Publications by authors named "Ida Karlsson"

Background: Air pollution in later life has been associated with dementia; however, limited research has investigated the association between air pollution across the life course, either at specific life periods or cumulatively. The project investigates the association of air pollution with dementia via a life-course epidemiological approach.

Methods: Participants of the Lothian Birth Cohort, born in 1936, provided lifetime residential history in 2014.

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Introduction: An earlier age of menopause (AOM) is hypothesized to increase vulnerability to the neuropathological processes of dementia which begin in midlife.

Methods: We tested this hypothesis in a sample of 10,832 women from the Swedish Twin Registry, stratified by menopause etiology. Survival models showed that a U-shaped association was present for women whose menopause occurred spontaneously.

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Background: Problem-solving interventions with workplace involvement (PSI-WPI) have been shown to reduce sick leave and increase return to work in an occupational health services context. However, many employees struggle with reduced work functioning, anxiety-, and depressive symptoms up to 12 months after a sick leave episode, and it is unclear if the intervention affects outcomes other than sick leave. The aim of this study is to investigate if a PSI-WPI added to care as usual (CAU) is superior to CAU with respect to self-reported sick leave, psychological symptoms, work ability, work performance, and health after RTW when provided in primary care.

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  • About 10%-30% of obese individuals are considered metabolically healthy (MHO), but the traits that define this group compared to those with metabolically unhealthy obesity (MUO) are not well understood.
  • The study analyzed data from over 9,800 individuals with obesity, looking at factors like physical activity, education, depressive symptoms, and genetic predisposition related to BMI to see how they differ between MHO and MUO.
  • Findings showed that MHO individuals had better physical activity levels, education, and lower depressive symptoms than MUO individuals, but these factors did not predict whether MHO individuals would become metabolically unhealthy over four years, although a higher genetic predisposition for BMI suggested a potential for stability in M
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  • Psychological resilience is defined as the ability to cope with and adapt to difficult life situations.
  • This study analyzes data from over 10,000 US adults aged 50 and older to explore how psychological resilience relates to all-cause mortality, using models that account for various health factors.
  • Findings indicate that higher psychological resilience is linked to a lower risk of death, suggesting it plays a protective role in overall health and well-being among older adults.
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  • * A cluster-randomised trial involved 197 employees, with results analyzed using generalized estimating equations due to skewed sickness absence data.
  • * Findings showed no significant difference in sickness absence days between those receiving PSI-WPI (median 78 days) and those receiving standard care (median 64 days), suggesting additional factors in the health care system may limit effectiveness.
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Diabetes mellitus type 2 (T2D) is associated with accelerated biological aging and the increased risk of onset of other age-related diseases. Epigenetic changes in DNA methylation levels have been found to serve as reliable biomarkers for biological aging. This study explores the relationship between various epigenetic biomarkers of aging and diabetes risk using longitudinal data.

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The COVID-19 pandemic highlighted the need for a rapid, convenient, and scalable diagnostic method for detecting a novel pathogen amidst a global pandemic. While command-line interface tools offer automation for SARS-CoV-2 Oxford Nanopore Technology sequencing data analysis, they are inapplicable to users with limited programming skills. A solution is to establish such automated workflows within a graphical user interface software.

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Roots play a pivotal role in the adaption of a plant to its environment, with different root traits adapting the plant to different stresses. The environment affects the Root System Architecture (RSA), but the genetic factors determine to what extent, and whether stress brought about by extreme environmental conditions is detrimental to a specific crop. This study aimed to identify differences in winter wheat RSA caused by cultivation region and practice, in the form of preceding crop (precrop), and to identify if modern cultivars used in Sweden differ in their reaction to these environments.

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Antihypertensive, lipid-lowering, and blood glucose-lowering drugs have slowed down the aging process in animal models. In humans, studies are limited, have short follow-up times, and show mixed results. Therefore, this study aimed to estimate the effects of commonly used medications on functional aging, cognitive function, and frailty.

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Epigenetics plays an important role in the aging process, but it is unclear whether epigenetic factors also influence frailty, an age-related state of physiological decline. In this study, we performed a meta-analysis of epigenome-wide association studies in four samples drawn from the Swedish Adoption/Twin Study of Aging (SATSA) and the Longitudinal Study of Aging Danish Twins (LSADT) to explore the association between DNA methylation and frailty. Frailty was defined using the frailty index (FI), and DNA methylation levels were measured in whole blood using Illumina's Infinium HumanMethylation450K and MethylationEPIC arrays.

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Objective: To examine the associations of excessive daytime sleepiness (EDS) and probable rapid eye movement sleep behavior disorder (pRBD), respectively, with impulsive-compulsive behaviors (ICBs) over a 5-year follow-up in patients with early Parkinson's disease (PD).

Methods: The Parkinson's Progression Markers Initiative is a multicenter cohort study based on an ongoing and open-ended registry. Longitudinal associations of sleep disorders with ICB over 5-year follow-up visits were estimated using generalized linear mixed-effects models among PD participants.

