Aim The aim of this study was to examine neurodevelopment, psychological adjustment, and health‐related quality of life (HRQoL) in adolescents after bypass surgery for congenital heart disease (CHD) during early childhood. Method Fifty‐nine adolescents (34 females, 25 males) with CHD were examined at a median age of 13 years 8 months (range 11y 5mo–16y 11mo). Outcome was assessed with the Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children, (fourth edition); the Beery Test of Visual‐Motor Integration; the Rey–Osterrieth Complex Figure Test; the Zurich Neuromotor Assessment; the Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire; and the KIDSCREEN questionnaires. Results were compared with those of 40 age‐ and sex‐matched healthy comparison individuals. Results Outcome with regard to full‐scale IQ, perceptual reasoning, and the working memory scale was poorer in patients with CHD than in the comparison group (all p≤0.001). Visual perception, visuomotor integration (p≤0.001), and executive functions (Rey figure copy: p=0.05) were also affected. Patients with CHD also had lower scores on all motor domains (p<0.02) except static balance. Psychological adjustment was affected only in the ‘peer relationship’ domain (p=0.05). Quality of life was similar to that of typically developing peers. Interpretation Adolescents with CHD may manifest persistent cognitive and motor impairments, while psychological adjustment and self‐reported HRQoL are mostly typical. Thus, long‐term neurodevelopmental evaluations are necessary to provide early educational and therapeutic support.
Objective To investigate the co-occurrence of tinnitus-related distress and pain experiences alongside psychological factors that may underlie their association. Method Patients with chronic tinnitus (N = 1238) completed a questionnaire battery examining tinnitus-related distress and affective and sensory pain perceptions. A series of simple, paralleland serial multiple mediator models examined indirect effects of psychological comorbidities as well as-process variables including depressivity, perceived stress and coping attitudes. Moderator and moderated mediation analyses examined differential relational patterns in patients with decompensated vs. compensated tinnitus. Results There were significant associations between tinnitus-related distress and pain perceptions. These were partially mediated by most specified variables. Psychological comorbidities appeared to influence tinnitus-pain associations through their impact on depressivity, perceived stress, and coping attitudes. Some specific differences in affective vs. sensory pain perception pathways emerged. Patients with decompensated tinnitus yielded significantly higher symptom burden across all measured indices. Tinnitus decompensation was associated with heightened associations between [1] tinnitus-related distress and pain perceptions, depressivity and negative coping attitudes; and [2] most psychological comorbidities and sensory, but not affective pain perception. Moderated mediation analyses revealed stronger indirect effects of depressivity and anxiety in mediating affective-, and anxiety in mediating sensory pain perception in patients with decompensated tinnitus.
Young adults with CHD have impaired physical HRQoL but normal mental HRQoL and PA. Lower physical exercise capacity, female sex, less social support and lower educational level predict an unfavorable quality of life and PA. This subgroup of patients should be monitored more closely and provided with special psychosocial care to improve long-term outcome.
Sixty-seven persons were identified 1 to 2 months after the death or life-threatening illness of their spouse and followed for 25 months. Intake measures included a) a revised Ways of Coping Scale, a structured assessment of ego defenses, sociodemographic information, and other baseline variables. Fifty-six completed follow-up. Outcome measures included deaths, hospitalization, self-rated health, depressive symptoms, symptoms of anxiety, and separation distress. In our analyses, bereavement was used as a covariate and found to be unrelated to outcome. Low self-ratings on coping by making a change and problem-focused planning predicted higher scores on separation distress at 13 months (p < or = .05). Participants who used less problem-focused planning were at risk for higher depression scores 13 months after the stressful event (p < or = .05). Low ego-defensive work and high neurotic ego-defensive ratings predicted high depression scores at 13 months (p < or = .05). At 25 months, coping by self-blame was inversely related to scores on separation distress (p < or = .05). Coping variables predicted neither scores on anxiety symptom scales nor the outcomes of hospitalization or death over the 25-month study period. These observations counter some prevailing clinical assumptions about coping with a loss and emphasize the value of empirical studies of coping as a mediator of outcome during the stress of a loss.
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