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172,036 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Both amplification of normal visceral phenomena and the personality trait of alexithymia are factors in the process of somatization, whereby somatic symptoms become metaphors for emotional distress. The relationship between these two variables was investigated in 101 psychiatric out-patients. Each subject was administered the Somatosensory Amplification Scale (SSA); the Toronto Alexithymia Scale (TAS); the NEO-FFI, which measures five personality factors; and the health locus of control (HLC). In addition, anxiety and depression were quantitatively measured. SSA and TAS significantly correlated only in the female subjects. A regression model found neuroticism to contribute the most variance in predicting SSA while TAS did not fit into the model. Amplification is a perceptual element in potentiating somatization, whereas alexithymia contributes to the cognitive aspects of the process. The role of neuroticism is discussed as a mediating factor.
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PMID:The relationship between somatosensory amplification, alexithymia, and neuroticism. 799 59

Ethanol, a risk factor for myocardial dysfunction, depresses myocardial contraction. This study was to determine whether ethanol-induced myocardial depression is affected by hypertension. Mechanical properties of ventricular myocytes isolated from both normotensive Wistar-Kyoto (WKY) and spontaneously hypertensive (SHR) rats were evaluated using a video edge-detection system. Myocytes were electrically stimulated to contract at 0.5 Hz. Contractile properties analyzed include peak twitch amplitude (PTA), time-to-PTA (TPS), time-to-90% relengthening (TR(90)), and maximal velocities of shortening/relengthening (+/-dL/dt). Intracellular Ca(2+) transients were measured as fura-2 fluorescence intensity (DeltaFFI) changes. Acute ethanol exposure (80-640 mg/dl) caused a concentration-dependent inhibition of PTA and DeltaFFI in both WKY and SHR myocytes. The extent of maximal inhibition of PTA and FFI was significantly greater in SHRs (53.7 and 38.9%) compared to the WKY group (21.0 and 25.4%). Ethanol did not affect TPS but shortened TR(90) and slowed +/-dL/dt at high concentration ranges. Interestingly, the augmented ethanol-induced inhibition of cell shortening in hypertension was greatly attenuated by Ca(2+) channel opener BayK 8644 (1 microM). These results suggest that ethanol-induced myocardial depression may be augmented in hypertension, possibly due to mechanism(s) involving sarcolemmal Ca(2+) channels.
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PMID:Hypertension augments ethanol-induced depression of cell shortening and intracellular Ca(2+) transients in adult rat ventricular myocytes. 1040 46

Evidence suggests a pathophysiological role of insulin-like growth factor 1 (IGF-1) in hypertension. Cardiac function is altered with advanced age, similar to hypertension. Accordingly, the effects of IGF-1 on cardiac myocyte shortening and intracellular Ca(2+) were evaluated in hypertension at different ages. Ventricular myocytes were isolated from Wistar-Kyoto rats (WKY) and spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR), aged 12 and 36 weeks. Mechanical and intracellular Ca(2+) properties were examined by edge-detection and fluorescence microscopy. At 12 weeks, IGF-1 (1 to 500 ng/mL) increased peak twitch amplitude (PTA) and FFI changes (DeltaFFI) in a dose-dependent manner in WKY myocytes, with maximal increases of 27.5% and 35.2%, respectively. However, IGF-1 failed to exert any action on PTA and DeltaFFI in the age-matched SHR myocytes. Interestingly, at 36 weeks, IGF-1 failed to exert any response in WKY myocytes but depressed both PTA and DeltaFFI in a dose-dependent manner in SHR myocytes, with maximal inhibitions of 40.5% and 16.1%, respectively. Myocytes from SHR or 36-week WKY were less sensitive to norepinephrine (1 micromol/L) and KCl (30 mmol/L). Pretreatment with nitric oxide synthase inhibitor N(omega)-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester (L-NAME, 100 micromol/L) did not alter the IGF-1-induced response in 12-week WKY myocytes but unmasked a positive action in 12-week SHR and 36-week WKY myocytes. L-NAME also significantly attenuated IGF-1-induced depression in 36-week SHR myocytes. In addition, the Ca(2+) channel opener Bay K8644 (1 micromol/L) abolished IGF-1-induced cardiac depression in 36-week SHR myocytes. Collectively, these results suggest that the IGF-1-induced cardiac contractile response was reduced with advanced age as well as with hypertension. Alterations in nitric oxide and intracellular Ca(2+) modulation may underlie, in part, the resistance to IGF-1 in hypertension and advanced age.
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PMID:Influence of age on contractile response to insulin-like growth factor 1 in ventricular myocytes from spontaneously hypertensive rats. 1060 Nov 21