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Purpose: This study aims to explore ethical challenges potentially arising from a problem-solving intervention with workplace involvement (PSI-WPI) in primary health care (with first-line manager involvement) for employees on sickness absence due to common mental disorders.

Methods: A qualitative design guided by the theoretical framework for systematic identification of ethical aspects of healthcare technologies. Semi-structured interviews were performed with coordinators ( = 6), employees ( = 13), and first-line managers ( = 8).

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  • Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and interstitial lung disease (ILD) are associated with shorter telomere length (TL), but previous research primarily focused on European populations, making this study relevant for an Asian demographic.
  • The study aimed to analyze the causal relationship between leukocyte TL and the risk of developing COPD and ILD in a sample of Japanese individuals, using data from the Biobank Japan Project.
  • Results indicated a significant inverse relationship, suggesting that shorter leukocyte TL may causally increase the risk of COPD (OR = 0.78) and ILD (OR = 0.29), emphasizing the potential relevance of TL in respiratory diseases.
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Obesity and metabolic syndrome (MetS) share common pathophysiological characteristics with aging. To better understand their interplay, we examined how body mass index (BMI) and MetS jointly associate with physiological age, and if the associations changed from midlife to late-life. We used longitudinal data from 1,825 Swedish twins.

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Introduction: Dementia predicts increased mortality. We used case-control and co-twin control models to investigate genetic and shared environmental influences on this association.

Methods: Case-control design, including 987 twins with dementia and 2938 age- and sex-matched controls in the Swedish Twin Registry.

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  • The study explores the relationship between body mass index (BMI) and metabolic health in 786 Swedish twins over a period of up to 27 years, focusing on how these factors change from midlife to late-life.
  • It found that while obesity is associated with a higher risk of developing metabolic syndrome (MetS) as individuals age, a significant portion of those with metabolically healthy overweight or obesity maintained their status across different age groups.
  • The research concluded that individuals can experience shifts in metabolic health status regardless of their BMI category, highlighting that many can regain metabolic health even after experiencing MetS.
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Background: DNA methylation-derived epigenetic clocks and frailty are well-established biological age measures capturing different aging processes. However, whether they are dynamically linked to each other across chronological age remains poorly understood.

Methods: This analysis included 1 309 repeated measurements in 524 individuals aged 50-90 years from the Swedish Adoption/Twin Study of Aging.

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Objectives: The educational gradient in late-life health is well established. Despite this, there are still ambiguities concerning the role of underlying confounding by genetic influences and gene-environment (GE) interplay. Here, we investigate the role of educational factors (attained and genetic propensities) on health and mortality in late life using genetic propensity for educational attainment (as measured by a genome-wide polygenic score, PGSEdu) and attained education.

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  • The study aimed to investigate the relationship between psychological resilience and DNA methylation age, using data from 4,018 participants in the Health and Retirement Study.
  • Researchers applied multivariable linear regression models to examine this association, controlling for factors like age, sex, and education.
  • Results indicated that higher psychological resilience scores were linked to slower DNA methylation age acceleration across most epigenetic clocks, suggesting greater resilience may correlate with slower biological aging.
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Age is a dominant risk factor for some of the most common neurological diseases. Biological ageing encompasses interindividual variation in the rate of ageing and can be calculated from clinical biomarkers or DNA methylation data amongst other approaches. Here, we tested the hypothesis that a biological age greater than one's chronological age affects the risk of future neurological diagnosis and the development of abnormal signs on clinical examination.

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Background: Work-directed interventions that include problem-solving can reduce the number of sickness absence days. The effect of combining a problem-solving intervention with involvement of the employer is currently being tested in primary care in Sweden for employees on sickness absence due to common mental disorders (PROSA trial). The current study is part of the PROSA trial and has a two-fold aim: 1) to explore the experiences of participating in a problem-solving intervention with workplace involvement aimed at reducing sickness absence in employees with common mental disorders, delivered in Swedish primary health care, and 2) to identify facilitators of and barriers to participate in the intervention.

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  • The study investigates how obesity affects cardiovascular disease (CVD) differently based on genetic and environmental influences, using data from Swedish twins.
  • Participants were categorized by genetically predicted body mass index (BMI) and analyzed for CVD risk using statistical models, focusing on individuals aged 40 or older.
  • Results showed that midlife obesity raised CVD risk across all genetic categories, but those with genetically determined lower BMI faced a higher risk than those with higher genetically predicted BMI, suggesting environmental factors play a significant role in obesity's health impacts.
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Background: Brain tumours are the leading cause of cancer-related death in children, and there is no effective treatment. A growing body of evidence points to deregulated epigenetics as a tumour driver, particularly in paediatric cancers as they have relatively few genomic alterations, and key driver mutations have been identified in histone 3 (H3). Cancer stem cells (CSC) are implicated in tumour development, relapse and therapy resistance and thus particularly important to target.

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