Health-related quality of life (HRQoL) can be reduced in parents with mental illness (mental illness) who face the dual demands of disabling symptoms and their impact on family, social, and occupational life. This study aimed at analyzing the influence of various factors on HRQoL in parents with mental illness. Baseline data of the German randomized controlled multicenter project CHIMPS (children of parents with mental illness) was used for analyses.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe relevance of coping behavior for the individual's own mental health has been widely investigated. However, research on the association between coping of parents with a mental illness and their children's mental health is scarce. In the current study, we address the role of several parental coping strategies and their relation to child psychological symptoms.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF(1) Background: Health-related quality of life (HRQoL) is frequently reduced in children of parents with a mental illness (COPMI). Child self- and parent proxy-ratings vary with raters' characteristics and facets of HRQoL. This study aimed at analyzing risk and protective factors associated with HRQoL in COPMI, and at examining the magnitude, direction, and predictors of child-parent agreement.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: This study was initiated to evaluate the cardiovascular benefit of perioperative use of acetylsalicylic acid (ASA) in patients undergoing carotid surgery.
Patients And Methods: A prospective two-arm comparative study was conducted and focused on cardiac, neurological and bleeding complications for patients with high-grade (> 80 %) asymptomatic or symptomatic (> 60 %), internal carotid artery stenosis based on NASCET criteria who were treated by surgery. Between March 2008 and November 2010, 540 patients underwent carotid endarterectomy in two European vascular centers.
The underlying mechanisms controlling food intake and satiety are thoroughly controlled, but seem to be insufficient under conditions of almost unlimited food supply. Hence, overweight and obesity are serious problems especially in industrialized countries. To assess the possible influence of CD26, exerting a dipeptidyl peptidase activity (DPP4) cleaving several energy homeostasis-relevant peptides, we investigated wild type and DPP4-deficient dark agouti rats in a model of diet-induced obesity and found a reduced weight gain in DPP4-deficient rats.
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