Publications by authors named "Mayes S"

The relationships between frequency of rumination in a boy with profound mental retardation and a variety of environmental, interpersonal, and temporal variables were investigated by collecting and analyzing data during all waking hours over a 4-week period. Low levels of rumination were associated with periods of special education programming (versus nonschool hours), individual attention (versus group activities and independent play), and time spent with caretakers who like the child (versus those who like him less). The findings also revealed a mealtime effect (decreasing rumination as time elapsed following meals) and a time of day effect (increasing rumination as the day progressed).

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Relationships among pre-injury ability, post-injury verbal intelligence, duration of coma and age were analysed in 34 closed-head injury patients, 7-28 years of age, whose coma lengths ranged from 5 to 180 days. The results obtained suggest that moderate to severe closed-head injury uniformly impairs verbal intellectual functioning without regard to premorbid status. Premorbid ability test scores had a markedly low correlation (0.

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Using standardized instruments, personality traits of twenty-two hemophilic boys and child-rearing attitudes and practices of their parents were evaluated at the beginning and end of a six-year period, during which psychosocial services were provided in a comprehensive care hemophilia program. The children changed significantly in a positive direction on two traits, enthusiasm and self-reliance. No significant negative personality trait changes were found.

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Personality traits of 50 hemophilic boys were assessed with the Early School (ESPQ), Children's (CPQ), and High School (HSPQ) Personality Questionnaires. Compared to the norms for healthy, male age-mates, hemophiliacs were significantly more intelligent, stable, and secure. They did not deviate from the norm on the remaining eight traits assessed.

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Personality patterns, signs of mental impairment, mental health correlates, and psychosocial consequences were assessed in 50 patients who had obstructive sleep apnea of sufficient severity to warrant recommendation for tracheostomy. The personality patterns of sleep apnea patients were consistently those of a somatic-neurotic type, similar to typical patterns for medical outpatients. The high level of psychologic distress demonstrated was clearly a consequence rather than a cause of the disorder.

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The rate of glucose turnover (RT) has been studied in 33 subhuman primate newborn (Macaca mulatta). There appears to be a linear relationship between RT and plasma glucose (G) such that RT = 1.053 G + 0.

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The capacity for gluconeogenesis has been studied in 33 subhuman primate newborn (Macaca mulatta) in the basal steady state. Basal blood glucose levels were seen to rise with increasing postnatal age. Availability of the major gluconeogenic substrates, alanine and lactate, was adequate at times when blood glucose and the rate of gluconeogenesis were low.

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Evidence of a neurohumoral factor capable of stimulating insulin and glucagon secretion was found in perfusates from ventrolateral hypothalamus (VLH) of rhesus monkeys. The perfusates from the VLH were collected via push-pull cannulas and injected into the peripheral circulation. Increase in portal insulin and glucagon was observed following the injection of six different perfusates.

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