2,103 results match your criteria: "University of Missouri--St Louis[Affiliation]"

Aggregation and accumulation of amyloid-β peptide (Aβ) are a critical trigger for the onset of Alzheimer's disease (AD). While the plaques are the most outstanding Aβ pathological feature, much of the recent research emphasis has been on soluble Aβ species because of their diffusible, proinflammatory, and toxic properties. The focus on soluble aggregated Aβ species has also increased the interest in antibodies that are selective for different Aβ conformations.

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Background: Prescription opioids remain a primary treatment option for patients with chronic low back pain. However, little research has examined how patients take opioids in daily life. Behavioral economics suggest that the environmental context may contribute to patients' decisions around opioid use.

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Article Synopsis
  • The COVID-19 pandemic increased perinatal anxiety and depression, negatively impacting child development, but the specific relationship between pandemic worries during pregnancy and later child outcomes is less understood.
  • A study involving 184 pregnant participants gathered data through online surveys during pregnancy and early postpartum, revealing that higher worries related to the pandemic were linked to lower socioemotional development in children at 12 months but did not affect general developmental milestones.
  • The study found that parents' ability to regulate their emotions in the early postpartum period acted as a buffer, suggesting that improving parental resilience through emotion regulation could help mitigate negative effects on child development.
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Identification of proteins dysregulated by COVID-19 infection is critically important for better understanding of its pathophysiology, building prognostic models, and identifying new targets. Plasma proteomic profiling of 4,301 proteins was performed in two independent datasets and tested for the association for three COVID-19 outcomes (infection, ventilation, and death). We identified 1,449 proteins consistently associated in both datasets with any of these three outcomes.

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Objective: Traditionally, adverse reproductive experiences have been described as stressful events for the individuals who experience them. However, a growing body of evidence suggests that the term "stress" minimizes this experience, and adverse reproductive experiences should be reconceptualized as reproductive trauma. Currently, there are few ways that clinicians have agreed are valid pathways to measure trauma symptoms within this population.

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Objective: Community violence (CV) is an important public health concern. The literature has largely focused on CV exposure among higher-risk, urban youth, while the impact of CV on emerging adults in university settings remains poorly understood, even though this developmental period is associated with heightened risk. Much of the extant research has utilized a cumulative approach to study CV, thus, little is known about how different dimensions of CV (i.

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Background: With the advent of antiretrovirals, people living with HIV are living near-normal lifespans. However, people living with HIV are at greater risk of experiencing cognitive impairment and reduced brain integrity despite well-controlled viremia. A robust literature supports exercise interventions as a method of improving cognition and structural brain integrity in older individuals without HIV.

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Childhood trauma is a known risk factor for trauma and stress-related disorders in adulthood. However, limited research has investigated the impact of childhood trauma on brain structure linked to later posttraumatic dysfunction. We investigated the effect of childhood trauma on white matter microstructure after recent trauma and its relationship with future posttraumatic dysfunction among trauma-exposed adult participants (n = 202) recruited from emergency departments as part of the AURORA Study.

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Child injury is a significant global health issue that contributes to both morbidity and mortality in children. Children with developmental disabilities are at a high risk for injuries due to a combination of environmental barriers and health conditions. However, little research has assessed the prevalence of injuries among this population in China.

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The convergence of trauma symptomatology, mental health symptoms, family and social difficulties, and intersectionality of diverse sexual and gender minority (SGM) individual issues is complex, multi-faceted, and challenging for the individuals in Cambodia who suffer them and for the therapists in Cambodia who meet individuals in treatment. We documented and analyzed the perspectives of mental health therapists in the context of a randomized control trial (RCT) intervention within the Mekong Project in Cambodia. The research questions explored perceptions of therapists' care of mental health clients, therapist wellbeing, and experiences of navigating within a research environment in which SGM citizens with mental health concerns receive treatment.

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Neural waves and short-term memory in a neural net model.

J Biol Phys

June 2023

Department of Mathematics and Statistics, University of Missouri - St. Louis, 63121, St. Louis, MO, USA.

We show that recognizable neural waveforms are reproduced in the model described in previous work. In so doing, we reproduce close matches to certain observed, though filtered, EEG-like measurements in closed mathematical form, to good approximations. Such neural waves represent the responses of individual networks to external and endogenous inputs and are presumably the carriers of the information used to perform computations in actual brains, which are complexes of interconnected networks.

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Missouri's dramatic rise in fentanyl-related overdoses was reported in Part I of this two-part series. In Part II, we report that previous efforts to combat the surge in illicit fentanyl supply from China failed, as Chinese factories shifted production to basic fentanyl precursor chemicals, known as dual-use pre-precursors. Mexican drug cartels now synthesize fentanyl from these basic chemicals and have overpowered the Mexican government.

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Objectives: This project assessed vaccine hesitancy among staff and incarcerated adults in one rural medium-security prison in the Midwestern United States and identified differences in hesitancy across sociodemographic and work-related variables.

Methods: 610 prison staff and people incarcerated completed a cross-sectional survey in May 2021. The vaccine hesitancy scale (VHS) identified perceived risk and confidence in vaccination.

