechanical analysis). The linear elastic model was inadequate, with a 10-fold over prediction of the displacement dynamic amplitude. The Neo-Hookean model accurately predicted the dynamic amplitude but failed to predict the initial compression of the cartilage, with a 10 times overprediction. The Ogden model provided the best results, with both the initial compression lying within one standard deviation of that observed in the validation data set, and the dynamic amplitude of the same order of magnitude. In conclusion, this study has found that the fast dynamic response of human AC is best represented by a third order Ogden model. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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17. Development of cannabis use disorder in medical cannabis users: A 9-month follow-up of a randomized clinical trial testing effects of medical cannabis card ownership.
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Cooke, Megan E., Potter, Kevin W., Jashinski, Julia, Pascale, Michael, Schuster, Randi M., Tervo-Clemmens, Brenden, Hoeppner, Bettina B., Pachas, Gladys N., Evins, A. Eden, and Gilman, Jodi M.
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MARIJUANA abuse ,MEDICAL marijuana ,CLINICAL trials ,WISCONSIN Card Sorting Test ,MENTAL depression - Abstract
Background: Evidence for long-term effectiveness of commercial cannabis products used to treat medical symptoms is inconsistent, despite increasingly widespread use. Objective: To prospectively evaluate the effects of using cannabis on self-reported symptoms of pain, insomnia, anxiety, depression, and cannabis use disorder (CUD) after 12 months of use. Methods: This observational cohort study describes outcomes over 9 months following a 12-week randomized, waitlist-controlled trial (RCT: NCT03224468) in which adults (N = 163) who wished to use cannabis to alleviate insomnia, pain, depression, or anxiety symptoms were randomly assigned to obtain a medical marijuana card immediately (immediate card acquisition group) or to delay obtaining a card for 12 weeks delay (delayed card acquisition group). During the 9-month post-randomization period, all participants could use cannabis as they wished and choose their cannabis products, doses, and frequency of use. Insomnia, pain, depression, anxiety, and CUD symptoms were assessed over the 9-month post-randomization period. Results: After 12 months of using cannabis for medical symptoms, 11.7% of all participants (n = 19), and 17.1% of those using cannabis daily or near-daily (n = 6) developed CUD. Frequency of cannabis use was positively correlated with pain severity and number of CUD symptoms, but not significantly associated with severity of self-reported insomnia, depression, or anxiety symptoms. Depression scores improved throughout the 9 months in all participants, regardless of cannabis use frequency. Conclusions: Frequency of cannabis use was not associated with improved pain, anxiety, or depression symptoms but was associated with new-onset cannabis use disorder in a significant minority of participants. Daily or near-daily cannabis use appears to have little benefit for these symptoms after 12 months of use. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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18. A 3D, Compartmental Tumor-Stromal Microenvironment Model of Patient-Derived Bone Metastasis.
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Mohseni Garakani, Mansoureh, Cooke, Megan E., Weber, Michael H., Wertheimer, Michael R., Ajji, Abdellah, and Rosenzweig, Derek H.
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BONE metastasis , *BONE cells , *GENE expression , *CELL migration , *EPITHELIAL-mesenchymal transition , *MEDICAL screening , *LACTIC acid , *DOXORUBICIN - Abstract
Bone is a frequent site of tumor metastasis. The bone–tumor microenvironment is heterogeneous and complex in nature. Such complexity is compounded by relations between metastatic and bone cells influencing their sensitivity/resistance to chemotherapeutics. Standard chemotherapeutics may not show efficacy for every patient, and new therapeutics are slow to emerge, owing to the limitations of existing 2D/3D models. We previously developed a 3D interface model for personalized therapeutic screening, consisting of an electrospun poly lactic acid mesh activated with plasma species and seeded with stromal cells. Tumor cells embedded in an alginate-gelatin hydrogel are overlaid to create a physiologic 3D interface. Here, we applied our 3D model as a migration assay tool to verify the migratory behavior of different patient-derived bone metastasized cells. We assessed the impact of two different chemotherapeutics, Doxorubicin and Cisplatin, on migration of patient cells and their immortalized cell line counterparts. We observed different migratory behaviors and cellular metabolic activities blocked with both Doxorubicin and Cisplatin treatment; however, higher efficiency or lower IC50 was observed with Doxorubicin. Gene expression analysis of MDA-MB231 that migrated through our 3D hybrid model verified epithelial–mesenchymal transition through increased expression of mesenchymal markers involved in the metastasis process. Our findings indicate that we can model tumor migration in vivo, in line with different cell characteristics and it may be a suitable drug screening tool for personalized medicine approaches in metastatic cancer treatment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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19. A novel 3D in vitro tissue model for bone‐metastasized breast cancer: A preclinical tool in drug discovery and testing.
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Mohseni Garakani, Mansoureh, Cooke, Megan E., Wertheimer, Michael R., Rosenzweig, Derek H., and Ajji, Abdellah
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BREAST cancer , *DRUG discovery , *BONE metastasis , *INDIVIDUALIZED medicine , *CELL lines , *TISSUES , *BREAST - Abstract
Bone metastasis is a frequent occurrence following breast cancer. The bone‐tumor microenvironment is heterogeneous and complicated to recapitulate. The development of new chemotherapeutics is ineffective partly due to a lack of precise in vitro tissue models. We developed a three‐dimensional (3D) bone‐tumor interface model for customized chemotherapeutic screening. It comprises a plasma‐modified electrospun mat seeded with osteoblasts to mimic a bone tissue, with a cell‐seeded hydrogel layer containing more and less aggressive or noncancerous cells on top, mimicking the tumor compartment. By screening the model with doxorubicin, we observed different migratory behaviors, with IC50 values that were largely in accordance with those cell lines' characteristics. Our 3D model reproduces the bone microenvironment and has great potential as a drug screening tool for personalized medicine. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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20. Coffee or Camaraderie?
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Lapane, Kate L. and Cooke, Megan E.
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- 2012
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21. Polygenic score for cigarette smoking is associated with ever electronic‐cigarette use in a college‐aged sample.
