18 results on '"Kevorkian S"'
Search Results
2. The dynamic stiffness matrix of two-dimensional elements: application to Kirchhoff's plate continuous elements
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Casimir, J.B., Kevorkian, S., and Vinh, T.
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- 2005
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3. AN ACCURATE METHOD FOR FREE VIBRATION ANALYSIS OF STRUCTURES WITH APPLICATION TO PLATES
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KEVORKIAN, S. and PASCAL, M.
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- 2001
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4. Laboratory scale tests for internal blast loading
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Kevorkian, S., primary, Duriez, N., additional, and Loiseau, O., additional
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- 2010
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5. Romanian cyprinids phylogeny based on 16S ARN mitochondrial genes
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Luca, C., primary, Kevorkian, S., additional, Elvira, M., additional, Dinischiotu, A., additional, and Costache, M., additional
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- 2007
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6. Fluid Intelligence Moderates the Link Between Psychopathy and Aggression Differently for Men and Women.
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Thomson ND, Kevorkian S, Bozgunov K, Psederska E, Aboutanos M, Vasilev G, and Vassileva J
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- Female, Humans, Intelligence, Male, Surveys and Questionnaires, Violence psychology, Aggression psychology, Antisocial Personality Disorder psychology
- Abstract
Research on sex differences in the association of psychopathy with fluid intelligence is limited, and it remains unknown if fluid intelligence plays a meaningful role in explaining the psychopathy-aggression link for men and women. The present study aimed to test for sex differences in the relation between the four-facet model of psychopathy and intelligence, and to assess whether fluid intelligence moderates the link between psychopathy and aggression. In a community sample of men ( n = 356) and women ( n = 196), we assessed psychopathy using the Psychopathy Checklist: Screening Version (PCL:SV), fluid intelligence using the Raven's Progressive Matrices, and types of aggression using the Aggression Questionnaire (AQ). Hierarchical regressions showed that the psychopathy lifestyle facet was negatively associated with intelligence and there were no sex differences. Our analyses for types of aggression revealed sex differences and similarities. For both men and women, total AQ scores were predicted by higher antisocial facet scores. Lower intelligence moderated the link between higher antisocial facet scores and aggression in men, but not for women. Physical aggression in women was associated with higher interpersonal, affective, and antisocial facet scores, whereas for men, it was only associated with higher antisocial facet scores. Verbal and indirect aggression were associated with higher intelligence in both men and women. For men only, higher antisocial facet scores were associated with verbal and indirect aggression. Higher intelligence moderated the link between the lifestyle facet and indirect aggression for women, whereas for men, it moderated the link between the affective facet and indirect aggression. This study further highlights sex differences in mechanisms of psychopathy-related aggression, which need to be considered in the development of violence interventions and risk assessment.
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- 2022
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7. Psychophysiological underpinnings of proactive and reactive aggression in young men and women.
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Thomson ND, Kevorkian S, Blair J, Farrell A, West SJ, and Bjork JM
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- Aggression, Fear, Female, Humans, Male, Psychophysiology, Galvanic Skin Response, Respiratory Sinus Arrhythmia
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Reactive aggression is posited to occur as a result of hypersensitivity to threat, whereas fearlessness may drive proactive aggression. This study aimed to test if physiological fear reactivity differentially relates to self-report reactive and proactive aggression using immersive virtual reality fear (VR) induction. We collected subjective fear ratings and sympathetic (SNS; skin conductance) and parasympathetic (PNS; respiratory sinus arrhythmia) nervous system reactivity during an interactive VR horror video. Results showed that for men and women, reactive aggression was related to heightened SNS fear reactivity. For men, proactive aggression was related to hypoarousal of the PNS and SNS (coinhibition) during fear induction, whereas augmented PNS was related to proactive aggression in women. These results support the fearlessness hypothesis for proactive aggression in men, but this does not replicate in women. By contrast, hypersensitivity to fear is related to reactive aggression for both men and women., (Copyright © 2021. Published by Elsevier Inc.)
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- 2021
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8. Negative affect and alcohol craving in trauma-exposed young adult drinkers.
