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1.
Obes Rev ; : e13769, 2024 Jun 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38830619

ABSTRACT

Given the high and growing prevalence of obesity among adults in the United States, obesity treatment and prevention are important topics in biomedical and public health research. Although researchers recognize the significance of this problem, much remains unknown about safe and effective prevention and treatment of obesity in adults. In response to the worsening obesity epidemic and the many unknowns regarding the disease, a group of key scientific and program staff members of the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and other federal and non-government agencies gathered virtually in September 2021 to discuss the current state of obesity research, research gaps, and opportunities for future research in adult obesity prevention and treatment. The current article synthesizes presentations given by attendees and shares their organizations' current initiatives and identified gaps and opportunities. By integrating the information discussed in the meeting and current initiatives, we identify potential targets and overlapping priorities for future research, including health equity and disparities in obesity, the heterogeneity of obesity, and the use of technological and innovative approaches in interventions.

2.
Psychol Addict Behav ; 38(2): 197-204, 2024 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37676169

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: The Supreme Court of the United States' decision in Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization in June 2022 overturned Roe v. Wade and ended federal protection of abortion rights. Given the drastic policy changes as a result of the ruling and high exposure to media related to abortion, women opposed to the decision may have experienced distress, which could trigger maladaptive coping strategies, such as alcohol use. The present research examined how consuming abortion-related media in the weeks following the Dobbs decision impacted alcohol use intentions among women of reproductive age residing in the 13 "trigger law" states that immediately restricted abortion access. METHOD: A sample of 196 women (Mage = 30.52, SD = 6.9) residing in trigger law states answered questions about abortion-related media consumption, views toward the Dobbs ruling, negative affect, and alcohol use intentions. RESULTS: Consuming more abortion-related media predicted higher alcohol use intentions for women who opposed the ruling, but not those who were in favor of abortion restrictions. CONCLUSIONS: This timely study provides evidence of how the Dobbs ruling is associated with health ramifications beyond reproduction, yielding insights about how high media exposure to large-scale, distressing events may put those most affected-women of reproductive age in states that enacted new policies restricting abortion access-at risk for alcohol use. Findings highlight an imperative direction for future research as abortion restrictions continue to be spotlighted in U.S. media and state legislatures. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).


Subject(s)
Abortion, Legal , Intention , Pregnancy , United States/epidemiology , Female , Humans , Adult , Media Exposure
3.
Subst Use Misuse ; 58(12): 1483-1492, 2023.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37350140

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: This study tested how individuals anticipate they will respond to opportunities to engage in simultaneous alcohol and marijuana (SAM) use. METHODS: Two studies utilizing a within-subjects design were conducted. Study 1 was conducted in Spring 2021 and a replication (Study 2) was conducted in Fall 2021. Participants were presented with pairs of scenarios. One scenario pair compared how willing participants expected to be to get drunk if they were sober vs. high. Another pair compared how willing participants would be to take a hit of marijuana if they were sober vs. drunk. College attending young adults (Study 1: N = 173; female = 81%; Study 2: N = 212; female = 49.1%) with varying degrees of substance use experience were recruited. RESULTS: In Study 1 participants reported greater willingness to get drunk when sober than when high. This was qualified by a statistically significant interaction whereby differences were greater among those who had more experience with past 30-day heavy drinking. Similar findings emerged for willingness to use marijuana. Participants anticipated greater willingness to use marijuana when sober than when drunk. This was also qualified by a statistically significant interaction whereby differences were greater among experimental or established users of marijuana than among abstainers. Study 2 findings replicated those from Study 1. CONCLUSIONS: College attending young adults state greater willingness to remain under the influence of one substance than to engage in SAM use when opportunities arise. Simultaneous use of alcohol and marijuana among college students is likely an exception, not the rule. Implications for prevention are discussed.


Subject(s)
Alcoholic Intoxication , Alcoholism , Cannabis , Hallucinogens , Marijuana Smoking , Marijuana Use , Substance-Related Disorders , Young Adult , Humans , Female , Alcohol Drinking , Ethanol
4.
Appetite ; 180: 106371, 2023 01 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36402411

ABSTRACT

Given the prevalence in obesity and other diet-related chronic diseases among adults in America, methods targeting dietary behavior change are essential. Interventions that aim to increase individuals' autonomous (i.e., self-driven) motivation to engage in health-promoting behaviors are highly effective, however, such interventions are difficult to scale. Thus, the current study tested the efficacy of a brief self-persuasion intervention to change participants' dietary goal content and increase intentions to make healthy dietary decisions, through autonomous motivation. The study also investigated the assumption that appearance-based goals decrease health-promoting behavior. The intervention was administered online to female college students (N = 300). Results showed that inspiring health-based and appearance-based goal content led to higher intentions compared to gaining others' approval-based goals, indirectly through higher autonomous motivation. Appearance-based goal content also led to higher intentions compared to a control condition. Results imply that there is promise in using a brief, easily administrable, self-persuasion intervention to increase health-promoting dietary behaviors. Additionally, results reflect that bolstering appearance-based goal content can promote health-promoting behaviors, however, more research is necessary to delineate the parameters of the finding.


