Research into mental toughness has largely been confined to elite sport but should theoretically be important across other performance domains. We examined mental toughness in 161 first year sport students at a UK University using a self-report questionnaire (MTQ48). A measure of achievement (year grade) and progression (pass, fail, or re-sit) was also obtained for each participant. Significant and positive correlations were found between total mental toughness, grades, and progression. Results suggest that the MTQ48 may be a useful screening device to identify students at risk of failing and dropping out of their program. Interventions that target life control and interpersonal confidence would appear to be most salient
We have determined the sequence and extent of maternal renal and uterine adaptation to pregnancy and examined the role of hormonal factors in their regulation. Renal bipolar diameter (RBD), renal artery resistance index (RARI), uterine artery pulsatility index (UAPI), and plasma relaxin, human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG), progesterone, estradiol, urea, and creatinine were measured longitudinally in women with normal spontaneous singleton pregnancies, in vitro fertilization (IVF) singleton pregnancies, ovum donation (OD) singleton pregnancies, and multiple pregnancies from prepregnancy to postpartum. There was a progressive increase in the RBD and the RARI and a decrease in the UAPI during pregnancy. These changes reversed toward prepregnancy levels by 6 weeks post delivery. There was no difference in the rate of change of RBD, RARI, and UAPI between spontaneous singleton, IVF singleton, OD singleton, and multiple pregnancies (p < 0.05), but relaxin was directly correlated to the RARI (r = 0.654, p = 0.015), and progesterone was inversely correlated to uterine artery PI (r = 0.554, p = 0.049). These data show that renal size and resistance to blood flow increase with advancing gestation, whereas the uterine artery resistance declined with gestation. These changes may be influenced by relaxin and progesterone.
The aim of this study was to assess the accuracy of antral follicle count (AFC) performed after pituitary down-regulation (dAFC) in predicting poor ovarian response and the influence of using different thresholds of follicle size and count on its accuracy. Using three definitions of follicle size, three dAFC were determined for every patient in a consecutive cohort of 148 IVF cycles. The performance of the dAFC in predicting poor ovarian response (as expressed by area under the curve; AUC) for follicle size definitions of 2-5, 2-8, 2-10 mm, was not significantly different (AUC 0.80, 0.80, 0.79, respectively). Multilevel likelihood ratio for dAFC thresholds of 20 were 5.43 (95% confidence interval 0.81-36.6), 3.06 (1.54-6.06), 1.63 (0.74-3.62) and 0.37 (0.19-0.75) with post-test probabilities of poor ovarian response of 50%, 36%, 23% and 6%, respectively, for a pretest probability of 15.5% for poor ovarian response. The single most important predictor of ovarian response was dAFC. The highest predictive performance was obtained in a model combining age and body mass index and dAFC (AUC = 0.82) showing only marginal improvement over dAFC alone. In conclusion, the performance of dAFC is the same regardless of the definition used for the size of antral follicles.
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