The impact of COVID-19 lockdown measures on patients with an eating disorder remains unclear, but preliminary results indicate that some patients could be more vulnerable to experience an increase in eating disorder pathology than others. To provide possible directions for future research, this report explored the impact of the Belgian COVID-19 lockdown measures on patients with bulimia nervosa (BN). The data of 15 female patients with BN from an ongoing experience sampling method study were analyzed. Mixed effects models compared surroundings, social context, negative affect (NA), positive affect (PA) and binge eating before and after the implementation of the lockdown measures. After the implementation of the lockdown measures, significant changes in surroundings and social context were found as well as an increase in NA and decrease in PA. Patients who experienced a higher binge eating frequency during the lockdown also experienced a stronger change in NA and PA. Future research should also look at changes in surroundings, social context, affect and how these interact with factors such as personality traits and coping styles when investigating why some patients are more susceptible to the negative effects of lockdown measures than others.Future research should also look at changes in surroundings, social context, affect and how these interact with factors such as personality traits and coping styles when investigating why some patients are more susceptible to the negative effects of lockdown measures than others.Weight-based teasing (WBT) is commonly reported among youth and is associated with disinhibited and disordered eating. Specifically, youth who experience WBT may engage in disordered eating behaviors to cope with the resultant negative affect. Therefore, we examined associations between WBT and disordered eating behaviors among youth and assessed whether negative affect mediated these relationships. Two hundred one non-treatment seeking youth (8-17y) completed questionnaires assessing WBT, disinhibited eating, depression, and anxiety. Disordered eating and loss-of-control (LOC) eating were assessed via semi-structured interview. https://www.selleckchem.com/products/kpt-330.html Analyses of covariance were conducted to examine relationships between WBT and eating-related variables, and bootstrapping mediation models were used to evaluate negative affect (a composite of depressive and anxiety symptoms) as a mediator of these associations. All models were adjusted for sex, race, age, and adiposity. Among 201 participants (13.1 ± 2.8y; 54.2% female; 30.3% Black; 32.8% with overweight/obesity), WBT was associated with emotional eating, eating in the absence of hunger, and disordered eating attitudes and behaviors (ps ≤ 0.02). These associations were all mediated by negative affect. WBT was also associated with a threefold greater likelihood of reporting a recent LOC eating episode (p = .049). Among boys and girls across weight strata, WBT was associated with multiple aspects of disordered eating and these relationships were mediated by negative affect. Longitudinal studies are needed to clarify the directionality of these associations and to identify subgroups of youth that may be particularly vulnerable to WBT and its sequelae.Identifying the susceptibility factors of the emotional response to COVID-19 is highly significant for the psychological epidemic-crisis intervention, and autistic-related traits (ATs) is likely to be one of the candidate factors. The current study explored the relationships between ATs, emotional response to COVID-19, and the behavioural immune system (BIS) measured by trait pathogen avoidance and COVID-19 risk perception in the general population. The results showed that ATs predicted increased negative emotions directly and indirectly by enhancing the activation tendency of BIS and COVID-19 risk perception. The findings provide a candidate hypothesis for the reaction characteristics to pathogen threats in individuals with ASD and expand the understanding of individual differences in response to COVID-19. High prevalence rates and variations in patterns of non-suicidal self-injury (NSSI) necessitate the identification of profiles of distinct sub-groups of self-injurers. To identify homogenous sub-groups of NSSI in a community-based sample of emerging adults. Data was collected using a cross-sectional survey design from a sample of 1,574 emerging adults aged 18-25 years, via multi-stage sampling. Cluster analysis using the k-medoid partitioning method was used to identify homogenous sub-groups in the sub-sample of 353 self-injurers. Follow-up analysis was conducted on measures of self-criticism, brooding-rumination, emotion regulation difficulties, experiential avoidance, psychological distress, attachment style and perceived social support to explore the validity of the clusters. Five homogenous sub-groups were identified; Multimethod, Exclusively Severe, Female Minor, Male Minor and Experimental NSSI. The sub-groups showed distinct patterns of NSSI behaviour, differing on the basis of gender, severity, frequency, diversification, age of onset and functions of NSSI. The Multimethod and Exclusively severe NSSI group members showed significantly higher psychological distress and emotion regulation difficulties. Identification of distinct sub-groups highlights the heterogeneity in NSSI behaviour. This has implications for comprehensive assessment frameworks, early identification of more vulnerable groups of self-injurers, and planning of targeted interventions.Identification of distinct sub-groups highlights the heterogeneity in NSSI behaviour. This has implications for comprehensive assessment frameworks, early identification of more vulnerable groups of self-injurers, and planning of targeted interventions.Colorectal cancer (CRC) is one of the most common malignant tumours of the digestive system, and most patients are already in an advanced stage at the time of diagnosis. Moreover, current single-use immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs), such as programmed cell death-1 (PD-1) and programmed cell death-ligand 1 (PD-L1) inhibitors, are only effective for some advanced CRC patients with microsatellite instability-high (MSI-H), and most patients may be unable to benefit from it due to a lack of CD8+ T cells in the tumour microenvironment. Additionally, the subtype of CRC has emerged as a factor affecting treatment responses, with immunogenic subtypes carrying a better prognosis. In this review, we discuss bottlenecks encountered with the single use of PD-1/PD-L1 inhibitors and summarize the research status and mechanisms of PD-1/PD-L1 inhibitor-based immunotherapeutic amplification strategies, including chemotherapy, radiotherapy, photomediated therapy and other immunotherapies used for colorectal cancer.


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Last-modified: 2024-12-07 (土) 09:11:22 (39d)