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These findings expand the epigenetic regulatory mechanism of porcine miR-31 and miR-20b in ovarian GCs.

To describe the prevalence of various circadian blood pressure patterns in adults recovering from abdominal surgery, and to evaluate the association between loss of normal circadian variation in blood pressure and hypotension during the initial 2 postoperative days.

A post-hoc analysis of data obtained from two randomized trials.

Operating rooms of the Cleveland Clinic.

Adults having abdominal surgery from 2015 to 2019 with at least one overnight stay. Participants were continuously monitored by wearable vital signs monitors starting in the post-anesthesia care unit and for the first 48 postoperative hours.

None. The exposure of interest was the degree of nocturnal decrease in blood pressure - normal nocturnal decrease in blood pressure ("normal dipping", more than 10% decrease compared to day-time), no nocturnal decrease ("non-dipping", less than 10% nocturnal decrease), or nocturnal increase in blood pressure ("rising").

Postoperative hypotension, defined by the time weighted average (TWA) area normal night-time decrease in blood pressure is associated with less postoperative hypotension. Future studies should evaluate whether abnormal postoperative diurnal blood pressure patterns are associated with worse outcomes.Host silencing of transposable elements (TEs) is critical to prevent genome damage and inappropriate inflammation. However, new evidence suggests that a virus-infected host may re-activate TEs and co-opt them for antiviral defense. RNA-Seq and specialized bioinformatics have revealed the diversity of virus infections that induce TEs. Furthermore, studies with influenza virus have uncovered how infection-triggered changes to the SUMOylation of TRIM28, an epigenetic co-repressor, lead to TE de-repression. Importantly, there is a growing appreciation of how de-repressed TEs stimulate antiviral gene expression, either via cis-acting enhancer functions or via their recognition as viral mimetics by innate immune nucleic acid sensors (e.g. RIG-I, mda-5 and cGAS). Understanding how viruses trigger, and counteract, TE-based antiviral immunity should provide insights into pathogenic mechanisms.There is a long and productive progression of X-ray crystallographic and electron microscopy studies establishing the structures of the spherical/icosahedral and cylindrical/helical capsids of a wide range of virus particles. This is because of the high degree of order - down to the Angstrom scale - in the secondary/tertiary/quaternary structure of the proteins making up the capsids. In stark contradistinction, very little is known about the structure of DNA or RNA genomes inside these capsids. This is because of the relatively large extent of disorder in the confined DNA or RNA, due to several fundamental reasons topological defects in the DNA case, and secondary/tertiary structural disorder in the RNA case. In this article we discuss the range of partial order associated with the encapsidated genomes of single-stranded RNA viruses, focusing on the contrast between mono-partite and multi-partite viruses and on the effects of sequence-specific and non-specific interactions between RNA and capsid proteins.

We examined the association of chronic liver disease with cognition and brain imaging markers of cognitive impairment using data from two large randomized controlled trials that included participants based on diabetes and hypertension, two common systemic risk factors for cognitive impairment and dementia.

We performed post hoc analyses using data from the Action to Control Cardiovascular Risk in Diabetes (ACCORD) and Systolic Blood Pressure Intervention Trial (SPRINT) studies, which included participants with diabetes and hypertension, respectively. Data were from the NHLBI Biologic Specimen and Data Repository Information Coordinating Center. selleck products In ACCORD, our measure of chronic liver disease was the Dallas Steatosis Index (DSI). In SPRINT, we used self-reported chronic liver disease. We used linear regression to evaluate the association between the measure of chronic liver disease and both baseline and longitudinal cognitive test performance and brain magnetic resonance imaging volume measurements.

Among 2969 diabetic participants in ACCORD, the mean age of participants was 62years, 47% were women. The median DSI was 1.0 (IQR, 0.2-1.8); a DSI of 1.0 corresponds to approximately a>70% probability of having NAFLD. Among 2890 hypertensive participants in SPRINT, the mean age was 68years, and 37% were women, and 60 (2.1%) had chronic liver disease. There were no consistent associations between liver disease and cognitive performance or brain volumes at baseline or longitudinally after adjustment.

Markers of chronic liver disease were not associated with cognitive impairment or related brain imaging markers among individuals with diabetes and hypertension.

