Zusammenfassung. Es wird über die Gütekriterien und Faktorenstrukturen dreier Instrumente zur Messung von Angst vor Spinnen berichtet. Der “Spinnenphobie-Fragebogen (SPF)“ und der “Fragebogen zur Angst vor Spinnen (FAS)“ sind Übersetzungen englischsprachiger, mehrfaktorieller Fragebögen. Beim “Spinnenangst-Screening (SAS)“ handelt es sich um eine Neuentwicklung mit nur vier Items zum möglichst ökonomischen Screening großer Stichproben. Alle drei Instrumente zeigten gute bis sehr gute Reliabilitätswerte, sowohl bezüglich der internen Konsistenz als auch der Retest-Reliabilität. Auch die Konstruktvaliditäten und die Kriteriumsvaliditäten erwiesen sich als sehr gut. Verwendungsempfehlungen für das Screening und die beiden Fragebögen werden gegeben.
Stressed and tense individuals often are recommended to change the way they breathe. However, psychophysiological effects of breathing instructions on respiration are rarely measured. We tested the immediate effects of short and simple breathing instructions in 13 people seeking treatment for panic disorder, 15 people complaining of daily tension, and 15 controls. Participants underwent a 3-hour laboratory session during which instructions to direct attention to breathing and anti-hyperventilation instructions to breathe more slowly, shallowly, or both were given. Respiratory, cardiac, and electrodermal measures were recorded. The anti-hyperventilation instructions failed to raise end-tidal pCO(2) above initial baseline levels for any of the groups because changes in respiratory rate were compensated for by changes in tidal volume and vice versa. Paying attention to breathing significantly reduced respiratory rate and decreased tidal volume instability compared to the other instructions. Shallow breathing made all groups more anxious than did other instructions. Heart rate and skin conductance were not differentially affected by instructions. We conclude that simple and short instructions to alter breathing do not change respiratory or autonomic measures in the direction of relaxation, except for attention to breathing, which increases respiratory stability. To understand the results of breathing instructions for stress and anxiety management, respiration needs to be monitored physiologically.
The identification of biological mechanisms underlying emotional behavior is crucial for our understanding of the pathogenesis of mental disorders. Besides genes modulating neural transmission and influencing amygdala reactivity and anxiety-related temperamental traits a different plasticity regulating genes affect interindividual differences in emotional regulation. Recently it has been demonstrated that stathmin, a regulator of microtubule formation which affects long-term potentiation (LTP), controls learned and innate fear responses in rodents, but its role in human emotion regulation is unknown. We hypothesized that in humans the gene coding for stathmin (STMN1), which is highly expressed in the lateral nucleus of the amygdala and associated thalamic and cortical structures, influences behavioral responses to fear and anxiety stimuli by way of two common single nucleotide polymorphisms (rs182455, SNP1; rs213641, SNP2). These polymorphisms are located within or close to the putative transcriptional control region. We used the acoustic startle paradigm and a standardized laboratory protocol for the induction of fear and psychosocial stress in 106 healthy volunteers to investigate the impact of stathmin gene variation on two fear- and anxiety-controlling effector-systems of the amygdala. We found that STMN1 genotype interacting with individuals' gender significantly impacts fear and anxiety responses as measured with the startle and cortisol stress response. We therefore conclude that STMN1 genotype has functional relevance for the acquisition and expression of basic fear and anxiety responses also in humans.
The objective of this study was to investigate whether it is possible to use a lateral (profile) photograph to determine the underlying skeletal Class and which reference points of the angle of convexity are most suitable for this purpose. Profile photographs and lateral cephalographs included in the baseline data for 180 orthodontic patients were retrospectively evaluated. The subjects were assigned to skeletal Classes based on Wits values obtained by radiolographic analysis. The Class I subjects were 58 patients (22 males, 36 females) with an average age of 13.63 +/- 2.1 years, the Class II subjects 60 patients (37 males, 23 females) with an average age of 13.60 +/- 2.6 years, and the Class III subjects 62 patients (28 males, 34 females) with an average age of 11.65 +/- 3.3 years. The angles measured were A'OrB' (=POrA'-POrA'), A'N'B', and the angle of convexity with its variants (N'SnPog', N'A'Pog', TrSnPog', TrA'Pog', Gl'SnPog', and Gl'A'Pog'). These angles were statistically evaluated using a two-sided t-test and linear discriminant analysis. Class II and Class III subjects exhibited highly significant differences (P < 0.001) for all angles. Class I and Class III exhibited highly significant differences (P < 0.001) for almost all angles, and significant differences for A'N'B' (P < 0.05). Class I and Class II differed significantly (P < 0.05) only for some angles (N'SnPog', TrA'Pog', Gl'SnPog', and Gl'A'Pog'). The error within the linear discriminant analysis was smallest for N'SnPog', GlA'Pog', and TrA'Pog' angles. However, the method error according to Dahlberg yielded rather high values for all angles (1.07-1.17 degrees). Discrimination between skeletal Class I and Class III was easier than that between Class I and Class II. One of the reasons may be that the subclasses division I and division II were not distinguished within the Class II subjects.
Background: Several highly proliferative human cells transiently activate telomerase, a ribonucleoprotein with reverse transcriptase activity, to counterbalance replication-associated telomere erosion and to increase stress resistance. Quiescent human hepatocytes exhibit very low or undetectable levels of telomerase activity. However, hepatocytes display a remarkable proliferative capability following liver injury. To investigate whether liver regeneration by compensatory hyperplasia is associated with telomerase activation, we measured telomerase activity in pig livers after 70 to 80% partial hepatectomy using a fully quantitative real-time telomeric repeat amplification protocol. In contrast to commonly studied inbred laboratory mouse strains, telomere length and telomerase activity in porcine tissues are comparable to humans.
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