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A pilgrimage is an intentional journey undertaken for reasons that can increase a sense of well-being. Although originally completed for religious purposes, motives in contemporary times may include anticipated religious, spiritual, and humanistic benefits as well as appreciation of culture and geography. This quantitative and qualitative survey research explored the motivations of a sample subset age 65 and over from a larger study who completed one of the Camino de Santiago de Compostela routes in Spain.

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Phosphate deficiency modifies lipid composition and seed oil production in camelina.

Plant Sci

May 2023

Department of Biology, University of Missouri - St. Louis, St. Louis, MO 63121, USA; Donald Danforth Plant Science Center, St. Louis, MO 63132, USA. Electronic address:

Camelina (Camelina sativa) is an emerging industrial oilseed crop because of its potential for double cropping, fallow year production, growth on marginal lands, and multiple uses of seed oils and meals. To realize the potential for sustainable production of camelina, a better understanding of how camelina seed oil production and composition respond to low input environments is desired. Phosphorus (P) is one of the least available essential macronutrients to plants with finite worldwide supply.

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Research and theory in nonverbal communication have made great advances toward understanding the patterns and functions of nonverbal behavior in social settings. Progress has been hindered, we argue, by presumptions about nonverbal behavior that follow from both received wisdom and faulty evidence. In this article, we document four persistent misconceptions about nonverbal communication-namely, that people communicate using decodable body language; that they have a stable personal space by which they regulate contact with others; that they express emotion using universal, evolved, iconic, categorical facial expressions; and that they can deceive and detect deception, using dependable telltale clues.

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Abortion travel within the United States: An observational study of cross-state movement to obtain abortion care in 2017.

Lancet Reg Health Am

June 2022

Division of Epidemiology, College of Public Health, Ohio State University, 60 Townshend Hall, 1885 Neil Ave. Mall, Columbus, OH 43212, United States.

Background: In the United States, abortion access is often more limited for people who live in states with few abortion facilities and restrictive abortion legislation. Pregnant people seeking an abortion thus often travel to access care.

Methods: We calculated state-specific abortion rate (number of abortions per thousand women ages 15 to 44) and percentage of patients leaving for abortion care using CDC 2017 Abortion Surveillance data, the Guttmacher Institute's Abortion Provider Census and Pregnancies, Births and Abortions in the United States report, and US Census data.

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Implementing ecological momentary assessment (EMA) methodology to evaluate the substance use disorder (SUD) treatment pipeline has clear advantages, including learning about participants' day-to-day experiences to aid in the improvement of services and accessibility for those seeking treatment. Given that the SUD treatment pipeline spans long periods of time, EMA burst designs (deployment of multiple short EMA periods spread over time) can be advantageous for evaluating the treatment pipeline over time while keeping participant burden low. This feasibility study describes (1) the process and study design of implementing EMA burst methodology to evaluate the SUD treatment pipeline experience; (2) study implementation from the perspective of researchers, including discussion of collaboration with community partners; and (3) participant feedback on the experience of engaging with this type of research.

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Primary Objective: Despite a high prevalence of intimate partner violence (IPV) and its lasting impacts on individuals, particularly women, very little is known about how IPV may impact the brain. IPV is known to frequently result in traumatic brain injury (TBI) and posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). In this overview of literature, we examined literature related to neuroimaging in women with IPV experiences between the years 2010-2021.

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Article Synopsis
  • There are differences in how different racial and ethnic groups experience stress and resources that can affect their brains, especially the amygdala, which helps process fear and trauma.
  • A study with 283 participants looked at how their brains reacted to scary and neutral faces after trauma, finding that Black and Hispanic people had different brain connections compared to White people.
  • The results suggest that these differences in brain activity and responses to stress may influence how likely someone is to develop PTSD after experiencing traumatic events.
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Species delimitation is challenging in lineages that exhibit both high plasticity and introgression. This challenge can be compounded by collection biases, which may downweight specimens morphologically intermediate between traditional species. Additionally, mismatch between named species and observable phenotypes can compromise species conservation.

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Introduction: Athlete burnout has many potential negative effects on athletes' sporting performance and careers. Maintaining and promoting the coach-athlete relationship to meet athletes' basic psychological needs is one way to reduce burnout. Existing studies of the correlation between coach-athlete relationships and athlete burnout have mainly focused on the coaches' leadership style, with little attention given to relationship-maintenance strategies and the mechanism of athlete burnout from the athletes' perspective.

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Little is known about the causes and consequences of alternative pathways flown by long-distance migratory birds. Bobolinks () breed in grasslands across northern North America and migrate from their breeding grounds toward the eastern Atlantic Coast and then proceed through the Caribbean to South America. However, a small but regular number of Bobolinks have been recorded on the Galapagos Islands.

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Breast cancer is one of the leading causes of death among women worldwide. Histopathological images have proven to be a reliable way to find out if someone has breast cancer over time, however, it could be time consuming and require much resources when observed physically. In order to lessen the burden on the pathologists and save lives, there is need for an automated system to effectively analysis and predict the disease diagnostic.

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