Subject(s)
Diet , Health Promotion , Humans , Female
5.
Cardiooncology ; 7(1): 15, 2021 Apr 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33875012

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Breast cancer is the most common female cancer worldwide. Effective therapies including doxorubicin and trastuzumab have improved survival, but are associated with a substantial risk of cardiovascular disease. Mechanisms underlying cancer treatment-induced cardiotoxicity (CTC) are poorly understood and have largely focused on cardiomyocyte damage, although other cellular populations in the heart such as the cardiac endothelium, may play an important role in cardiac damage. We treated a breast tumor-bearing mouse model with doxorubicin and trastuzumab to investigate the role of the cardiac endothelium in the development of CTC. METHODS: Immune compromised mice were inoculated in the 4th mammary fat pad with human breast cancer cells overexpressing HER2 (BT474). When tumors were palpable, mice were treated weekly with doxorubicin (5 mg/kg) and trastuzumab (4 mg/kg). The cardiac phenotype of mice was assessed by echocardiography and histological evaluation of the heart. Cardiac vascular damage was assayed by in vivo permeability assays and primary cultures of murine cardiac endothelial cells were used to assay doxorubicin toxicity in vitro. RESULTS: The growth of BT474 breast tumors in Balb/c Nude mice was suppressed upon treatment with doxorubicin and trastuzumab. Mice treated for 4 months with doxorubicin and trastuzumab maintained body weights, but demonstrated an echocardiographic phenotype consistent with preserved left ventricular (LV) ejection fraction, decreased LV mass and increased filling pressures (E/e'). Histological staining with Masson's trichrome and Picrosirius red showed extensive fibrosis and increased collagen deposition in the ventricular myocardium surrounding blood vessels of treated mice compared to untreated mice. Evans blue permeability assays demonstrated increased cardiac vasculature permeability while primary cardiac endothelial cells exposed to doxorubicin in vitro showed increased cell death as compared to lung or liver endothelial cells. CONCLUSIONS: An orthotopic mouse model of human breast cancer in Nude mice treated with doxorubicin and trastuzumab resulted in a cardiac vascular defect accompanied by preserved LV ejection fraction, decreased LV mass, suggesting mild diastolic dysfunction and cardiac remodeling consistent with subclinical cardiotoxicity. Our data suggest that cardiac endothelium is more sensitive to doxorubicin therapy as compared to other organ endothelium and cardiac endothelial damage may correlate with breast cancer treatment-induced cardiotoxicity.

6.
Nicotine Tob Res ; 23(7): 1085-1093, 2021 06 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33220048

ABSTRACT

Implementation intentions are a goal-setting technique in which an individual commits to perform a particular behavior when a specific context arises. Recently, researchers have begun studying how implementation intention (II) interventions can facilitate antismoking efforts. The current systematic review synthesized results of experimental studies that tested the effect of an II intervention on smoking cognitions and behavior. Of 29 reviewed articles, 11 studies met inclusion criteria. Nine studies (81.8%) tested an II intervention as a cessation tool for current smokers, whereas two tested II interventions as a tool to prevent smoking among predominantly nonsmoking adolescents. A majority of the studies (66.7%) testing II interventions as a cessation tool reported a positive effect on cessation at long-term follow-up. Of the two studies testing II interventions as a tool for prevention, one study found a positive effect on long-term follow-up. Methodology varied between the studies, highlighting the discrepancies between what researchers consider "implementation intentions" to be. II interventions are a promising tool for antismoking efforts, but more research is necessary to determine the best methodology and the populations for whom this intervention will be most effective. IMPLICATIONS: Brief, free, and easily scalable, II interventions to prevent smoking are highly attractive for antismoking efforts. This review outlines the circumstances under which II interventions have demonstrated effectiveness in helping people resist smoking cigarettes. We illuminate gaps in the existing literature, limitations, methodological discrepancies between studies, and areas for future study.