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Cooke, Megan E., Clifford, James S., Do, Elizabeth K., Gilman, Jodi M., Maes, Hermine H., Peterson, Roseann E., Prom‐Wormley, Elizabeth C., Evins, A. Eden, and Schuster, Randi M.
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MONOGENIC & polygenic inheritance (Genetics) , *COLLEGE students , *ELECTRONIC cigarettes , *RISK assessment , *GENOMES - Abstract
Background and Aims: Electronic cigarette use has escalated rapidly in recent years, particularly among youth. Little is known about the genetic influences on e‐cigarette use. This study aimed to determine whether genetic risk for regular use of combustible cigarettes or for number of cigarettes smoked per day confers risk for ever e‐cigarette use or frequency of e‐cigarette use. Design, Setting, Participants, and Measurements: We used data from 9541 young adults from the Spit for Science longitudinal cohort study (2011–2019). Polygenic scores (PGS) of regular combustible cigarette use (PGS‐RCU) and cigarettes per day (PGS‐CPD) were constructed using summary statistics from the two largest available genome‐wide association study (GWAS) meta‐analysis of European ancestry and East Asian ancestry of combustible cigarette use and used to test whether the PGS of RCU or CPD predicted lifetime e‐cigarette use and frequency of past 30‐day e‐cigarette use in a diverse sample of young adults of African (AFR), Admixed American (AMR), East Asian (EAS), European (EUR), and South Asian (SAS) ancestry. Findings: The PGS‐RCU was associated with lifetime e‐cigarette use in the EUR sample (OR = 1.27, 95% CI = 1.19–1.36, P = 7.53 × 10−12), but not in the other subsamples (ps > 0.12). This association remained significant after excluding regular combustible cigarette smokers (OR = 1.21, 95% CI = 1.12–1.31, P = 3.36 × 10−6). There was no statistically significant association between PGS‐CPD and lifetime e‐cigarette use and neither the PGS‐RCU nor the PGS‐CPD were associated with frequency of e‐cigarette use in the past 30 days in any of the subsamples. Conclusions: Genetic factors associated with regular combustible cigarette use appear to be associated with ever e‐cigarette use in young adults. We did not find evidence for shared genetic factors influencing heaviness of use of combustible cigarettes and current e‐cigarette use frequency. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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22. Risk, Protective, and Associated Factors of Anxiety and Depressive Symptoms and Campus Health Services Utilization Among Black Men on a College Campus.
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Williams, Kofoworola D. A., Adkins, Amy E., Kuo, Sally I-Chun, LaRose, Jessica G., Utsey, Shawn O., Guidry, Jeanine P. D., The Spit for Science Working Group, Dick, Danielle M, Pedersen, Kimberly, Neale, Zoe, Thomas, Nathaniel, Adkins, Amy E, Bannard, Thomas, Cho, Seung B, Barr, Peter, Byers, Holly, Berenz, Erin C, Caraway, Erin, Clifford, James S, and Cooke, Megan
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- 2022
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23. T119. AN INTERNATIONAL AND MULTI-ANCESTRAL GENOME-WIDE ASSOCIATION STUDY META-ANALYSIS OF CANNABIS USE DISORDERS
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Levey, Daniel, Galimberti, Marco, Johnson, Emma, Cooke, Megan, Rajagopal, Veera, Deak, Joseph, Zhou, Hang, Lam, Max, Nunez, Yaira, Edenberg, Howard, Polimanti, Renato, Lencz, Todd, Demontis, Ditte, Stein, Murray, and Gelernter, Joel
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- 2022
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24. An International and Multi-Ancestral Genome-Wide Association Study Meta-Analysis of Cannabis Use Disorders
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Levey, Daniel, Galimberti, Marco, Johnson, Emma, Cooke, Megan, Rajagopal, Veera, Deak, Joseph, Zhou, Hang, Lam, Max, Nunez, Yaira, Polimanti, Renato, Lencz, Todd, Roussos, Panos, Smoller, Jordan, Demontis, Ditte, Agrawal, Arpana, Gaziano, J. Michael, Stein, Murray, and Gelernter, Joel
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- 2022
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25. Assessing Changes in Symptoms of Depression and Anxiety During Four Weeks of Cannabis Abstinence Among Adolescents.
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Cooke, Megan E., Gilman, Jodi M., Lamberth, Erin, Rychik, Natali, Tervo-Clemmens, Brenden, Evins, A. Eden, and Schuster, Randi M.
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TEMPERANCE ,ANXIETY sensitivity ,ANXIETY ,MENTAL depression ,TEENAGERS ,SEXUAL abstinence - Abstract
Background: Cannabis use is prevalent among adolescents, and many report using in attempts to alleviate negative mood and anxiety. Abstinence from substances such as alcohol and tobacco has been reported to improve symptoms of anxiety and depression. Few studies have examined the effect of cannabis abstinence on symptoms of anxiety and depression. Objective: To test the effect of 4 weeks of continuous cannabis abstinence on depressive and anxious symptoms. Methods: Healthy, non-treatment seeking adolescents who used cannabis at least weekly (n = 179) were randomized to either 4 weeks of cannabis abstinence achieved through a contingency management paradigm (CB-Abst) or cannabis use monitoring without an abstinence requirement (CB-Mon). Abstinence was assessed by self-report verified with quantitative assay of urine for cannabinoids. Anxiety and depressive symptoms were assessed weekly with the Mood and Anxiety Symptom Questionnaire (MASQ). Results: Symptoms of depression and anxiety decreased throughout the study for all participants (MASQ-AA: stnd beta = −0.08, p = 0.01, MASQ-GDA: stnd beta = −0.11, p = 0.003, MASQ-GDD: stnd beta = −0.08, p = 0.02) and did not differ significantly between randomization groups (p 's > 0.46). Exploratory analyses revealed a trend that abstinence may be associated with greater improvement in symptoms of anxiety and depression among those using cannabis to cope with negative affect and those with potentially hazardous levels of cannabis use. Conclusions: Among adolescents who use cannabis at least weekly, 4 weeks of cannabis abstinence was not associated with a significant change in anxiety or depressive symptoms compared to continued use. For recreational cannabis users who may be concerned about reducing their use for fear of increased symptoms of anxiety and depression, findings suggest that significant symptom worsening may not occur within the first 4 weeks of abstinence. Further studies are needed in clinical populations where anxiety and depression symptoms are measured more frequently and for a longer period of abstinence. Future studies are also needed to determine whether there are subgroups of adolescents who are uniquely impacted by sustained cannabis abstinence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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26. The Genetic and Environmental Influences Contributing to the Association between Electronic and Conventional Cigarette Initiation.