The authors compared the internal consistency, 1-year temporal stability, and self-informant agreement of ratings of personality trait (NEO Five-Factor Inventory; NEO-FFI; P. T. Costa & R. R. McCrae, 1992) and personality disorder symptom severity (Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-III-R Personality Disorders Questionnaire; SCID-II-Q; R. L. Spitzer, J. B. W. Williams, M. Gibbon, & M. First, 1990) in 131 substance-dependent inpatients. Internal consistency coefficients were acceptable to very good for most NEO-FFI and SCID-II-Q scales, and temporal stability correlations were significant for all measures. Agreement between patient and informant ratings was more modest. Substance abuse and depression symptom severity moderated the temporal stability and self-informant agreement of several personality trait and disorder ratings. The authors did not find that the five factors were more reliable than the Axis II symptoms. Issues related to the reliability of personality assessment in multiply diagnosed patients are discussed.
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PMID:Reliability of personality disorder symptoms and personality traits in substance-dependent inpatients. 1135 28

Research in unipolar depression suggests that neuroticism is associated with poor long-term outcome and greater chronicity. The objective of this study was to determine whether baseline neuroticism scores predict response to treatment with fluoxetine in depressed outpatients. Seventy-six depressed outpatients participating in a clinical trial of fluoxetine (fixed/flexible dosing) completed the NEO-FFI (five factor inventory short form) at baseline. Clinical response was defined as a 50% or greater decrease in the 17-item Hamilton Depression Rating Scale (HAM-D-17) total score (final visit--baseline). Logistic regression evaluated NEO-FFI factor scores as predictors of treatment outcome within an intent-to-treat model. Scores on the neuroticism scale were not found to significantly predict treatment response as measured by the HAM-D-17. Strengths of this study include a standardized treatment protocol and use of structured interview instruments, while limitations include a modest sample size, lack of continuation data, state/trait effects, and lack of generalizability to other antidepressant treatments.
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PMID:NEO-FFI factor scores as predictors of clinical response to fluoxetine in depressed outpatients. 1185 46

Before and after hysterectomy, 60 women completed self-report questionnaires. Measures of personality (NEO-Five Factor Inventory, NEO-FFI), coping (Coping Inventory for Stressful Situations, CISS), and procedure appraisal were completed pre-operatively. Measures of depression and anxiety were completed pre- and post-operatively. Pre-op, 34% of women reported depression at clinical levels, and 29% reported clinical anxiety. The prevalence of depression fell to 8% 3-months post-op although clinical levels of anxiety persisted post-op in 22% of women. Regression analyses revealed that the principal risk factors for post-op negative affect were pre-op levels of depression and concerns about hysterectomy outcome. In assessing proposed models of post-hysterectomy outcome, structural equational modelling revealed the key position of neuroticism and extraversion, which were both directly and indirectly related to pre- and post-operative depression and anxiety. The mediating variables in this model included coping dispositions and procedure appraisal. It is concluded that the variables contained within stress moderation models provide a useful framework for understanding the processes that may lead to elevated levels of negative affect both before and after hysterectomy. Such an approach may prove beneficial for other surgical-outcome studies.
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PMID:Understanding pre- and post-hysterectomy levels of negative affect: a stress moderation model approach. 1285 94

The issue of neurotrophins is recognized as a new lead in the quest for a deeper understanding of mood disorders. This hypothesis has emerged from experimental evidence suggesting that antidepressant drugs might work by a neuroprotective effect through the stimulation of the neurotrophin expression in distinct regions of the CNS. Endogenous levels of BDNF protein were measured in the serum samples of 118 healthy unrelated volunteers (64 male, 54 female, age: 42.1+/-13.0 years), and the NEO-FFI has been performed in all subjects. BDNF serum values amounted to 16.3+/-7.3 ng/ml. BDNF concentration correlated significantly with age (r=0.182, p=0.048), but showed no gender differences (male 16.1+/-7.2, female 16.5+/-7.4 ng/ml). A negative correlation between the BDNF serum concentration and the depression-related factor neuroticism (r=-0.212, p=0.022) has been found. Low BDNF levels in healthy humans with depressive personality traits might constitute a risk marker, reflecting a personality profilethat is linked to vulnerability to mood disorders. These results provide further support for the hypothesis that BDNF may be central to the development of depressive mood states.
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PMID:BDNF serum concentrations in healthy volunteers are associated with depression-related personality traits. 1473 33

