Publications by authors named "Margaret Wilkinson"

Neuroimaging studies implicate multiple cortical regions in reading ability/disability. However, the neural cell types integral to the reading process are unknown. To contribute to this gap in knowledge, we integrated genetic results from genome-wide association studies for word reading (n = 5054) with gene expression datasets from adult/fetal human brain.

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Reading Disability (RD) is often characterized by difficulties in the phonology of the language. While the molecular mechanisms underlying it are largely undetermined, loci are being revealed by genome-wide association studies (GWAS). In a previous GWAS for word reading (Price, 2020), we observed that top single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) were located near to or in genes involved in neuronal migration/axon guidance (NM/AG) or loci implicated in autism spectrum disorder (ASD).

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Article Synopsis
  • * A genome-wide association study (GWAS) involving over 13,000 to 33,000 participants revealed significant associations in word reading linked to specific genetic markers, while accounting for 13-26% of the variability in various language-related traits.
  • * The research indicates a shared genetic factor among several language skills and establishes connections to brain structure associated with language processing, emphasizing the role of genetics in understanding human language abilities.
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Developmental dyslexia (DD) is a common reading disability, affecting 5% to 11% of children in North America. Children classified as having DD often have a history of early language delay (ELD) or language impairments. Nevertheless, studies have reported conflicting results as to the association between DD-ELD and the extent of current language difficulties in children with DD.

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Reading disabilities (RD) are the most common neurocognitive disorder, affecting 5% to 17% of children in North America. These children often have comorbid neurodevelopmental/psychiatric disorders, such as attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). The genetics of RD and their overlap with other disorders is incompletely understood.

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The paper explores an interdisciplinary whole person approach to healing from trauma that conserves our rich inheritance from Jung but also takes on board insights from research in the areas of attachment, trauma and the neurobiology of emotion. It is now over 20 years since insights from neurobiology began to be used to inform clinical practice. The paper reviews key insights which have emerged, along with the ways they enable therapists to help mind, brain and body to heal and the ways in which they clarify why, in clinical practice, we do what we do.

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Objective: To examine the evolution of Children's Health Insurance Program (CHIP) and Medicaid programs after passage of the Children's Health Insurance Program Reauthorization Act of 2009 (CHIPRA), focusing on policies affecting eligibility, enrollment, renewal, benefits, access to care, cost sharing, and preparation for health care reform.

Methods: Case studies were conducted in 10 states during 2012-which included key informant interviews and consumer focus groups-and a national survey of state CHIP program administrators was conducted in early 2013.

Results: Despite the recession that persisted during much of the study period, many states expanded children's coverage by raising upper income eligibility limits or by covering new groups made eligible by CHIPRA.

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Aim: This study aimed to explore and gain insight into the perceptions and expectations of family members of terminally ill patients pertaining to the use of syringe drivers.

Background: There is a lack of research regarding the use of syringe drivers in Africa and, more specifically, South Africa. However, syringe drivers have been in use for around two decades in some South African settings.

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Unlabelled: CASE PRESENTATION AND ASSESSMENT: A 3-month-old female Cornish Rex kitten was found to have non-painful swelling of the carpal and tarsal regions when presented for routine neutering. The kitten was smaller in stature and less active than its siblings and, according to the owner, had a bunny-hopping gait, was reluctant to climb stairs and strained during defecation. Radiography of the affected limbs and a subsequent radiographic survey of the entire skeleton demonstrated features consistent with rickets.

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A 3-year-old Ragdoll cat was referred for investigation of polyuria, polydipsia, vomiting, weight loss and hypercalcaemia. Serum biochemical abnormalities included total and ionised hypercalcaemia and hypophosphataemia. Following clinical investigations a diagnosis of idiopathic hypercalcaemia was made.

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The objective of the study is to examine the relationship between different deprivation indicators and both self-rated health and emergency admission rates of older people to determine which indicators best predict the health of people in this age group. The method employed an ecological study design using data from all 100 neighbourhoods in Sheffield in 2004 and analysing relationships in three age groups 50-64, 65-74 and over 75 years. Analysis was performed using Pearson correlation coefficient.

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Background: Postoperative parathyroid gland function after total thyroidectomy (TT) has traditionally been monitored by the measurement of serum calcium concentrations. The purpose of this study is to determine whether measurement of parathyroid hormone (PTH) concentrations in the early postoperative period accurately predicts patients at risk of developing hypocalcaemia.