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Prom-Wormley, Elizabeth C, Clifford, James S, Cooke, Megan E, Cecilione, Jennifer, Maes, Hermine H, Do, Elizabeth, and Roberson-Nay, Roxann
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ELECTRONIC cigarettes ,YOUNG adults ,BIVARIATE analysis ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,TEENAGERS - Abstract
Introduction: As the use of electronic cigarette (EC) continues to rise in the United States, especially among adolescents and young adults, it is necessary to better understand the factors associated with EC initiation. Specifically, it is unclear how genetic and environmental contributions influence the initiation of EC. Furthermore, the degree to which genetic and environmental influences are shared between EC initiation and conventional cigarette (CC) initiation is unknown.Methods: A sample of young adult twins ages 15-20 (N = 858 individuals; 421 complete twin pairs) was used to estimate the genetic and environmental influences on the liability of initiation unique to EC and CC as well as the degree to which these factors are shared between the two. Approximately 24% of participants initiated the use of EC, 19% initiated the use of CC, and 11% initiated the dual use.Results: Combined contributions of additive genetic and shared environmental influences were significant for CC (ACC = 0.19 [95% confidence interval {CI} = 0-0.79], p = 0.57; CCC = 0.42 [95% CI = 0-0.70], p = 0.13) and EC (AEC = 0.25 [95% CI = 0-0.83, p = 0.44; CEC = 0.42 [95% CI = 0-0.73], p = 0.12), whereas unique environmental influences were significant (ECC = 0.39 [95% CI = 0.18-0.57], p < 0.001; EEC = 0.32 [95% CI = 0.14-0.56], p < 0.001). Results also demonstrated a significant overlap of the unique environmental (rE = 0.87, p < 0.001) and familial influences contributing to correlation between the two phenotypes in the bivariate analysis.Conclusions: These preliminary results suggest that both genes and environmental influences are potential drivers of EC initiation among adolescents and young adults.Implications: This article is the first to use a sample of twin to estimate the contributions of genetic and environmental influences toward EC initiation and estimate the potential for overlapping influences with CC initiation. This study has implications for future debate about the etiology of EC and CC use with respect to potential overlapping genetic and environmental influences. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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27. The rheology of direct and suspended extrusion bioprinting.
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Cooke, Megan E. and Rosenzweig, Derek H.
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Bioprinting is a tool increasingly used in tissue engineering laboratories around the world. As an extension to classic tissue engineering, it enables high levels of control over the spatial deposition of cells, materials, and other factors. It is a field with huge promise for the production of implantable tissues and even organs, but the availability of functional bioinks is a barrier to success. Extrusion bioprinting is the most commonly used technique, where high-viscosity solutions of materials and cells are required to ensure good shape fidelity of the printed tissue construct. This is contradictory to hydrogels used in tissue engineering, which are generally of low viscosity prior to cross-linking to ensure cell viability, making them not directly translatable to bioprinting. This review provides an overview of the important rheological parameters for bioinks and methods to assess printability, as well as the effect of bioink rheology on cell viability. Developments over the last five years in bioink formulations and the use of suspended printing to overcome rheological limitations are then discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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28. Suspended Manufacture of Biological Structures
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Moxon, Samuel R., Cooke, Megan E., Cox, Sophie C, Snow, Martyn, Jeys, Lee, Jones, Simon W., Smith, Alan M., and Grover, Liam M
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A method for the production of complex cell-laden structures is reported, which allows high-levels of spatial control over mechanical and chemical properties. The potential of this method for producing complicated tissues is demonstrated by manufacturing a complex hard/soft tissue interface and demonstrating that cell phenotype can be maintained over four weeks of culture.
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- 2017
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29. Contingency management is associated with positive changes in attitudes and reductions in cannabis use even after discontinuation of incentives among non-treatment seeking youth.
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Cooke, Megan E., Knoll, Sarah J., Streck, Joanna M., Potter, Kevin, Lamberth, Erin, Rychik, Natali, Gilman, Jodi M., Evins, A. Eden, and Schuster, Randi M.
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ATTITUDE change (Psychology) , *MARIJUANA abuse , *INTRINSIC motivation , *HARM reduction , *SENSATION seeking , *SOCIAL interaction , *AT-risk youth - Abstract
It is important to identify interventions that reduce harm in youth not motivated to change their cannabis use. This study evaluated how short-duration contingency management (CM) impacts cannabis use attitudes and behavior after abstinence incentives are discontinued among non-treatment seeking youth. Participants (N=220) were randomized to 4 weeks of abstinence-based CM (CB-Abst; n=126) or monitoring (CB-Mon; n=94). Participants completed self-report and provided biochemical measures of cannabis exposure at baseline, end-of-intervention, and 4-week follow-up. Changes in self-reported cannabis use frequency (days/week; times/week) and biochemically verified creatinine-adjusted 11-nor-9-carboxy-tetrahydrocannabinol concentrations (CN-THCCOOH) were analyzed between groups from baseline to follow-up. In CB-Abst, cannabis use goals at end-of-intervention were described and changes in cannabis use at follow-up were explored by goals and cannabis use disorder (CUD) diagnosis. There was a group by visit interaction on cannabis use (days: beta=0.93, p=0.005; times: beta=0.71, p<0.001; CN-THCCOOH: beta=0.26, p=0.004), with reductions at follow-up detected only in CB-Abst. Following 4 weeks of abstinence, 68.4% of CB-Abst participants wanted to reduce or abstain from cannabis use following completion of CM. Those in CB-Abst who set end-of-intervention reduction goals and were without CUD had greater decreases in cannabis use frequency at follow-up (Goals*time on days/week: beta=−2.27, p<0.001; CUD*time on times/week: beta=0.48, SE=0.24, t=2.01, p=0.048). Findings support the utility of brief incentivized abstinence for generating motivation to reduce cannabis use and behavior change even after incentives end. This study supports CM as a potentially viable harm reduction strategy for those not yet ready to quit. • Youth decreased cannabis use even after completion of contingency management (CM). • CM may increase intrinsic motivation to reduce cannabis use among youth. • CM may be a viable harm reduction strategy for youth not yet motivated to quit. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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30. Unpacking Genetic Risk Pathways for College Student Alcohol Consumption: The Mediating Role of Impulsivity.