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Berenz EC, Edalatian Zakeri S, Demos AP, Paltell KC, Bing-Canar H, Kevorkian S, and Ranney R
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- Adaptation, Psychological, Adolescent, Adult, Alcohol Drinking epidemiology, Alcoholism epidemiology, Cues, Female, Humans, Male, Salivation, Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic epidemiology, Young Adult, Alcohol Drinking psychology, Alcoholism psychology, Craving physiology, Reinforcement, Psychology, Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic psychology
- Abstract
Background: Clinical research indicates that successful posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) treatment does not lead to improvements in alcohol use outcomes in comorbid PTSD and alcohol use disorder (AUD). Emerging theory suggests that treating PTSD may not disrupt an association between negative affect and alcohol craving, which underlies negative reinforcement drinking. The goal of the current study was to determine the respective influences of PTSD symptoms, coping motives, and negative affect on trauma and alcohol cue reactivity to inform theoretical models of co-occurring PTSD and AUD., Methods: The sample consisted of 189 young adults (50.3% women; 49.2% current PTSD; 84.0% current AUD) who endorsed interpersonal trauma (e.g., sexual/physical assault) and current weekly alcohol use. Participants completed a trauma and alcohol cue reactivity assessment, in which subjective (e.g., craving, affect) and physiological (i.e., salivation) measures were recorded in response to 4 narrative (i.e., personalized trauma or standard neutral) and in vivo beverage (i.e., personalized alcohol or water) cue combinations., Results: Forward-fitted linear mixed-effects (LME) models confirmed that trauma cue-elicited craving was elevated among those high but not low in PTSD symptoms, consistent with prior research and theory. Trauma cue-elicited craving was fully explained by increases in negative affect, with no evidence of a direct effect of trauma cue on craving. PTSD symptoms moderated an association between trauma cue and negative affect (but not negative affect and craving), and coping motives for alcohol moderated an association between negative affect and craving (but not trauma cue and negative affect)., Conclusions: This study provides novel laboratory evidence for the respective contributions of negative affect, PTSD symptoms, and coping motives on alcohol craving in trauma-exposed drinkers. It offers a methodological framework in which to evaluate novel strategies that aim to disrupt negative reinforcement drinking in individuals with co-occurring PTSD and AUD., (© 2021 by the Research Society on Alcoholism.)
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- 2021
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9. Anxiety Mediates the Link Between Psychopathy and Aggression in NGRI Acquittees.
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Thomson ND, Kevorkian S, Galusha C, Wheeler EMA, and Ingram L
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- Anxiety, Anxiety Disorders, Humans, Violence, Aggression, Antisocial Personality Disorder
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Psychopathy has been long associated with anxiety, and anxiety has been argued to play an important role in psychopathy-related behaviors, such as aggression. However, these associations have not yet been explored in Not Guilty by Reason of Insanity (NGRI) Acquittees. The goals of the present study were to test the correlations between the 4-facet psychopathy construct and anxiety, and to assess whether anxiety mediates the association between psychopathy and aggression. In a sample of 81 NGRI acquittees, anxiety was positively related to the lifestyle facet. When testing the mediating role of anxiety on the psychopathy-aggression link, the results showed that low anxiety mediated the link between the interpersonal facet and aggression. By contrast, high anxiety mediated the link between the lifestyle facet and aggression. These results highlight the disparate associations between specific psychopathy features and anxiety in predicting aggressive behavior. The present findings demonstrate that violence reduction strategies may need to become more tailored to individual needs when it comes to reducing risk among people with varying levels of psychopathic traits and serious mental illness.
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- 2021
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10. Drinking Patterns of Post-Deployment Veterans: The Role of Personality, Negative Urgency, and Posttraumatic Stress.
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Brown RC, Mortensen J, Hawn SE, Bountress K, Chowdhury N, Kevorkian S, McDonald SD, Pickett T, Danielson CK, Thomas S, and Amstadter AB
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Rates of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and alcohol misuse are known to be high among post-deployment Veterans. Previous research has found that personality factors may be relevant predictors of post-deployment drinking, yet results have been inconsistent and may be influenced by the selection of drinking outcome. This study aimed to examine relations between PTSD, negative urgency, and the five factor models of personality with multiple alcohol consumption patterns, including maximum drinks in a day, number of binge drinking episodes, at-risk drinking, and average weekly drinks in a sample of 397 Operation Enduring Freedom/Operation Iraqi Freedom/Operation New Dawn (OEF/OIF/OND) Veterans. The pattern of results suggested that the association between personality, PTSD, and drinking may depend on which drinking outcome is selected. For example, maximum drinks in a day was significantly associated with younger age, male gender, low agreeableness, and an interaction between negative urgency and PTSD, whereas number of binge drinking days was significantly associated with younger age, extraversion, low agreeableness, and negative urgency. This study highlights the heterogeneity of drinking patterns among Veterans and the need for careful consideration and transparency of outcomes selection in alcohol research., Competing Interests: We have no known conflict of interest to disclose.