Markers of chronic liver disease were not associated with cognitive impairment or related brain imaging markers among individuals with diabetes and hypertension.Black Americans who consume alcohol experience negative alcohol-related outcomes, indicating a need to identify psycho-sociocultural factors that may play a role in drinking and related problems to inform prevention and treatment. Although lower levels of ethnic-racial identity (ERI) are related to negative drinking outcomes, this is the first known test of whether psychological distress and drinking to cope with distress play a role in these relations. Participants were 155 Black current drinking undergraduates at a racially/ethnically diverse university. ERI was significantly, negatively correlated with drinking frequency, drinking problems, coping motivated drinking, depression, and social anxiety. ERI was unrelated to drinking quantity. ERI was indirectly related to drinking and related problems via the sequential effects of depression and coping motivated drinking, but not via depression or coping motives alone. ERI was indirectly related to drinking via the sequential effects of social anxiety and coping motivated drinking, and indirectly related to drinking problems via social anxiety but not via coping motives alone. In line with minority stress-based models, ERI is related to less negative drinking outcomes (less frequent drinking, fewer problems) via less psychological distress (depression, social anxiety) and less coping motivated drinking. Also, social anxiety was robustly related to drinking frequency and problems among Black drinkers, a group that has been underrepresented in the social anxiety-drinking literature. This finding indicates that anxiety about social situations may play an especially important role in drinking behaviors in this group.Addiction is a complex biopsychosocial phenomenon, impacted by biological predispositions, psychological processes, and the social environment. Using mathematical and computational models that allow for surrogative reasoning may be a promising avenue for gaining a deeper understanding of this complex behavior. This paper reviews and classifies a selection of formal models of addiction focusing on the intra- and inter-individual dynamics, i.e., (neuro) psychological models and social models. We find that these modeling approaches to addiction are too disjoint and argue that in order to unravel the complexities of biopsychosocial processes of addiction, models should integrate intra- and inter-individual factors.

We conducted a scoping review focused on various forms of substance use amid the pandemic, looking at both the impact of substance use on COVID-19 infection, severity, and vaccine uptake, as well as the impact that COVID-19 has had on substance use treatment and rates.

A scoping review, compiling both peer-reviewed and grey literature, focusing on substance use and COVID-19 was conducted on September 15, 2020 and again in April 15, 2021 to capture any new studies. Three bibliographic databases (Web of Science Core Collection, Embase, PubMed) and several preprint servers (EuropePMC, bioRxiv, medRxiv, F1000, PeerJ Preprints, PsyArXiv, Research Square) were searched. We included English language original studies only.

Of 1564 articles screened in the abstract and title screening phase, we included 111 research studies (peer-reviewed 98, grey literature 13) that met inclusion criteria. There was limited research on substance use other than those involving tobacco or alcohol. We noted that individuals engagi The funding body had no role in the design, analysis, or interpretation of the data in the study.

Study was funded by the Institution for Social and Policy Studies, Yale University and The Horowitz Foundation for Social Policy. DH was funded by a NIDA grant (R01DA048860). The funding body had no role in the design, analysis, or interpretation of the data in the study.

The study identified groups of JUUL using young adults based on their use patterns and compared harm perceptions, JUUL dependence, and other tobacco product use among these groups.

Online cross-sectional survey data were gathered in March 2019 from 667 undergraduate students who used JUUL weekly (50.4% females, average age 20.3years) at a southwest U.S. university.

Latent class analysis identified four groups of young adults who used JUUL 1) Light Social JUUL Using Young Adults (LS, 52.5%) who used JUUL occasionally with friends when drinking alcohol, 2) Daily Sensation Seekers (DSS, 16.2%) who used JUUL daily with alcohol, 3) Daily Activity Driven JUUL Using Young Adults (DAD, 26.0%) who used JUUL daily while drinking, watching media, or studying, and 4) Daily All Occasion JUUL Using Young Adults (DAO, 5.3%) who used JUUL heavily, daily and in various occasions. While all four groups reported some extent of JUUL dependence, DAO reported the highest dependence and were more likely than LS to have used cigarettes and other e-cigarettes besides JUUL. They also tended to believe different pod flavors could cause different types of lung damage while the other groups were unsure/disagreed with this belief. LS were more likely than DSS and DAD to believe that JUUL use indicated openness to new experiences.

Young adults with different JUUL use patterns perceived JUUL harms differently and faced varied risks of JUUL dependence and other tobacco product use. Effective cessation interventions should be adapted to meet the needs of these groups.

Young adults with different JUUL use patterns perceived JUUL harms differently and faced varied risks of JUUL dependence and other tobacco product use. Effective cessation interventions should be adapted to meet the needs of these groups.

The Cannabis Use Disorders Identification Test - Revised (CUDIT-R) is a broadly employed measure of cannabis-related problems. However, minimal research has tested the measurement invariance of the CUDIT-R among youths from different countries, hindering cross-national comparisons. Thus, the present study aimed to test the measurement invariance of the CUDIT-R between seven countries and gender groups, and provide different sources of reliability and validity evidence of the scale.

A sample of 4,712 college student lifetime cannabis users (mean age=20.57, SD=3.97; 70.4% females) from seven countries completed the CUDIT-R. Last 30-day cannabis users (n=2402; mean age=20.09, SD=3.18; 67.7% females) additionally completed another measure of cannabis-related problems, and measures of cannabis frequency, quantity and motives.

Multigroup analysis showed configural (equal number of factors and pattern of factor-indicator relationships), metric (equal factor loadings) and scalar (equal thresholds) invariance of the CUDIT-R across five countries and across gender in the sample of lifetime cannabis users.

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