- Author
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Ksinan, Albert J., Su, Jinni, Aliev, Fazil, Dick, Danielle M., Pedersen, Kimberly, Neale, Zoe, Thomas, Nathaniel, Adkins, Amy E., Bannard, Thomas, Cho, Seung B., Barr, Peter, Berenz, Erin C., Caraway, Erin, Clifford, James S., Cooke, Megan, Do, Elizabeth, Edwards, Alexis C., Goyal, Neeru, Hack, Laura M., and Halberstadt, Lisa J.
- Subjects
ALCOHOLISM ,ALCOHOLISM risk factors ,BLACK people ,COLLEGE students ,COMPARATIVE studies ,ALCOHOL drinking ,GENOMES ,IMPULSIVE personality ,LONGITUDINAL method ,RISK assessment ,RISK-taking behavior ,WHITE people ,STRUCTURAL equation modeling ,ALCOHOL drinking in college ,GENETICS - Abstract
Background: The period of college represents a particularly risky developmental stage with regard to alcohol use, as college students engage in more risky drinking behaviors than their noncollege peers, and such problematic alcohol use is associated with far‐reaching negative consequences. Existing findings from genome‐wide association studies (GWAS) indicate that alcohol consumption has a complex polygenic etiology. Currently, there is a lack of studies examining genetic risk for alcohol consumption using polygenic risk scores (PRS) in college samples. In this study, we examined whether alcohol‐specific and risky behavior–related PRS were longitudinally associated with alcohol consumption among college students and whether this effect might be partially mediated by impulsivity domains. Methods: The sample included n = 2,385 European ancestry (EA) and n = 1,153 African ancestry (AA) college students assessed over the course of 4 years. To indicate genetic risk, 2 PRS were created based on recent large‐scale GWAS: alcohol consumption (Liu et al., 2019) —drinks per week (DPW)‐PRS and risky behaviors (Linnér et al., 2019) —RISK‐PRS. The main outcome was alcohol consumption, measured across 4 waves of follow‐up data. The UPPS‐P impulsivity subscales were examined as mediators of the genetic effect on alcohol consumption. Results: The results from structural equation modeling showed that among EA students, both DPW‐PRS and RISK‐PRS had significant positive effects on alcohol consumption above and beyond UPPS dimensions and control variables. RISK‐PRS explained larger portion of variance in alcohol consumption than DPW‐PRS. RISK‐PRS showed a significant indirect effect on alcohol consumption through sensation seeking and lack of perseverance; no significant indirect effect of DPW‐PRS was found. No significant association of either PRS or alcohol consumption was found for AA participants. Conclusions: The current results found that PRS related to more broadly defined risky behaviors predicted alcohol consumption across college years and that this association was partially mediated via dimensions of impulsivity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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31. Genes, Roommates, and Residence Halls: A Multidimensional Study of the Role of Peer Drinking on College Students' Alcohol Use.
- Author
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Pedersen, Kimberly, Thomas, Nathaniel, Adkins, Amy E., Bannard, Thomas, Cho, Seung B., Berenz, Erin C., Caraway, Erin, Clifford, James S., Cooke, Megan, Do, Elizabeth, Edwards, Alexis C., Goyal, Neeru, Hack, Laura M., Halberstadt, Lisa J., Hawn, Sage, Kuo, Sally, Lasko, Emily, Lend, Jennifer, Lind, Mackenzie, and Long, Elizabeth
- Subjects
PSYCHOLOGY of college students ,DISEASE susceptibility ,DRINKING behavior ,ALCOHOL drinking ,GENES ,LONGITUDINAL method ,STATISTICAL sampling ,SEASONS ,STUDENT attitudes ,UNIVERSITIES & colleges ,AFFINITY groups ,PEERS ,ALCOHOL drinking in college - Abstract
Background: Peer drinking is one of the most robust predictors of college students' alcohol use and can moderate students' genetic risk for alcohol use. Peer effect research generally suffers from 2 problems: selection into peer groups and relying more on perceptions of peer alcohol use than peers' self‐report. The goal of the present study was to overcome those limitations by capitalizing on a genetically informed sample of randomly assigned college roommates to examine multiple dimensions of peer influence and the interplay between peer effects and genetic predisposition on alcohol use, in the form of polygenic scores. Methods: We used a subsample (n = 755) of participants from a university‐wide, longitudinal study at a large, diverse, urban university. Participants reported their own alcohol use during fall and spring and their perceptions of college peers' alcohol use in spring. We matched individuals into their rooms and residence halls to create a composite score of peer‐reported alcohol use for each of those levels. We examined multiple dimensions of peer influence and whether peer influence moderated genetic predisposition to predict college students' alcohol use using multilevel models to account for clustering at the room and residence hall level. Results: We found that polygenic scores (β = 0.12), perceptions of peer drinking (β = 0.37), and roommates' self‐reported drinking (β = 0.10) predicted alcohol use (all ps < 0.001), while average alcohol use across residence hall did not (β = −0.01, p = 0.86). We found no evidence for interactions between peer influence and genome‐wide polygenic scores for alcohol use. Conclusions: Our findings underscore the importance of genetic predisposition on individual alcohol use and support the potentially causal nature of the association between peer influence and alcohol use. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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32. Current Biomedical Applications of 3D Printing and Additive Manufacturing.