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- 2021
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11. Examination of the effects of impulsivity and risk-taking propensity on alcohol use in OEF/OIF/OND Veterans.
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Hawn SE, Chowdhury N, Kevorkian S, Sheth D, Brown RC, Berenz E, McDonald S, Pickett T, Danielson CK, Thomas S, and Amstadter AB
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Introduction: A strong association between posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and problematic alcohol use has been demonstrated among Veteran populations exposed to combat trauma. Several traits, such as higher levels of risk-taking propensity (RTP) and impulsivity (e.g., negative urgency [NU]), are associated with both increased PTSD symptom-atology and greater alcohol use problems., Methods: The present study examined the effects of NU and RTP on alcohol use (measured by average weekly alcohol consumption and number of binge drinking days in 1 month), as well as their potential moderating effects on the association between PTSD symptom severity and alcohol use in a sample of Operation Enduring Freedom/Operation Iraqi Freedom/Operation New Dawn (OEF/OIF/OND) US Veterans. We hypothesized that NU and RTP would both significantly predict alcohol use and moderate the relation between PTSD symptom severity and alcohol use, such that the association between PTSD symptoms and alcohol use would be greater among individuals high compared to low in NU and RTP., Results: As hypothesized, the main effects of RTP and NU were significantly positively associated with average weekly alcohol consumption and the number of binge drinking days in the past month. However, neither NU nor RTP moderated the relation between PTSD and either alcohol variable., Discussion: NU and RTP may represent transdiagnostic risk markers for PTSD and alcohol use problems; however, the current study did not support an exploratory role of NU or RTP in the association between PTSD and alcohol use phenotypes., Competing Interests: COMPETING INTERESTS None declared.
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- 2019
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12. Childhood trauma and distress tolerance in a trauma-exposed acute-care psychiatric inpatient sample.
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Berenz EC, Vujanovic AA, Rappaport L, Kevorkian S, Gonzalez RE, Chowdhury N, Dutcher CD, Dick DM, Kendler KS, and Amstadter AB
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- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Hospitalization, Humans, Inpatients psychology, Male, Middle Aged, Retrospective Studies, Young Adult, Adult Survivors of Child Adverse Events psychology, Mental Disorders psychology, Mental Disorders therapy, Resilience, Psychological
- Abstract
Objective: Distress tolerance (DT; the perceived or actual ability to withstand negative internal states) has emerged as a promising transdiagnostic risk factor in clinically severe populations. However, little is known about etiological factors associated with the development of DT. We hypothesized that greater levels of childhood trauma would be associated with lower perceived and behavioral DT, beyond theoretically relevant covariates., Method: The current investigation evaluated several childhood trauma types (i.e., physical abuse, sexual abuse, emotional abuse, physical neglect, and emotional neglect) in relation to perceived (i.e., self-report) and behavioral DT in a sample of 87 trauma-exposed adults in acute-care psychiatric inpatient treatment., Results: Results of hierarchical linear regression models indicated that greater childhood physical abuse and emotional neglect were significantly associated with higher perceived DT. Greater levels of emotional abuse were associated with lower perceived DT, and greater physical neglect was associated with lower behavioral DT., Conclusions: DT may be differentially influenced by different forms of childhood trauma. (PsycINFO Database Record, ((c) 2018 APA, all rights reserved).)
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- 2018
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13. A Multimodal Study of Childhood Trauma and Distress Tolerance in Young Adulthood.
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Berenz EC, Vujanovic A, Rappaport LM, Kevorkian S, Gonzalez RE, Chowdhury N, Dutcher C, Dick DM, Kendler KS, and Amstadter A
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Individuals with a history of childhood trauma experience deficits in emotion regulation. However, few studies have investigated childhood trauma and both perceived (i.e., self-report) and behavioral measures of distress tolerance. The current study evaluated associations between childhood trauma (i.e., physical abuse, sexual abuse, and witnessing family violence) and measures of perceived (Distress Tolerance Scale) and behavioral distress tolerance (i.e., Paced Auditory Serial Addition Test, breath-holding). Participants were 320 undergraduate students with a history of interpersonal trauma (e.g., sexual/physical assault). Structural equation modeling was used to evaluate associations between frequency of childhood trauma type and distress tolerance. Greater childhood physical abuse was associated with higher perceived distress tolerance. Greater levels of witnessing family violence were associated with lower behavioral distress tolerance on the breath-holding task. No significant effects were found for Paced Auditory Serial Addition Test performance. Associations between childhood trauma and emotion regulation likely are complex and warrant further study., Competing Interests: Disclosure statement No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.
