Sentences with phrase «predicted early onset»

Not exact matches

Do early father - infant interactions predict the onset of externalising behaviours in young children?
Birthweight and pre-eclampsia in the mother predict the development of early onset Type 2 diabetes
Young - Pearse and colleagues believe that their strategy of using induced pluripotent stem cells to reprogram patient skin cells into neurons of interest could be used to predict which therapeutics will best help early onset Alzheimer's patients.
The team found 11 biomarkers that distinguish fatal infections from non-fatal ones and two that, when screened for early upon symptom onset, accurately predict which patients are likely to die.
The researchers were limited by the scans available, so they were unable to test whether the algorithm could predict the onset of disease even earlier.
Having shorter telomeres is connected to the early onset of illnesses such as cardiovascular disease and cancer, with mortality in older adults and, as CMU's Sheldon Cohen first discovered, predicts susceptibility to acute infectious disease in young to midlife adults.
The researchers examined the relationship between a risk score based on multiple genetic differences and early - onset heart disease and found that the polygenic risk score predicted a high risk for early - onset disease in one in 53 people at the same level as FH does.
The new system calculates a risk score based on multiple genetic differences, or polygenic risk scores, to predict significantly more cases of early - onset heart disease than standard tests for single genetic disorders.
Julianne Moore's win in the best actress category for «Still Alice,» in which she played an early - onset Alzheimer's patient, was as widely predicted as the prizes in the supporting ranks for Patricia Arquette («Boyhood») and J.K. Simmons («Whiplash»).
Adverse childhood experiences predict earlier age of drinking onset: results from a representative US sample of current or former drinkers
The person who worried about the «38 — 57 % of those dogs evaluated early where they predict CHD will develop, but doesn't...» isn't adding «at two years of age», and again ignores the much worse situation where at least an equally high percentage of OFA - normal dogs might develop late - onset DJD and / or pass on many bad genes to offspring.
A question for future research is whether risk factors exert their effects for only a limited period (suggesting that the same risk factors we measured in early childhood, such as losing a parent, would predict adult - onset MDD if they occurred in late adolescence) or whether risk factors are developmentally sensitive, and those that predict juvenile - onset MDD are qualitatively different from those that predict adult - onset MDD.
Substance use disorders emerged in middle adolescence and increased in frequency through the middle 20s, becoming by far the most common psychiatric problems reported by the study participants.26, 27 We have already shown that early conduct problems predicted the onset of adolescent substance use disorders in this sample, 28,29 and it is not surprising that this is the aspect of behavioral problems that showed the intervention effect in young adulthood.
Rothman, E.F., Edwards, E.M., Heeren, T. and Hingson, R.W. (2007) Adverse childhood experiences predict earlier age of drinking onset: Results from a representative US sample of current and former drinkers, Pediatrics, 122, e298 - e304.
Age of Onset of Child Maltreatment Predicts Long - Term Mental Health Outcomes Kaplow & Widom Journal of Abnormal Psychology, 116 (1), 2007 View Abstract Shows results that indicate early onset of maltreatment predict anxiety and depression in adulthood; later onset of maltreatment predicts behavioral problems in adultOnset of Child Maltreatment Predicts Long - Term Mental Health Outcomes Kaplow & Widom Journal of Abnormal Psychology, 116 (1), 2007 View Abstract Shows results that indicate early onset of maltreatment predict anxiety and depression in adulthood; later onset of maltreatment predicts behavioral problems in adPredicts Long - Term Mental Health Outcomes Kaplow & Widom Journal of Abnormal Psychology, 116 (1), 2007 View Abstract Shows results that indicate early onset of maltreatment predict anxiety and depression in adulthood; later onset of maltreatment predicts behavioral problems in adultonset of maltreatment predict anxiety and depression in adulthood; later onset of maltreatment predicts behavioral problems in adultonset of maltreatment predicts behavioral problems in adpredicts behavioral problems in adulthood.
Early onset of these disorders predicts worse outcomes; hence, early intervention is critical.48, 59,60 Psychiatric care has a chance to succeed where criminalization neverEarly onset of these disorders predicts worse outcomes; hence, early intervention is critical.48, 59,60 Psychiatric care has a chance to succeed where criminalization neverearly intervention is critical.48, 59,60 Psychiatric care has a chance to succeed where criminalization never can.
ATTENTION - DEFICIT / HYPERACTIVITY DISORDER IN ADOLESCENCE PREDICTS ONSET OF MAJOR DEPRESSIVE DISORDER THROUGH EARLY ADULTHOOD.
OBJECTIVE: To test the a priori hypothesis that this genetic variant predicts early - onset antisocial behavior in a high - risk sample and further examine the effects of birth weight, an environmentally influenced index of prenatal adversity previously linked to childhood disruptive behaviors and genotype x birth weight interaction.
CONCLUSIONS: Early - onset antisocial behavior in a high - risk clinical group is predicted by a specific COMT gene variant previously linked with prefrontal cortical function and birth weight, and those possessing the val / val genotype are more susceptible to the adverse effects of prenatal risk as indexed by lower birth weight.
Furthermore, prospective, longitudinal research has demonstrated that disorganized and avoidant attachment in early childhood, as well as age of onset, chronicity, and the severity of abuse all predicted dissociation in various developmental stages, up to late adolescence (Ogawa et al., 1997).
Not only can symptoms be distressing, AUD can trigger a cascade of lifelong adverse outcomes, such as: other mental disorders, suicide, serious unintentional injury, illicit drug use, antisocial behaviour, as well as early onset of heart disease, stroke and cancer.3 While the peak age for the onset for AUD is 18 — 24 years, the factors that predict the transition from alcohol use to AUD symptom onset and from symptom onset to diagnosable AUD remain largely unknown.
This approach to measuring both timing and rate of symptom development is consistent with recent recognition that certain prevention and early intervention efforts may be most effective during specific developmental windows.29 Determining the power of certain first - onset AUD symptoms to predict the later development of AUD will fill a gap in the literature and will have implications for the development of effective early intervention programme.
Hypotheses are assessed using logistic regression models predicting the odds of early onset of sexual intercourse among 9959 respondents (53 % female, 47 % male) from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health.
Externalizing symptoms (e.g., delinquency, aggression) robustly predict adolescent SU and evidence accumulated from decades of research support externalizing symptoms as part of a developmental cascade that sets in motion a sequence of negative socialization processes that culminate in early onset and escalation of SU (e.g., Dodge et al. 2009).
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z