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Ahangar, Pouyan, Cooke, Megan E, Weber, Michael H, and Rosenzweig, Derek H
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TISSUE engineering ,THREE-dimensional printing ,RAPID prototyping ,MEDICAL equipment ,REGENERATIVE medicine ,TECHNOLOGY - Abstract
Additive manufacturing (AM) has emerged over the past four decades as a cost-effective, on-demand modality for fabrication of geometrically complex objects. The ability to design and print virtually any object shape using a diverse array of materials, such as metals, polymers, ceramics and bioinks, has allowed for the adoption of this technology for biomedical applications in both research and clinical settings. Current advancements in tissue engineering and regeneration, therapeutic delivery, medical device fabrication and operative management planning ensure that AM will continue to play an increasingly important role in the future of healthcare. In this review, we outline current biomedical applications of common AM techniques and materials. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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33. S7. General Functional Connectivity: Shared Features of Resting State and Task fMRI Drive Reliable and Heritable Individual Differences in Functional Brain Networks
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Elliott, Maxwell, Knodt, Annchen, Cooke, Megan, Kim, Justin, Melzer, Tracy, Keenan, Ross, Ireland, David, Ramrakha, Sandhya, Poulton, Richie, Caspi, Avshalom, Moffitt, Terrie, and Hariri, Ahmad
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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34. Polygenic prediction of the phenome, across ancestry, in emerging adulthood.
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Docherty, Anna R., Moscati, Arden, Dick, Danielle, Savage, Jeanne E., Salvatore, Jessica E., Cooke, Megan, Aliev, Fazil, Moore, Ashlee A., Edwards, Alexis C., Riley, Brien P., Adkins, Daniel E., Peterson, Roseann, Webb, Bradley T., Bacanu, Silviu A., and Kendler, Kenneth S.
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MENTAL depression risk factors ,PSYCHOSES ,GENETICS of schizophrenia ,SCHIZOPHRENIA risk factors ,COGNITION disorders ,PERSONALITY disorders ,ANXIETY ,CARDIOVASCULAR diseases risk factors ,GENETIC polymorphisms ,MEDICAL quality control ,NEUROSES ,NICOTINE ,PANIC disorders ,PHOBIAS ,SUBSTANCE abuse ,WHITE people ,PHENOTYPES ,FAMILY history (Medicine) ,ADULTS ,GENETICS ,MENTAL illness risk factors - Abstract
Background: Identifying genetic relationships between complex traits in emerging adulthood can provide useful etiological insights into risk for psychopathology. College-age individuals are under-represented in genomic analyses thus far, and the majority of work has focused on the clinical disorder or cognitive abilities rather than normal-range behavioral outcomes. Methods: This study examined a sample of emerging adults 18–22 years of age (N = 5947) to construct an atlas of polygenic risk for 33 traits predicting relevant phenotypic outcomes. Twenty-eight hypotheses were tested based on the previous literature on samples of European ancestry, and the availability of rich assessment data allowed for polygenic predictions across 55 psychological and medical phenotypes. Results: Polygenic risk for schizophrenia (SZ) in emerging adults predicted anxiety, depression, nicotine use, trauma, and family history of psychological disorders. Polygenic risk for neuroticism predicted anxiety, depression, phobia, panic, neuroticism, and was correlated with polygenic risk for cardiovascular disease. Conclusions: These results demonstrate the extensive impact of genetic risk for SZ, neuroticism, and major depression on a range of health outcomes in early adulthood. Minimal cross-ancestry replication of these phenomic patterns of polygenic influence underscores the need for more genome-wide association studies of non-European populations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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35. The Utility of a Brief Web-Based Prevention Intervention as a Universal Approach for Risky Alcohol Use in College Students: Evidence of Moderation by Family History.
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Neale, Zoe E., Salvatore, Jessica E., Cooke, Megan E., Savage, Jeanne E., Aliev, Fazil, Donovan, Kristen K., Hancock, Linda C., and Dick, Danielle M.
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ALCOHOL drinking ,COLLEGE students ,EMOTIONAL problems of children ,FAMILY history (Sociology) ,PEER pressure - Published
- 2018
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36. Interfacial Mineral Fusion and Tubule Entanglement as a Means to Harden a Bone Augmentation Material.
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Hughes, Erik A. B., Cox, Sophie C., Cooke, Megan E., Davies, Owen G., Williams, Richard L., Hall, Thomas J., and Grover, Liam M.
- Published
- 2018
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37. Formulation and viscoelasticity of mineralised hydrogels for use in bone-cartilage interfacial reconstruction.
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Majumdar, Trina, Jones, Simon W., Cooke, Megan E., Hughes, Erik A.B., Grover, Liam M., Cox, Sophie C., Lawless, Bernard M., and Bellier, Francis
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HYDROGELS ,CARTILAGE ,VISCOELASTIC materials ,DYNAMIC mechanical analysis ,HYDROXYAPATITE - Abstract
Articular cartilage is a viscoelastic tissue whose structural integrity is important in maintaining joint health. To restore the functionality of osteoarthritic joints it is vital that regenerative strategies mimic the dynamic loading response of cartilage and bone. Here, a rotating simplex model was employed to optimise the composition of agarose and gellan hydrogel constructs structured with hydroxyapatite (HA) with the aim of obtaining composites mechanically comparable to human cartilage in terms of their ability to dissipate energy. Addition of ceramic particles was found to reinforce both matrices up to a critical concentration (< 3 w/v%). Beyond this, larger agglomerates were formed, as evidenced by micro computed tomography data, which acted as stress risers and reduced the ability of composites to dissipate energy demonstrated by a reduction in tan δ values. A maximum compressive modulus of 450.7±24.9 kPa was achieved with a composition of 5.8 w/v% agarose and 0.5 w/v% HA. Interestingly, when loaded dynamically (1–20 Hz) this optimised formulation did not exhibit the highest complex modulus instead a sample with a higher concentration of mineral was identified (5.8 w/v% agarose and 25 w/v% HA). Thus, demonstrating the importance of examining the mechanical behaviour of biomaterials under conditions representative of physiological environments. While the complex moduli of the optimised gellan (1.0 ± 0.2 MPa at 1 Hz) and agarose (1.7 ± 0.2 MPa at 1 Hz) constructs did not match the complex moduli of healthy human cartilage samples (26.3 ± 6.5 MPa at 1 Hz), similar tan δ values were observed between 1 and 5 Hz. This is promising since these frequencies represent the typical heel strike time of the general population. In summary, this study demonstrates the importance of considering more than just the strength of biomaterials since tissues like cartilage play a more complex role. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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38. Structuring of Hydrogels across Multiple Length Scales for Biomedical Applications.