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- 2018
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14. Adiponectin expression in visceral adiposity is an important determinant of insulin resistance in morbid obesity.
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Sirbu AE, Buburuzan L, Kevorkian S, Martin S, Barbu C, Copaescu C, Smeu B, and Fica S
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- Adiponectin blood, Adult, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Gene Expression Regulation, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Obesity, Morbid blood, Obesity, Morbid physiopathology, RNA, Messenger, Uric Acid blood, Adiponectin genetics, Insulin Resistance, Intra-Abdominal Fat metabolism, Obesity, Morbid metabolism
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Introduction: Visceral adiposity is associated with decreased serum adiponectin levels, peripheral resistance to insulin and an increased risk of cardio-metabolic complications. However, the link between adiponectin expression in visceral adipose tissue (VAT), its serum levels and metabolic protection is controversial. The aim of this study was to investigate the relationship between the adiponectin gene expression in VAT and clinical and metabolic parameters in patients with severe obesity., Material and Methods: This is a cross-sectional study that included 51 severely obese patients (age 43.24±11.29 years, BMI 45.13±8.67 kg/m2), extensively evaluated clinically and biologically (metabolic tests, serum adiponectin measurements, HOMA-IR) before bariatric surgery. Omental adipose tissue was sampled during the intervention and the relative quantification of adiponectin gene expression was performed by real-time PCR, using beta-actin as reference gene., Results: Adiponectin mRNA in VAT was significantly higher in obese insulin-sensitive patients than in the rest of obese patients (p < 0.05) and negatively correlated with HOMA-IR (r =-0.354, p=0.016) and uric acid (r =-0.304, p=0.045). After adjustment for gender, TG/HDL ratio and uric acid, adiponectin expresion (β= -0.439, p=0.001), waist circumference (β=0.467, p=0.001) and serum adiponectin (β =-0.339, p=0.011) remained significantly associated with HOMA-IR, together explaining more than 50% of its variation., Conclusions: In severely obese patients, adiponectin gene expression in VAT is negatively correlated with serum levels of uric acid and is an independent determinant, together with anthropometric parameters of visceral obesity and serum adiponectin levels, of insulin resistance.
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- 2018
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15. Associations Between Personality and Distress Tolerance Among Trauma-Exposed Young Adults.
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Chowdhury N, Kevorkian S, Hawn SE, Amstadter AB, Dick D, Kendler KS, and Berenz EC
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Low distress tolerance (DT) is related to negative mental health outcomes, particularly among trauma-exposed populations, who are at greater risk for mental health problems. However, little is known about potential etiological factors underlying the development of perceived (i.e., self-report) or behaviorally assessed DT. The present study examined associations between Big Five personality factors (i.e., openness, conscientiousness, extraversion, agreeableness, & neuroticism) and multiple measures of DT. Participants were 440 college students (71.4% women) endorsing a history of one or more potentially traumatic events. Participants completed the abbreviated Big Five Inventory (BFI), Distress Tolerance Scale (DTS), Discomfort Intolerance Scale (DIS), breath-holding task, and Paced Auditory Serial Addition Test (PASAT). Results of a series of hierarchical linear regressions indicated that higher levels of neuroticism and lower levels of conscientiousness were significantly associated with lower DTS scores, but no other DT measures. Greater extraversion was significantly associated with greater DT on the DIS and the PASAT. Lower levels of openness were associated with lower DT on the breath-holding task. Individual differences in normal personality traits account for significant variation in multiple measures of DT and may provide insight into the etiology of various forms of DT.
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- 2018
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16. Posttraumatic stress disorder symptoms, anxiety sensitivity, and alcohol-use motives in college students with a history of interpersonal trauma.
