Publications by authors named "Kathleen A OʼConnor"

Adolescents' use of online resources to self-manage anxiety is growing. The objective of the current trial was to assess the effectiveness of an online, primarily self-led cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) program in reducing anxiety symptoms compared to an active comparator, access to anxiety resources on a static website. A total of 563 adolescents (13-19 years) with self-identified anxiety concerns were enrolled.

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  • Japan continues to face low fertility rates, with this study investigating factors like coital frequency, age, and BMI on pregnancy chances among hormonally monitored women aged 23-34 trying to conceive their first child.
  • In a sample of 80 participants, only 44% successfully conceived naturally within 24 weeks, while after two years, 74% had either delivered or were pregnant, with some seeking fertility treatments.
  • The findings indicate that increasing coital frequency could lead to higher natural conception rates, but the overall low conception and coital rates in the study highlight the need for further research into the underlying reasons for low fertility in this motivated group.
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We retrospectively studied the effect of introducing procalcitonin into clinical practice on antibiotic use within a large academic pediatric intensive care unit. In the absence of a standardized algorithm, availability of the procalcitonin assay did not reduce the frequency of antibiotic initiations or the continuation of antibiotics for greater than 72 hours.

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  • High-quality CPR is essential for increasing survival rates from cardiac arrest, but knowledge and skills diminish over time.
  • A study evaluated the impact of "Rolling Refresher" training on nurses' chest compression skills over a 12-month period, with significant improvements noted at the six-month mark.
  • Results indicated that retention of high-quality chest compression skills declines six months post-recertification, but ongoing refresher training can effectively enhance skill retention.
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Objectives: To determine whether peak blood procalcitonin (PCT) measured within 48 hours of pediatric intensive care unit (PICU) admission can differentiate severe bacterial infections from sterile inflammation and viral infection and identify potential subgroups of PICU patients for whom PCT may not have clinical utility.

Study Design: This was a retrospective, observational study of 646 critically ill children who had PCT measured within 48 hours of admission to an urban, academic PICU. Patients were stratified into 6 categories by infection status.

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  • Elevated and suppressed cortisol levels are related to unfavorable metabolic markers like triglycerides and HbA1c, prompting an investigation into how saliva and blood cortisol levels influence these markers.
  • A study involving 48 healthy women assessed both salivary cortisol production and various metabolic indicators, revealing that low salivary cortisol secretors had higher triglyceride and HbA1c levels compared to high secretors.
  • The findings indicate that salivary cortisol secretor status may provide unique insights into health that differ from blood cortisol measurements, particularly concerning metabolic health.
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Controversy over the adaptive significance of male hunting in subsistence societies hinges on the relative importance of familial provisioning and mate-quality signalling. This paper examines the proximate and ultimate motivations of hunting behaviour from a neuroendocrine perspective, using salivary testosterone and cortisol data collected before, during and after hunting focal follows from 31 Tsimane hunters aged 18-82 years. Despite circadian declines in hormone levels, testosterone and cortisol of Tsimane hunters increased at the time of a kill, and remained high as successful hunters returned home.

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Testosterone plays an important role in mediating male reproductive trade-offs in many vertebrate species, augmenting muscle and influencing behavior necessary for male-male competition and mating-effort. Among humans, testosterone may also play a key role in facilitating male provisioning of offspring as muscular and neuromuscular performance are deeply influenced by acute changes in testosterone. This study examines acute changes in salivary testosterone among 63 Tsimane men ranging in age from 16-80 (mean 38.

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Between-individual variation of salivary progesterone (P4) and cortisol levels does not always closely reflect blood hormone concentrations. This may be partly a function of individual differences in salivary hormone excretion. We tested whether time of day at sampling and ethnicity contributed to individual variation in salivary hormones after adjusting for blood hormone levels.

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The challenge hypothesis posits that acute increases in testosterone (T) during male-male competition enhance performance and survivability while limiting the physiological costs of consistently high T. Human challenge hypothesis research focuses on young men in industrial populations, who have higher baseline T levels than men in subsistence populations. We tested whether the Tsimane, pathogenically stressed forager-horticulturalists of the Bolivian Amazon, would express acute T increases in response to physical competition.

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Objectives: Biomarkers of inflammation, including C-reactive protein (CRP) and α(1) -acid glycoprotein (AGP), have tremendous potential in anthropological, public health, and nutrition research as objective indicators of acute infection; however, their usage is limited by the lack of widely agreed upon, reliable cutpoints to define infection. We assessed the sensitivity and specificity of CRP and AGP for identifying acute infectious disease (ID) episodes among children in the Kilimanjaro region of Tanzania.

Methods: Data were available from 43 3- to 5-year-old children.

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Psychosocial stress is thought to negatively impact fecundity, but human studies are confounded by variation in nutrition and lifestyle. Baboons offer a useful model to test the effect of prolonged mild stress on reproductive indicators in a controlled setting. Following relocation from social groups to solitary housing, a previously documented stressful event for nonhuman primates, daily urine samples, tumescence, and menstrual bleeding were monitored in twenty baboons (Papio sp.