Early Life Stress (ELS) has been associated with a range of adverse outcomes in adults, including abnormalities in electrical brain activity [1], personality dimensions [40], increased vulnerability to substance abuse and depression [14]. The present study seeks to quantify these proposed effects in a large sample of non-clinical subjects. Data for the study was obtained from The Brain Resource International Database (six laboratories: two in USA, two in Europe, two in Australia). This study analyzed scalp electrophysiological data (EEG eyes open, closed and target auditory oddball data) and personality (NEO-FFI), history of addictive substance use and ELS) data that was acquired from 740 healthy volunteers. The ELS measures were collected via a self-report measure and covered a broad range of events from childhood sexual and physical abuse, to first-hand experience of traumatizing accidents and sustained domestic conflict [41]. Analysis of covariance, controlling for age and gender, compared EEG data from subjects exposed to ELS with those who were unexposed. ELS was associated with significantly decreased power across the EEG spectrum. The between group differences were strongest in the eyes closed paradigm, where subjects who experienced ELS showed significantly reduced beta (F1,405=12.37, p=.000), theta (F1,405=20.48, p=.000), alpha (F1,405=9.65, p=.002) and delta power (F1,450=36.22, p=.000). ELS exposed subjects also showed a significantly higher alpha peak frequency (F1,405=6.39, p=.012) in the eyes closed paradigm. Analysis of covariance on ERP components revealed that subjects who experienced ELS had significantly decreased N2 amplitude (F1,405=7.73, p=.006). Analyses of variance conducted on measures of personality revealed that subjects who experienced ELS had significantly higher levels of neuroticism (F1,264=13.39, p=.000) and openness (F1,264=17.11, p=.000), but lower levels of conscientiousness, than controls (F1,264=4.08, p=.044). The number of ELS events experienced was shown to be a significant predictor of scores on the DASS questionnaire [27], which rates subjects on symptoms of depression (F3,688=16.44, p=.000, R2=.07), anxiety (F3,688=14.32, p=.000, R2=.06) and stress (F3,688=20.02, p=.000, R2=.08). Each additional early life stressor was associated with an increase in these scores independent of age, gender and the type of stressor. Furthermore, the number of ELS experiences among smokers was also found to be a positive predictor of the nicotine dependency score (Faegstrom Test For Nicotine Dependence, [19]) (F3,104=10.99, p=.000, R2=.24), independent of age, gender and type of stressor. In conclusion, we highlight the impact of a history of ELS showed significant effects on brain function (EEG and ERP activity), personality dimensions and nicotine dependence.
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PMID:The impact of early life stress on psychophysiological, personality and behavioral measures in 740 non-clinical subjects. 1603 39

Purpose of this study was to develop the Japanese version of the Values In Action Inventory of Strengths (VIA-IS). Japanese VIA-IS was back-translated, and their items were checked by the developers of the original VIA-IS. Participants in our standardization study were 778 undergraduate students who answered a battery of self-report questionnaires. The battery consisted of the Japanese versions of VIA-IS, Subjective Happiness Scale, General Health Questionnaire, and NEO Five Factor Inventory (NEO-FFI). It was found that VIA-IS has high internal consistency and test-retest reliability. Happier people showed higher overall scores on VIA-IS and on almost all subscales both in men and women. Scores on VIA-IS were higher in the healthier group than in the unhealthy group, especially on the subscales of depression and impediment of social activities. Subscales of NEO-FFI were related to subscales of VIA-IS in a consistent way. High nomination groups showed significantly higher scores on eight subscales of VIA-IS than low nomination groups.
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PMID:[Development of the Japanese version of the Values In Action Inventory of Strengths (VIA-IS)]. 1644 95

Factor-analytic approaches to human personality have consistently identified several core personality traits, such as Extraversion/Introversion, Neuroticism, Agreeableness, Consciousness, and Openness. There is an increasing recognition that certain personality traits may render individuals vulnerable to psychiatric disorders, including anxiety disorders and depression. Our purpose in this study was to explore correlates between the personality dimensions neuroticism and extraversion as assessed by the NEO Five-Factor Inventory (NEO-FFI) and resting regional cerebral glucose metabolism (rCMRglu) in healthy control subjects. Based on the anxiety and depression literatures, we predicted correlations with a network of brain structures, including ventral and medial prefrontal cortex (encompassing anterior cingulate cortex and orbitofrontal cortex), insular cortex, anterior temporal pole, ventral striatum, and the amygdala. Twenty healthy women completed an (18F)FDG (18F-fluorodeoxyglucose) positron emission tomography (PET) scan at rest and the NEO-FFI inventory. We investigated correlations between scores on NEO-FFI Neuroticism and Extraversion and rCMRglu using statistical parametric mapping (SPM99). Within a priori search territories, we found significant negative correlations between Neuroticism and rCMRglu in the insular cortex and positive correlations between Extraversion and rCMRglu in the orbitofrontal cortex. No significant correlations were found involving anterior cingulate, amygdala, or ventral striatum. Neuroticism and Extraversion are associated with activity in insular cortex and orbitofrontal cortex, respectively.
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PMID:Regional cerebral brain metabolism correlates of neuroticism and extraversion. 1647 Aug 4


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