Subject(s)
Intention , Smoking Cessation , Adolescent , Humans , Smoking , Smoking Prevention , Tobacco Smoking
7.
Biol Res Nurs ; 20(2): 137-144, 2018 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29378417

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: To recruit healthy full- and preterm infants into genetic research and determine the effectiveness of a noninvasive DNA sampling technique for comparing epigenetic modifications. BACKGROUND: Noxious stimuli during a vulnerable period of infant neuronal plasticity may trigger long-term epigenetic changes affecting neurodevelopment, pain modulation, and reactivity. Recognizing epigenetic pain findings is problematic because parents are reluctant to enroll newborns into genetic research. METHODS: Design: Within-subject change over time candidate-gene DNA methylation association study. Setting/ sample: Urban teaching hospital's neonatal intensive care unit and newborn nursery. Convenience sample of healthy full- (>37 weeks, n = 6) and preterm (<37 weeks, n = 6) infants. PROCEDURE: Parents participated in a genetic presentation prior to informed consent. Infant buccal saliva was collected after admission to the unit and prior to discharge. ANALYSIS: The methylation pattern at the 5' end of µ-opioid receptor gene ( OPRM1) was examined. DNA was treated with bisulfite to convert all cytosines to uracil residues, leaving methylated cytosines unchanged. Sequencing of untreated and bisulfite-converted DNA was carried out. The sequences of unconverted and bisulfite-converted DNA were aligned with ClustalW, fidelity of the polymerase chain reaction and the sequencing reaction evaluated, and the methylation pattern identified. RESULTS: Recruitment and assessment of a noninvasive DNA sampling technique for comparing epigenetic modifications were successful; however, infant stress did not produce a change in OPRM1 methylation expression. RELEVANCE: This study established the feasibility of recruiting healthy full-term infants into genetic research and the effectiveness of noninvasive DNA sampling for comparing epigenetic modification in infants.


Subject(s)
DNA Methylation , Epigenesis, Genetic , Infant, Premature/physiology , Polymerase Chain Reaction/methods , Receptors, Opioid, mu/genetics , Sequence Analysis, DNA/methods , DNA/analysis , Female , Humans , Infant, Newborn
8.
J Biol Chem ; 278(50): 50615-23, 2003 Dec 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-14519761

ABSTRACT

Current evidence suggests that tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNFalpha) and the family of interferons (IFNs) synergistically regulate many cellular responses that are believed to be critical in chronic inflammatory diseases, although the underlying mechanisms of such interaction are complex, cell-specific, and not completely understood. In this study, TNFalpha in a time-dependent manner activated both janus tyrosine kinase 1 and Tyk2 tyrosine kinase and increased the nuclear translocation of interferon-regulatory factor-1, STAT1, and STAT2 in human airway smooth muscle cells. In cells transfected with a luciferase reporter, TNFalpha stimulated gamma-activated site-dependent gene transcription in a time- and concentration-dependent manner. Using neutralizing antibodies to IFNbeta and TNFalpha receptor 1, we show that TNFalpha-induced secretion of IFNbeta mediated gamma-activated site-dependent gene expression via activation of TNFalpha receptor 1. In addition, neutralizing antibody to IFNbeta also completely abrogated the activation of interferon stimulation response element-dependent gene transcription induced by TNFalpha. Secreted IFNbeta acted as a negative regulator of TNFalpha-induced interleukin-6 expression, while IFNbeta augmented TNFalpha-induced RANTES (regulated on activation normal T cell expressed and secreted) secretion but had little effect on TNFalpha-induced intercellular adhesion molecule-1 expression. Furthermore TNFalpha, a modest airway smooth muscle mitogen, markedly induced DNA synthesis when cells were treated with neutralizing anti-IFNbeta. Together these data show that TNFalpha, via the autocrine action of IFNbeta, differentially regulates the expression of proinflammatory genes and DNA synthesis.


Subject(s)
Interferon-beta/metabolism , Muscle, Smooth/metabolism , Tumor Necrosis Factor-alpha/metabolism , Active Transport, Cell Nucleus , Cell Nucleus/metabolism , Cells, Cultured , Chemokine CCL5/metabolism , DNA/metabolism , Dose-Response Relationship, Drug , Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay , Flow Cytometry , Humans , Immunoblotting , Immunohistochemistry , Inflammation , Phosphorylation , Protein Binding , Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction , Time Factors , Trachea/pathology , Transcription, Genetic , Tumor Necrosis Factor-alpha/physiology
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