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C-reactive protein (CRP) is used as a biomarker of morbidity and mortality risk in studies of population health, and is essential to interpretation of several micronutrient biomarkers. There is thus a need for a robust high-sensitivity CRP (hsCRP) measurement method for large-scale, non-clinical studies. We developed an efficient, inexpensive assay suitable for quantifying CRP across the physiological range using any blood specimen type.

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Objectives: The male reproductive axis is responsive to energetic deficits, including multiday fasts, but little is known about brief periods of fasting (<24 hours). Reduced testosterone in low-energy balance situations is hypothesized to reflect redirection of resources from reproduction to survival. This study tests the hypothesis that testosterone levels decrease during a minor caloric deficiency by assessing the effects of a single missed (evening) meal on morning testosterone in 23 healthy male participants, age 19-36.

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Objective: Detailed characterization of progesterone and ovulation across the menopausal transition provides insight into conception risk and mechanisms of reproductive aging.

Methods: Participants (n = 108, aged 25-58 y) collected daily urine specimens for 6-month intervals in each of 5 consecutive years. Specimens were assayed for pregnanediol glucuronide (PDG), luteinizing hormone (LH), follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH), and estrone glucuronide (E1G).

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Background: The relative dose-response (RDR) test, which measures the percentage of change in serum retinol concentration in response to an oral vitamin A (VA) dose, is a functional reference method to assess low hepatic VA stores. However, problems due to the relative instability of retinol, which is measured in the traditional RDR test, could be circumvented if retinol-binding protein (RBP), a more stable marker of VA, could be measured instead of retinol to provide the RDR value.

Objective: The objective was to compare classification of VA status assessed by retinol-RDR with that assessed by using RBP-RDR.

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Detailed characterization of estrogen dynamics during the transition to menopause is an important step toward understanding its potential implications for reproductive cancers developing in the transition years. We conducted a 5-year prospective study of endogenous levels of total and unopposed estrogen. Participants (n=108; ages 25-58 years) collected daily urine specimens for 6 months in each of 5 consecutive years.

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C-reactive protein (CRP) is a widely used, sensitive biomarker of inflammation. Studies conducted among users of exogenous hormones suggest that estrogen increases CRP, whereas progesterone decreases CRP. Examinations of CRP in normally cycling women suggest the opposite: CRP is negatively associated with endogenous estrogen and positively associated with endogenous progesterone.

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Background: Retinol-binding protein (RBP) is accepted as a surrogate biochemical marker for retinol to determine vitamin A (VA) status. A recently developed enzyme immunoassay for RBP uses serum or whole blood stored as dried blood spots (DBS). However, the stability of RBP in DBS has not been examined.

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Objective: This study describes age-related changes in luteinizing hormone (LH) and follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) in a 5-year prospective study of reproductive aging.

Design: Participants (n = 156 college-educated, white, US women; 25 to 58 y) were recruited from the TREMIN Research Program on Women's Health. They collected daily urine specimens for 6 months in each of 5 consecutive years.

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Objective: We developed assays for measurement of urinary betaLH and betaFSH under collection and storage conditions typical of non-clinical research settings.

Design And Methods: IEMAs for free betaLH and total betaFSH were validated by standard methods. Stability of urinary betaLH and betaFSH was tested across freeze-thaws and stored long term at 4 degrees C or -20 degrees C, or short term at room temperature, and with heating to dissociate the subunits.

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Objective: To demonstrate that the perimenopausal increase in menstrual cycle length presented by Treloar et al. was biased by misidentified menopause dates, mean values classified by calendar year, and exclusion of menstrual cycles straddling two calendar years; and to use the revised data to investigate women's experiences of longer perimenopausal cycles.

Design: Secondary analysis of prospectively collected menstrual cycle data.

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Previous studies of postpartum amenorrhea (PPA) demonstrated distinct subgroups of women with short and long durations of amenorrhea. This phenomenon was attributed to cases where breastfeeding is absent because of pregnancy loss or infant death, or confusion of postpartum bleeding with resumption of menses. We explored these ideas using data from an 11-month prospective study in Bangladesh in which 858 women provided twice-weekly interviews and urine specimens for up to 9 months; 300 women were observed while experiencing PPA.

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Objective: We describe a 5-year prospective study of reproductive aging, and present analyses of steroid hormone and menstrual cycle changes with age.

Design: Participants were college-educated white women, primarily of northern European ancestry, recruited from the Tremin Research Program on Women's Health (n = 156, 25-58 years). In each of 5 consecutive years, they collected daily urine specimens for 6 months and recorded menstrual bleeds for all months.

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Hormonal changes that occur before or during parturition are known to trigger early postpartum maternal behaviors in many mammals. In humans, little evidence has been found for hormonal mediation of early postpartum maternal behavior. In this paper, we investigate associations between fetoplacental hormone concentrations in late pregnancy on the time from parturition to initiation of breast-feeding.

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