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Cooke, Megan E., Jones, Simon W., ter Horst, Britt, Moiemen, Naiem, Snow, Martyn, Chouhan, Gurpreet, Hill, Lisa J., Esmaeli, Maryam, Moakes, Richard J. A., Holton, James, Nandra, Rajpal, Williams, Richard L., Smith, Alan M., and Grover, Liam M.
- Published
- 2018
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39. Post‐GWAS in Psychiatric Genetics: A Developmental Perspective on the “Other” Next Steps.
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Dick, Danielle M., Barr, Peter B., Cho, Seung Bin, Cooke, Megan E., Kuo, Sally I‐Chun, Lewis, Tenesha J., Neale, Zoe, Salvatore, Jessica E., Savage, Jeanne, and Su, Jinni
- Subjects
MENTAL illness genetics ,SUBSTANCE abuse ,GENDER differences (Psychology) ,PSYCHOLOGICAL resilience ,BEHAVIOR genetics ,GENOTYPE-environment interaction - Abstract
As psychiatric genetics enters an era where gene identification is finally yielding robust, replicable genetic associations and polygenic risk scores, it is important to consider next steps and delineate how that knowledge will be applied to ultimately ameliorate suffering associated with substance use and psychiatric disorders. Much of the post‐genome‐wide association study discussion has focused on the potential of genetic information to elucidate the underlying biology and use this information for the development of more effective pharmaceutical treatments. In this review we focus on additional areas of research that should follow gene identification. By taking genetic findings into longitudinal, developmental studies, we can map the pathways by which genetic risk manifests across development, elucidating the early behavioral manifestations of risk, and studying how various environments and interventions moderate that risk across developmental stages. The delineation of risk across development will advance our understanding of mechanism, sex differences and risk and resilience processes in different racial/ethnic groups. Here, we review how the extant twin study literature can be used to guide these efforts. Together, these new lines of research will enable us to develop more informed, tailored prevention and intervention efforts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. The Relationship Between Parenting Styles and Substance Use Among University Students.
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Niazi, Zackaria I., Dick, Danielle, Adkins, Amy, and Cooke, Megan
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PARENTING ,SUBSTANCE use of college students ,PARENT participation in higher education - Abstract
Parenting styles are important in the behavioral development of adolescents. The environment created by the parent, in regards to communication with their child and level of independence given to their child, may influence the child's susceptibility to risk behaviors. This study examines the relationship between parenting style and substance use among university students. We hypothesized that university students exposed to lower levels of autonomy granting (AG) or parental involvement (PI) parenting styles would have an increased likelihood of alcohol and nicotine use. We also hypothesized that religiosity, parental education level, ethnicity, and gender would act as moderators of parenting styles and alcohol and nicotine use. Data from a diverse university-wide sample was collected in the fall semester of the student's freshman year from 2011-2014 (N = 9889, 61.5% female). Results demonstrated that AG had a significant, negative association with alcohol use (B = -0.033, p = 0.006) and nicotine use (B = -0.066, p <0.001). All moderators were found to be significant predictors of alcohol use, however only father education level demonstrated a borderline significant moderation of the relationship between PI and alcohol use. Religiosity, Black race, Asian race, and gender were found to be significant predictors of nicotine use. Only gender moderated the association between PI and nicotine use. Even though alcohol and nicotine use and AG were associated, our results indicate that once students enter university, previous parenting style does not have a strong effect on alcohol and nicotine use behaviors in our sample. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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41. Molecular Genetic Influences on Normative and Problematic Alcohol Use in a Population-Based Sample of College Students.
- Author
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Webb, Bradley T., Edwards, Alexis C., Wolen, Aaron R., Salvatore, Jessica E., Aliev, Fazil, Riley, Brien P., Cuie Sun, Williamson, Vernell S., Kitchens, James N., Pedersen, Kimberly, Adkins, Amy, Cooke, Megan E., Savage, Jeanne E., Neale, Zoe, Cho, Seung B., Dick, Danielle M., and Kendler, Kenneth S.
- Subjects
ALCOHOL drinking in college ,HUMAN genetic variation ,MOLECULAR genetics - Abstract
Background: Genetic factors impact alcohol use behaviors and these factors may become increasingly evident during emerging adulthood. Examination of the effects of individual variants as well as aggregate genetic variation can clarify mechanisms underlying risk. Methods: We conducted genome-wide association studies (GWAS) in an ethnically diverse sample of college students for three quantitative outcomes including typical monthly alcohol consumption, alcohol problems, andmaximumnumber of drinks in 24 h. Heritability based on common genetic variants (h
2 SNP ) was assessed. We also evaluated whether risk variants in aggregate were associated with alcohol use outcomes in an independent sample of young adults. Results: Two genome-wide significant markers were observed: rs11201929 in GRID1 for maximum drinks in 24 h, with supportive evidence across all ancestry groups; and rs73317305 in SAMD12 (alcohol problems), tested only in the African ancestry group. The h2 SNP estimate was 0.19 (SE = 0.11) for consumption, and was non-significant for other outcomes. Genome-wide polygenic scores were significantly associated with alcohol outcomes in an independent sample. Conclusions: These results robustly identify genetic risk for alcohol use outcomes at the variant level and in aggregate. We confirm prior evidence that genetic variation in GRID1 impacts alcohol use, and identify novel loci of interest for multiple alcohol outcomes in emerging adults. These findings indicate that genetic variation influencing normative and problematic alcohol use is, to some extent, convergent across ancestry groups. Studying college populations represents a promising avenue by which to obtain large, diverse samples for gene identification. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
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- View/download PDF
42. Genome-Wide Polygenic Atlas of the Phenome in Emerging Adulthood: Prediction of Behavioral and Health Outcomes
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Moscati, Arden, Docherty, Anna, Savage, Jeanne, Salvatore, Jessica, Cooke, Megan, Aliev, Fazil, Moore, Ashlee, Peterson, Roseann, Edwards, Alexis, Riley, Brien, Adkins, Daniel, Webb, Bradley, Dick, Danielle, Bacanu, Silviu, and Kendler, Kenneth
- Published
- 2017
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- View/download PDF
43. M49 - Genome-Wide Polygenic Atlas of The Phenome In Emerging Adulthood: Genetic Overlap of Risk Across Five Ancestries
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Docherty, Anna, Moscati, Arden, Savage, Jeanne, Salvatore, Jessica, Cooke, Megan, Aliev, Fazil, Moore, Ashlee, Peterson, Roseann, Edwards, Alexis, Riley, Brien, Adkins, Daniel, Webb, Bradley, Dick, Danielle, Bacanu, Silviu, and Kendler, Kenneth
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Exposure-Response Relationships during Free-Access Intravenous Alcohol Self-Administration in Nondependent Drinkers: Influence of Alcohol Expectancies and Impulsivity.
