An episode of hyperthermia is not uncommon during pregnancy. The consequences depend on the extent of temperature elevation, its duration, and the stage of development when it occurs. Mild exposures during the preimplantation period and more severe exposures during embryonic and fetal development often result in prenatal death and abortion. Hyperthermia also causes a wide range of structural and functional defects. The central nervous system (CNS) is most at risk probably because it cannot compensate for the loss of prospective neurons by additional divisions by the surviving neuroblasts and it remains at risk at stages throughout pre- and postnatal life. In experimental animals the most common defects are of the neural tube, microphthalmia, cataract, and micrencephaly, with associated functional and behavioral problems. Defects of craniofacial development including clefts, the axial and appendicular skeleton, the body wall, teeth, and heart are also commonly found. Nearly all these defects have been found in human epidemiological studies following maternal fever or hyperthermia during pregnancy. Suggested future human studies include problems of CNS function after exposure to influenza and fever, including mental retardation, schizophrenia, autism, and cerebral palsy.
Hyperthermia during pregnancy can cause embryonic death, abortion, growth retardation and developmental defects. Processes critical to embryonic development, such as cell proliferation, migration, differentiation and programmed cell death (apoptosis) are adversely affected by elevated maternal temperatures, showing some similarity to the effects of ionizing radiation. The development of the central nervous system is especially susceptible: a 2.5 degrees C elevation for 1 h during early neural tube closure in rats resulted in an increased incidence of cranio-facial defects, and a 'spike' temperature elevation of 2-2.5 degrees C in an exposure of 1 h during early neurogenesis in guinea pigs caused an increase in the incidence of microencephaly. However, in general, thresholds and dose-response relationships vary between species and even between different strains of the same species, depending on genotype. This precludes rigorous quantitative extrapolation to humans, although some general principles can be inferred. In humans, epidemiological studies suggest that an elevation of maternal body temperature by 2 degrees C for at least 24 h during fever can cause a range of developmental defects, but there is little information on thresholds for shorter exposures. Further experimental and epidemiological studies are recommended, focusing on stage-specific developmental effects in the central nervous system using a variety of sensitive assays.
Although hyperthermia is teratogenic in birds, all the common laboratory animals, farm animals, and primates and satisfies defined criteria as a teratogen, its study as a human teratogen has been neglected. Homeothermic animals, including humans, can experience body temperature elevations induced by febrile infections, heavy exercise and hot environments which exceed the thresholds (1.5-2.5 degrees C elevation) which are known to cause a syndrome of embryonic resorptions, abortions, and malformations in experimental animals. Hyperthermia is particularly damaging to the central nervous system, and if a threshold exposure occurs at the appropriate stages of embryonic development, exencephaly, anencephaly, encephalocoele, micrencephaly, microphthalmia, neurogenic talipes, and arthrogryposis can be produced in a high proportion of exposed embryos, the incidence and type of defect depending on the species and strain within species, the stage of development, and the severity of hyperthermic exposure. Other defects which can be induced experimentally include exomphalos, hypoplasia of toes and teeth, renal agenesis, vertebral anomalies, maxillary hypoplasia, facial clefting, cataract, coloboma, and heart and vascular defects. Proliferating cells are particularly sensitive to temperature elevations, resulting in arrest of mitotic activity and immediate death of cells in mitosis with threshold elevations (1.5-2.5 degrees C) and delayed death of cells probably in S phase with higher elevations (3.5 degrees C). In general, lower temperature elevations (2.5 degrees C) require longer durations of elevation to cause defects than a simple spike at a higher elevation (4.5 degrees C). The death of cells is largely confined to the brain and in the day 21 guinea pig embryo to the alar regions of the brain. Cell death probably accounts for most of the defects in the central nervous system, but microvascular disturbances leading to leakage, oedema and haemorrhage, placental necrosis, and infarction are other known effects of hyperthermia; and these are probably involved in the pathogenesis of many defects of the heart, limbs, kidneys, and body wall. Recent experiments have demonstrated protection of rat embryos in culture against a known teratogenic exposure by a brief nonteratogenic exposure given at least 15 min earlier. This protection is associated with the synthesis of heat-shock proteins, and temporary arrest of the cell proliferative cycle. Hyperthermia appears to be capable of causing congenital defects in all species and may act alone or synergistically with other agents.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
When conducting psychological evaluations, clinicians typically assume that the subject being evaluated is putting forth maximal effort and is not exaggerating or magnifying symptom complaints. While the field of neuropsychology has identified that factors, such as effort and motivation, can significantly interfere with correct interpretation of self-reported symptoms and test scores, evaluation methods for other psychological conditions, such as attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) have not addressed effort and motivation as potential factors influencing accurate diagnosis. In analyzing the performance of students simulating ADHD, and comparing it to performance of both non-ADHD and genuine ADHD students, this study clearly demonstrated that the symptoms of ADHD are easily fabricated, and that simulators would be indistinguishable from those with true ADHD. In addition, students motivated to feign ADHD could easily perform poorly on tests of reading and processing speed, thus allowing them access to academic accommodations. Implications of these findings are discussed.
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