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Berenz EC, Kevorkian S, Chowdhury N, Dick DM, Kendler KS, and Amstadter AB
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- Fear, Female, Humans, Life Change Events, Male, Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic psychology, Students psychology, Surveys and Questionnaires, Adaptation, Psychological physiology, Alcohol Drinking psychology, Anxiety psychology, Motivation, Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic diagnosis
- Abstract
Posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) symptoms are associated with coping-motivated alcohol use in trauma-exposed samples. However, it is unclear which individuals experiencing PTSD symptoms are at greatest risk for alcohol-use problems following trauma exposure. Individuals endorsing high anxiety sensitivity, which is the fear of anxiety and related sensations, may be particularly motivated to use alcohol to cope with PTSD symptoms. In the current study, we examined the moderating role of anxiety sensitivity in the association between PTSD symptoms and coping motives in a sample of 295 young adults with a history of interpersonal trauma and current alcohol use. Participants completed measures of past 30-day alcohol consumption, trauma history, current PTSD symptoms, anxiety sensitivity, and alcohol-use motives. Results of hierarchical multiple regression analyses indicated that greater anxiety sensitivity was significantly associated with greater coping (β = .219) and conformity (β = .156) alcohol-use motives, and greater PTSD symptoms were associated with greater coping motives (β = .247), above and beyond the covariates of sex, alcohol consumption, trauma load, and noncriterion alcohol-use motives. The interaction of anxiety sensitivity and PTSD symptoms accounted for additional variance in coping motives above and beyond the main effects (β = .117), with greater PTSD symptoms being associated with greater coping motives among those high but not low in anxiety sensitivity. Assessment and treatment of PTSD symptoms and anxiety sensitivity in young adults with interpersonal trauma may be warranted as a means of decreasing alcohol-related risk in trauma-exposed young adults. (PsycINFO Database Record, ((c) 2016 APA, all rights reserved).)
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- 2016
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17. Associations among trauma, posttraumatic stress disorder, cannabis use, and cannabis use disorder in a nationally representative epidemiologic sample.
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Kevorkian S, Bonn-Miller MO, Belendiuk K, Carney DM, Roberson-Nay R, and Berenz EC
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- Adult, Aged, Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Substance-Related Disorders epidemiology, Surveys and Questionnaires, United States epidemiology, Marijuana Abuse epidemiology, Marijuana Smoking epidemiology, Psychological Trauma epidemiology, Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic epidemiology
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Research in community and clinical samples has documented elevated rates of cannabis use and cannabis use disorders (CUDs) among individuals with trauma exposure and posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). However, there is a lack of research investigating relations between, and correlates of, trauma and cannabis phenotypes in epidemiologic samples. The current study examined associations between trauma (i.e., lifetime trauma exposure and PTSD) and cannabis phenotypes (i.e., lifetime cannabis use and CUD) in a nationally representative sample. Participants were individuals who participated in Waves 1 and 2 of the National Epidemiologic Survey on Alcohol and Related Conditions (n = 34,396; 52.4% women; age, M = 48.0 years, SD = 16.9). Lifetime DSM-IV Criterion A trauma exposure was significantly associated with lifetime cannabis use (OR = 1.215) but was only marginally associated with CUD (OR = 0.997). Within the trauma-exposed sample, lifetime PTSD showed a significant association with CUD (OR = 1.217) but was only marginally associated with lifetime cannabis use (OR = 0.992). Partially consistent with hypotheses, lifetime trauma was associated with greater odds of lifetime cannabis use, whereas PTSD was associated with greater odds of CUD. Longitudinal research investigating patterns of onset of these events/disorders is needed., ((c) 2015 APA, all rights reserved).)
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- 2015
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18. Type-I prenyl protease function is required in the male germline of Drosophila melanogaster.
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Adolphsen K, Amell A, Havko N, Kevorkian S, Mears K, Neher H, Schwarz D, and Schulze SR
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Many proteins require the addition of a hydrophobic prenyl anchor (prenylation) for proper trafficking and localization in the cell. Prenyl proteases play critical roles in modifying proteins for membrane anchorage. The type I prenyl protease has a defined function in yeast (Ste24p/Afc1p) where it modifies a mating pheromone, and in humans (Zmpste24) where it has been implicated in a disease of premature aging. Despite these apparently very different biological processes, the type I prenyl protease gene is highly conserved, encoded by a single gene in a wide range of animal and plant groups. A notable exception is Drosophila melanogaster, where the gene encoding the type I prenyl protease has undergone an unprecedented series of duplications in the genome, resulting in five distinct paralogs, three of which are organized in a tandem array, and demonstrate high conservation, particularly in the vicinity of the active site of the enzyme. We have undertaken targeted deletion to remove the three tandem paralogs from the genome. The result is a male fertility defect, manifesting late in spermatogenesis. Our results also show that the ancestral type I prenyl protease gene in Drosophila is under strong purifying selection, while the more recent replicates are evolving rapidly. Our rescue data support a role for the rapidly evolving tandem paralogs in the male germline. We propose that potential targets for the male-specific type I prenyl proteases include proteins involved in the very dramatic cytoskeletal remodeling events required for spermatid maturation.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
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