- Author
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Stangl, Bethany L., Vatsalya, Vatsalya, Zametkin, Molly R., Cooke, Megan E., Plawecki, Martin H., O’Connor, Sean, and Ramchandani, Vijay A.
- Abstract
Background: Self-administration is a hallmark of all addictive drugs, including alcohol. Human laboratory models of alcohol self-administration have characterized alcohol-seeking behavior and served as surrogate measures of the effectiveness of pharmacotherapies for alcohol use disorders. Intravenous alcohol self-administration is a novel method that assesses alcohol exposure driven primarily by the pharmacological response to alcohol and may have utility in characterizing unique behavioral and personality correlates of alcohol-seeking and consumption. Methods: This study examined exposure-response relationships for i.v. alcohol self-administration, and the influence of impulsivity and alcohol expectancy, in healthy, nondependent drinkers (n=112). Participants underwent a 2.5-hour free-access i.v. alcohol self-administration session using the Computerized Alcohol Infusion System. Serial subjective response measures included the Drug Effects Questionnaire and Alcohol Urge Questionnaire. To characterize the motivational aspects of alcohol consumption prior to potential acute adaptation, the number of self-infusions in the first 30 minutes of the free-access session was used to classify participants as low- and high-responders. Results: High-responders showed greater subjective responses during i.v. alcohol self-administration compared with low responders, reflecting robust exposure-driven hedonic responses to alcohol. High-responders also reported heavier drinking patterns and lower scores for negative alcohol expectancies on the Alcohol Effects Questionnaire. High-responders also showed higher measures of impulsivity on a delayed discounting task, supporting previous work associating impulsivity with greater alcohol use and problems. Conclusions: These findings indicate that early-phase measures of free-access i.v. alcohol self-administration are particularly sensitive to the rewarding and motivational properties of alcohol and may provide a unique phenotypic marker of alcohol-seeking behavior. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Predicting Tobacco Use across the First Year of College.
- Author
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Cooke, Megan E., Nasim, Aashir, Seung Bin Cho, Kendler, Kenneth S., Clark, Shaunna L., and Dick, Danielle M.
- Subjects
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HEALTH of college freshmen , *TOBACCO use , *SMOKELESS tobacco , *HOOKAHS , *HEALTH behavior , *UNIVERSITIES & colleges , *ANXIETY , *COLLEGE students , *DEMOGRAPHY , *MENTAL depression , *ECOLOGY , *ETHNIC groups , *LONGITUDINAL method , *PROBABILITY theory , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *RACE , *RESEARCH funding , *SEX distribution , *SOCIAL skills , *TOBACCO products , *DATA analysis software , *ODDS ratio - Abstract
The article presents a study examining tobacco use and associated predictors among first year college students. Information is provided on how students were found to use multiple alternative tobacco products in addition to cigarettes, such as cigars, smokeless tobacco, and hookah. Particular attention is also given to transitions in use during the school year.
- Published
- 2016
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46. Effects of Varenicline on Neural Correlates of Alcohol Salience in Heavy Drinkers.
- Author
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Vatsalya, Vatsalya, Gowin, Joshua L., Schwandt, Melanie L., Momenan, Reza, Coe, Marion A., Cooke, Megan E., Hommer, Daniel W., Bartlett, Selena, Heilig, Markus, and Ramchandani, Vijay A.
- Subjects
VARENICLINE ,ALCOHOL drinking ,SMOKING cessation ,DRUG administration ,MULTILEVEL models ,DRUG therapy ,THERAPEUTICS - Abstract
Background: Preclinical and emerging clinical evidence indicates that varenicline, a nicotinic partial agonist approved for smoking cessation, attenuates alcohol seeking and consumption. Reductions of alcohol craving have been observed under varenicline treatment and suggest effects of the medication on alcohol reward processing, but this hypothesis remains untested. Methods: In this double-blind, placebo-controlled randomized experimental medicine study, 29 heavy drinkers underwent a functional magnetic resonance imaging scan after 2 weeks of varenicline (2 mg/d) or placebo administration. During functional magnetic resonance imaging, participants performed the Alcohol-Food Incentive Delay task, where they could earn points for snacks or alcohol. At baseline and after 3 weeks of medication, participants underwent intravenous alcohol self-administration sessions in the laboratory. Results: During the functional magnetic resonance imaging scan, participants in the varenicline group (N = 17) reported lower feelings of happiness and excitement on subjective mood scales when anticipating alcohol reward compared with the placebo group (N = 12). Linear mixed effects analysis revealed that anticipation of alcohol reward was associated with significant blood oxygen level dependent activation of the ventral striatum, amygdala, and posterior insula in the placebo group; this activation was attenuated in the varenicline group. The varenicline group showed no difference in intravenous alcohol self-administration relative to the placebo group for either session. Participants with higher insula activation when anticipating alcohol reward showed higher alcohol self-administration behavior across groups. Conclusions: Our findings suggest that varenicline decreases blood oxygen level dependent activation in striato-corticolimbic regions associated with motivation and incentive salience of alcohol in heavy drinkers. This mechanism may underlie the clinical effectiveness of varenicline in reducing alcohol intake and indicates its potential utility as a pharmacotherapy for alcohol use disorders. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Gene-Environment Interaction Effects of Peer Deviance, Parental Knowledge and Stressful Life Events on Adolescent Alcohol Use.
