A number of recent findings
linking emotional symptoms such as sugar cravings to nutrient deficiency and altered neurochemistry states that an emphasis on biochemical techniques such as this concoction may be effective in reversing many previously unmanaged symptoms such as sugar cravings.
Not exact matches
Research demonstrates that there is a
link between depressive
symptoms and breastfeeding duration and that lack of preparation for common physical and
emotional symptoms and experiences which occur in the postpartum period may be associated with both.
«Neurological underpinnings of schizophrenia just as complex as the disorder itself: New analysis
links cognitive,
emotional, and intellectual
symptoms to neurological «disruption» in multiple brain regions.»
The Role of Depression and Dissociation in the
Link Between Childhood Sexual Abuse and Later Parental Practices Collin - Vezina, Cyr, Pauze, & McDuff Journal of Trauma and Dissociation, 6 (1), 2005 View Abstract Explores the link between child sexual abuse and maternal parenting, while taking into account mothers» childhood physical and emotional traumas and current depressive and dissociative sympt
Link Between Childhood Sexual Abuse and Later Parental Practices Collin - Vezina, Cyr, Pauze, & McDuff Journal of Trauma and Dissociation, 6 (1), 2005 View Abstract Explores the
link between child sexual abuse and maternal parenting, while taking into account mothers» childhood physical and emotional traumas and current depressive and dissociative sympt
link between child sexual abuse and maternal parenting, while taking into account mothers» childhood physical and
emotional traumas and current depressive and dissociative
symptoms.
A review of twenty studies on the adult lives of antisocial adolescent girls found higher mortality rates, a variety of psychiatric problems, dysfunctional and violent relationships, poor educational achievement, and less stable work histories than among non-delinquent girls.23 Chronic problem behavior during childhood has been
linked with alcohol and drug abuse in adulthood, as well as with other mental health problems and disorders, such as
emotional disturbance and depression.24 David Hawkins, Richard Catalano, and Janet Miller have shown a similar
link between conduct disorder among girls and adult substance abuse.25 Terrie Moffitt and several colleagues found that girls diagnosed with conduct disorder were more likely as adults to suffer from a wide variety of problems than girls without such a diagnosis.26 Among the problems were poorer physical health and more
symptoms of mental illness, reliance on social assistance, and victimization by, as well as violence toward, partners.
Addressing this gap, the present study examined multiple factors longitudinally that
link parental depressive
symptoms to adolescent adjustment problems, building on a conceptual model informed by
emotional security theory (EST).
According to this model, thoughts, beliefs, attributions and expectations play a key role in the perception of disease - related
symptoms, such as pain, and in how people adjust to them.64 The underlying process advocates a strong
link between such cognitions and
emotional state, physical
symptoms and behaviours.
Emotional availability and social skills: A
link between mother - child depressive
symptoms.
Transdiagnostic
emotional vulnerabilities
linking obsessive - compulsive and depressive
symptoms in a community - based sample of adolescents - Chasson GS, Bello MS, Luxon AM, Graham TAA, Leventhal AM.
Research on Dissociation suggests a
link between dissociative
symptoms and lowered activity in brain regions associated with
emotional processing and memory (amygdala, hippocampus, parahippocampal gyrus, and middle / superior temporal gyrus), attention and awareness (insula), filtering sensations (thalamus), processing of information about self (precuneus), and cognitive control (lateral prefrontal cortices).
Given those developments and the findings concerning the
link between depressive
symptoms and self - efficacy, this study was to our knowledge, the first to investigate the mutual influence between depressive
symptoms and academic, social and
emotional self - efficacy in a large adolescent sample, spanning 2.5 years over a period of early to mid adolescence.
This study builds upon this work then, by testing child perceptions of maternal
emotional availability and their perceptions of social skills as succeeding mediators that explain the
link between mother - child depressive
symptoms.
Specifically, the ACE Study model relies strongly on the idea that adverse childhood experiences create a burden of psychological stress that changes behavior, cognitions, emotions, and physical functions in ways that promote subsequent health problems and illness.22 Among the hypothesized pathways, adverse childhood experiences lead to depression and posttraumatic stress disorder, which in turn can lead to substance abuse, sleep disorders, inactivity, immunosuppression, inflammatory responses, and inconsistent health care use, possibly leading to other medical conditions later in life.23, 24 Therefore, childhood behavioral and
emotional symptoms very likely represent a crucial mediator
linking adverse childhood experiences and the longer term health - related problems found in the ACE substudies.
We also paid attention to parental attributes including depression, overall physical health, and evaluation of the parent — child and marital relationships in order to determine their potential influence in the
link between PTE exposure in a previous generation and children's
emotional and behavioral
symptoms.
In addition, the finding that loneliness but not perceived social acceptance mediated the
link between clique isolation and depressive
symptoms provides insight into underlying cognitive -
emotional constructs, which may be helpful in preventing depressive
symptoms in early adolescence.
The objectives of the present study were (a) to investigate whether clique isolation from age 11 to 13 years is a social risk factor for subsequent depressive
symptoms in early adolescence; (b) to test the potential role of loneliness and perceived social acceptance as cognitive and
emotional constructs underlying the
link between clique isolation and depressive
symptoms; and (c) to explore possible sex differences in the association between clique isolation and depressive
symptoms.
It is also
linked to deficits in
emotional regulation and frequently co-occurs with anxiety and depression
symptoms.
Greater anxiety
symptoms in mothers during pregnancy and across early development are
linked to more behavioral and
emotional problems in children (Beidel and Turner, 1997; O'Connor et al., 2002).
Attachment plays an important role in
symptom change for internalizing problems, with nonacceptance of
emotional responses partially mediating this
link.
Our results are also consistent with earlier cross-sectional research
linking adolescent negative emotions and
emotional variability with
symptoms of depression and problem behavior in adolescents (Larson et al. 1990; Silk et al. 2003).