Sentences with phrase «predicted symptom change»

We examined whether attachment security predicted symptom change, and whether emotion regulation capacities mediated this relation.

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They looked at whether a chemical change (methylation) in the function of the SKA2 gene measured in blood predicted the thickness of brain cortex (a measure of neuronal health) and psychological symptoms, specifically PTSD and depression.
«Clinically, these results indicate that neuropathic symptoms are very common in knee OA and that neuropathic processes — such as changes in conditioned modulation — predict who will respond to a common treatment for knee OA,» said Ajay D. Wasan, MD, MSc, the principal investigator, vice chair for Pain Medicine at UPMC, and a visiting professor at the University of Pittsburgh in Pennsylvania.
Using CPM, an index of endogenous pain - inhibitory capacity that was calculated from QST measurements, investigators correctly predicted changes in pain intensity and in neuropathic symptoms (p <.05).
Mapstone says that it may even be able to predict the disease much earlier, because brain changes associated with Alzheimer's begin many years before symptoms occur.
This is the premise of seeking HD biomarkers; they may someday help guide treatment decisions and predict how symptoms will change.
University of California researchers found that levels of hormones estradiol and follicle stimulating hormone, which triggers production of eggs, can predict the onset of «the change's» ancillary symptoms a year before they strike.
The presence of depressive and obsessive symptoms did not predict the outcome, although change in depression scores correlated with improvement.
This course is recommended for clinicians and therapists who seek knowledge about the factors that predict whether patients will show symptom change in the early part of cognitive - behavioral therapy (CBT) for bulimia nervosa.
Parental behaviors during family interactions predict changes in depression and anxiety symptoms during adolescence.
Guided by the Behavioral Vaccine Theory of prevention, this study uses a no - control group design to examine intervention variables that predict favorable changes in depressive symptoms at the six - to - eight week follow - up in at - risk adolescents who participated in a primary care, Internet - based prevention program.
It evaluates how parental anxiety predicted change in pediatric anxiety symptoms across four different interventions: Coping Cat [now called C.A.T. Project for youth aged 12 - 18], medication (sertraline; SRT), their combination (COMB), and pill placebo (PBO).
In addition, change in social problem solving predicted subsequent change in depressive symptoms over time.
Maternal PTSD symptoms similarly predicted differential child separation anxiety symptom change, but not child PTSD symptom change.
(3) Does total and / or non-anxious comorbidity predict Reliable Change in non-anxiety symptoms (self - reported depressive symptoms and parent - reported externalizing symptoms) above and beyond overall severity?
The reliability and validity evidence is strong, and the BPC significantly predicts change in youth symptoms during treatment.
Multiple regression analyses were used to predict reliable change in depressive and externalizing symptoms.
Conversely, severity predicted greater Reliable Change in parent reported internalizing and externalizing symptoms, and child reported depressive symptoms.
Diagnosis x time predicting changes in eating disorder symptoms and psychosocial functioning.
Latent growth curve techniques were used to investigate the degree to which family support predicts changes in youth depressive symptoms and / or depressive symptoms precede changes in family support from early through late adolescence.
Additionally, week - to - week fluctuations in OCD severity did not significantly predict weekly changes in depressive symptom severity.
Given that significant gender differences emerge in adolescence with regards to both level of depressive symptoms and number of depressive episodes (Hankin et al. 2007), we examined whether gender moderated the relationship between perceived control and dependent interpersonal stress to predict changes in depressive symptoms over time.
The results in Table III show that significant depressive symptoms in pregnancy differently predicted marital relations (both quality and change) among ART and control women.
Although pre and post-natal maternal depressive symptoms did not independently predict infant frontal function, our study demonstrated a prominent association of the change of maternal depressive symptoms from the prenatal to postnatal period with right frontal EEG activity and relative right frontal EEG asymmetry in 6 - month infants, that is, increasing maternal depressive symptoms from the prenatal to postnatal period predicted greater right frontal activity and relative right frontal asymmetry amongst 6 - month infants.
Reactivity measures of the hypothalamic pituitary - adrenal (HPA) axis and autonomic nervous system (ANS) biomarkers (heart rate, HR; respiratory sinus arrhythmia, RSA; and pre-ejection period, PEP) to a social stress task were used to predict concurrent and longitudinal changes in internalizing and externalizing symptoms.
(iii) To examine whether couple - related (number of children, length of partnership and number of previous partnerships) and psychosocial stress (SES, stressful life events and depressive symptoms in pregnancy) factors differently predict the quality and change of marital relationships among ART and control groups, we added corresponding two - way interactions into the main effect repeated - measure MANOVAs.
Do Individual Differences in Early Affective and Cognitive Self - Regulation Predict Developmental Change in ADHD Symptoms From Preschool to Adolescence?.
Drive for thinness did not predict changes in metabolic control but bulimic symptoms did (B =.31, p <.01).
We therefore tested whether children's temperament (effortful control and negative affect), social skills, child psychopathology, environmental stressors (life events), parental accuracy of predicting their child's emotion understanding (parental accuracy), parental emotional availability, and parental depression predict changes in depressive symptoms from preschool to first grade.
In addition, children's social skill at age of 4.5 and 6 years are predicted by the changes in maternal depressive symptoms over the course of the first 3 years of postnatal life [23].
Early paternal depressive symptoms predicted many aspects of children's outcome 3 years later, including externalizing and internalizing problems, social skills deficits, and lower cognitive and academic functioning, and predicted changes in children's externalizing, internalizing, and social problems across the preschool years.
Depressive symptoms predicted increases in HbA1c over time (B = 1.18, p <.01) and interacted with lag to predict changes in metabolic control (B = −.71, p <.05).
Depressive symptoms in pregnancy predicted negative changes during the first year of parenting in dyadic consensus (Figure 3), marital satisfaction (Figure 4) and sexual affection, especially among control women.
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