- Author
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Cooke, Megan E., Meyers, Jacquelyn L., Latvala, Antti, Korhonen, Tellervo, Rose, Richard J., Kaprio, Jaakko, Salvatore, Jessica E., and Dick, Danielle M.
- Subjects
- *
GENOTYPE-environment interaction , *LIFE change events , *UNDERAGE drinking , *PEERS , *TWINS , *UNIVARIATE analysis , *BIVARIATE analysis , *MODERATION (Statistics) , *BIOLOGICAL models , *COMPARATIVE studies , *ALCOHOL drinking , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL cooperation , *PSYCHOLOGY of parents , *RESEARCH , *RESEARCH funding , *PHYSIOLOGICAL stress , *PHENOTYPES , *EVALUATION research - Abstract
The purpose of this study was to address two methodological issues that have called into question whether previously reported gene–environment interaction (GxE) effects for adolescent alcohol use are ‘real’. These issues are (1) the potential correlation between the environmental moderator and the outcome across twins and (2) non-linear transformations of the behavioral outcome. Three environments that have been previously studied (peer deviance, parental knowledge, and potentially stressful life events) were examined here. For each moderator (peer deviance, parental knowledge, and potentially stressful life events), a series of models was fit to both a raw and transformed measure of monthly adolescent alcohol use in a sample that included 825 dizygotic (DZ) and 803 monozygotic (MZ) twin pairs. The results showed that the moderating effect of peer deviance was robust to transformation, and that although the significance of moderating effects of parental knowledge and potentially stressful life events were dependent on the scale of the adolescent alcohol use outcome, the overall results were consistent across transformation. In addition, the findings did not vary across statistical models. The consistency of the peer deviance results and the shift of the parental knowledge and potentially stressful life events results between trending and significant, shed some light on why previous findings for certain moderators have been inconsistent and emphasize the importance of considering both methodological issues and previous findings when conducting and interpreting GxE analyses. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Patterns of substance use across the first year of college and associated risk factors.
- Author
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Seung Bin Cho, Llaneza, Danielle C., Adkins, Amy E., Cooke, Megan, Kendler, Kenneth S., Clark, Shaunna L., and Dick, Danielle M.
- Subjects
SUBSTANCE abuse ,COLLEGE freshmen ,SYMPTOMS - Abstract
Starting college is a major life transition. This study aims to characterize patterns of substance use across a variety of substances across the first year of college and identify associated factors. We used data from the first cohort (N = 2056, 1240 females) of the “Spit for Science” sample, a study of incoming freshmen at a large urban university. Latent transition analysis was applied to alcohol, tobacco, cannabis, and other illicit drug uses measured at the beginning of the fall semester and midway through the spring semester. Covariates across multiple domains – including personality, drinking motivations and expectancy, high school delinquency, peer deviance, stressful events, and symptoms of depression and anxiety – were included to predict the patterns of substance use and transitions between patterns across the first year. At both the fall and spring semesters, we identified three subgroups of participants with patterns of substance use characterized as: (1) use of all four substances; (2) alcohol, tobacco, and cannabis use; and (3) overall low substance use. Patterns of substance use were highly stable across the first year of college: most students maintained their class membership from fall to spring, with just 7% of participants in the initial low substance users transitioning to spring alcohol, tobacco, and cannabis users. Most of the included covariates were predictive of the initial pattern of use, but covariates related to experiences across the first year of college were more predictive of the transition from the low to alcohol, tobacco, and cannabis user groups. Our results suggest that while there is an overall increase in alcohol use across all students, college students largely maintain their patterns of substance use across the first year. Risk factors experienced during the first year may be effective targets for preventing increases in substance use. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Effect of Medical Marijuana Card Ownership on Pain, Insomnia, and Affective Disorder Symptoms in Adults: A Randomized Clinical Trial.
- Author
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Gilman, Jodi M., Schuster, Randi M., Potter, Kevin W., Schmitt, William, Wheeler, Grace, Pachas, Gladys N., Hickey, Sarah, Cooke, Megan E., Dechert, Alyson, Plummer, Rachel, Tervo-Clemmens, Brenden, Schoenfeld, David A., and Evins, A. Eden
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Better cardiovascular fitness is associated with better structural brain integrity in midlife: A population‐representative birth cohort study: Neuroimaging: Earlier life risk factors and imaging biomarkers.
- Author
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d'Arbeloff, Tracy, Cooke, Megan, Knodt, Annchen, Sison, Maria, Ramrakha, Sandhya, Keenan, Ross, Poulton, Richie, Hariri, Ahmad R., Caspi, Avshalom, and Moffitt, Terrie E.
- Abstract
Background: Improving cardiovascular fitness has been promoted as a promising nonpharmacological strategy for buffering against age‐related cognitive decline and mitigating risk for Alzheimer's disease and related dementia (ADRD). These beneficial effects may be related to the capacity for improved cardiovascular fitness to stave off age‐related brain atrophy. However, there is evidence that some neurological benefits associated with adult cardiovascular fitness may be better explained by early childhood factors—referred to as neuroselection—rather than any active neuroprotective effects of fitness on the brain. Method: Data from 875 participants from the population‐representative Dunedin Study were utilized to investigate associations between cardiovascular fitness (VO2Max) at age 45, changes in cardiovascular fitness across adulthood, and structural brain integrity (cortical thickness, surface area, and subcortical grey matter volume) at age 45. Critically, the potential confounding effects of childhood IQ on any observed associations in midlife were evaluated in order to disentangle potential neuroselective from neuroprotective effects. Result: Better VO2Max at age 45 was associated with thicker cortex in frontal and temporal lobes (βs:0.14 to 0.25, Figure 1b) and smaller hippocampal fissure volumes at age 45 (β=‐0.18). Higher rates of decline in VO2max were associated with lower total (β=‐0.11) and distributed regional (βs:‐0.11 to ‐0.19, Figure 2b) surface area at age 45. These associations were unaffected by the inclusion of childhood IQ in the analyses. Conclusion: Better midlife cardiovascular fitness may offer neuroprotective effects on brain structure, which may in turn mitigate ADRD risk and buffer against cognitive decline. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
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