Methods: A prospective cohort study of patients undergoing TT was carried out.

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Introduction: Osteocalcin is a bone protein that has been used to mark bone turnover. The precise role of this protein in bone remodeling has not been fully elucidated; however, it was shown to be instrumental in the activation of osteoclastic bone resorption via its effect on osteoblasts. Fluoride influences bone growth by acting as a mitogenic agent for osteoblasts.

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Background: Routine use of intraoperative parathyroid hormone levels (IOPTH) during minimally invasive parathyroidectomy (MIP) has been challenged simply because the test works best when needed least, ie, once a solitary adenoma has been resected, and is less accurate with multiple gland disease. It has also been shown not to be cost-effective. The aim of this study was to determine if IOPTH "value-added" to decision-making during MIP.

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Three studies compared 98 children with spina bifida myelomeningocele (SBM)-a disorder associated with high rates of math disability and spatial deficits-to 94 typically developing children on multidigit subtraction and cognitive addition tasks. Children with SBM were classified into those with reading decoding and math disability, only math disability, and no reading or math disability. Study 1 showed that visual-spatial errors in multidigit arithmetic were not elevated in children with SBM.

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In this paper I discuss the nature and role of dream and the dreaming process in Jungian clinical practice in the light of neuroscience. Insights from contemporary neuroscience support rather than contest Jung's view that emotional truth, not censorship or disguise, underpins the dreaming process. I use clinical material to illustrate how work with dreams within the total interactive experience of the analytic dyad enables the development of the emotional scaffolding necessary for the development of 'mind'.

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Background: With minimally invasive parathyroidectomy (MIP) not all enlarged parathyroid glands are necessarily removed, and intraoperative measurement of parathyroid hormone levels (IO-PTH) does not necessarily predict multiple enlarged glands. The aim of this study was to compare morphology with function, using Ca(2+)-regulated PTH secretion.

Methods: PTH secretion was determined by perifusion: (1) cells from 12 normal parathyroids were compared with 14 parathyroid adenomas; (2) functional characteristics (PTH secretion, sestamibi uptake, IO-PTH decrease) were correlated with morphologic characteristics; (3) PTH secretion as a predictor of IO-PTH decrease was determined in 7 patients with 2 enlarged parathyroids.

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In the last ten years both analysts and neuroscientists have begun to challenge the analytic world to explore the analytic view of the mind in relation to knowledge emerging from the field of neuroscience. I find that 'in many ways it is Jung's understanding of the mind, the human condition, and the self, that is most compatible with the insights that are emerging from neuroscience today' (Wilkinson 2004, p. 84).

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Parathyroid hormone (PTH) secretion is acutely regulated by the extracellular Ca(2+)-sensing receptor (CaR). Thus, Ca(2+) ions, and to a lesser extent Mg(2+) ions, have been viewed as the principal physiological regulators of PTH secretion. Herein we show that in physiological concentrations, l-amino acids acutely and reversibly activated the extracellular Ca(2+)-sensing receptor in normal human parathyroid cells and inhibited parathyroid hormone secretion.

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Text comprehension processes were investigated in children with hydrocephalus, a neurodevelopmental disorder associated with good word decoding, but deficient reading comprehension. In Experiment 1, hydrocephalus and control groups were similar in processes related to activating word meanings and using context to enhance meaning. The hydrocephalus group was poorer at suppressing contextually irrelevant meanings.

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The authors describe a pilot medical education program that developed a new and ongoing correctional medicine curriculum for third- and fourth-year medical students at Nova Southeastern University College of Osteopathic Medicine. During the first two years of the pilot program (2000-02), a total of 53 students were placed in one-month rotations in prison health care settings. Students received orientations, directed readings, and prison clinic experience under the director of board-certified physician preceptors.

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This paper explores the mind-brain relationship, using insights from contemporary neuroscience. It seeks to investigate how our brains become who we are, how subjective experience arises. In order to do this some explanation is given of the basic concepts of how the brain produces our subjective mental life.

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This paper uses insights from contemporary neuroscience and attachment theory to explore the profound dissociative defences associated with trauma. I discuss the effects of trauma on the emotional, intellectual and imaginative life of the individual and on the development of the self. Based on work with three patients with very different experiences of trauma, the paper offers clinical illustration of 'right brain to right brain' Jungian analysis.

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