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Background: Conduct disorder (CD), which is characterized by severe aggressive and antisocial behavior, is linked to emotion processing and regulation deficits. However, the neural correlates of emotion regulation are yet to be investigated in adolescents with CD. Furthermore, it remains unclear whether CD is associated with deficits in emotional reactivity, emotion regulation, or both.
Methods: We used functional magnetic resonance imaging to study effortful emotion regulation by cognitive reappraisal in 59 female adolescents 15 to 18 years of age (30 with a CD diagnosis and 29 typically developing (TD) control adolescents).
Results: Behaviorally, in-scanner self-report ratings confirmed successful emotion regulation within each group individually but significant group differences in emotional reactivity and reappraisal success when comparing the groups (CD < TD). Functional magnetic resonance imaging results revealed significantly lower activation in left dorsolateral prefrontal cortex and angular gyrus in CD compared with TD adolescents during emotion regulation, but no group differences for emotional reactivity. Furthermore, connectivity between left dorsolateral prefrontal cortex and the bilateral putamen, right prefrontal cortex, and amygdala was reduced in CD compared with TD adolescents during reappraisal. Callous-unemotional traits were unrelated to neural activation, but these traits correlated negatively with behavioral reports of emotional reactivity.
Conclusions: Our results demonstrate reduced prefrontal brain activity and functional connectivity during effortful emotion regulation in female adolescents with CD. This sheds light on the neural basis of the behavioral deficits that have been reported previously. Future studies should investigate whether cognitive interventions are effective in enhancing emotion-regulation abilities and/or normalizing prefrontal and temporoparietal activity in female adolescents with CD.
Exposure to community violence through witnessing or being directly victimized has been associated with conduct problems in a range of studies. However, the relationship between community violence exposure (CVE) and conduct problems has never been studied separately in healthy individuals and individuals with conduct disorder (CD). Therefore, it is not clear whether the association between CVE and conduct problems is due to confounding factors, because those with high conduct problems also tend to live in more violent neighborhoods, i.e., an ecological fallacy. Hence, the aim of the present study was: (1) to investigate whether the association between recent CVE and current conduct problems holds true for healthy controls as well as adolescents with a diagnosis of CD; (2) to examine whether the association is stable in both groups when including effects of aggression subtypes (proactive/reactive aggression), age, gender, site and socioeconomic status (SES); and (3) to test whether proactive or reactive aggression mediate the link between CVE and conduct problems. Data from 1178 children and adolescents (62% female; 44% CD) aged between 9 years and 18 years from seven European countries were analyzed. Conduct problems were assessed using the Kiddie-Schedule of Affective Disorders and Schizophrenia diagnostic interview. Information about CVE and aggression subtypes was obtained using self-report questionnaires (Social and Health Assessment and Reactive-Proactive aggression Questionnaire (RPQ), respectively). The association between witnessing community violence and conduct problems was significant in both groups (adolescents with CD and healthy controls). The association was also stable after examining the mediating effects of aggression subtypes while including moderating effects of age, gender and SES and controlling for effects of site in both groups. There were no clear differences between the groups in the strength of the association between witnessing violence and conduct problems. However, we found evidence for a ceiling effect, i.e., individuals with very high levels of conduct problems could not show a further increase if exposed to CVE and vice versa. Results indicate that there was no evidence for an ecological fallacy being the primary cause of the association, i.e., CVE must be considered a valid risk factor in the etiology of CD.
Background & Aims: In ACLF patients, an adequate risk stratification is essential, especially for liver transplant allocation, since ACLF is associated with high short-term mortality. The CLIF-C ACLF score is the best prognostic model to predict outcome in ACLF patients. While lung failure is generally regarded as signum malum in ICU care, this study aims to evaluate and quantify the role of pulmonary impairment on outcome in ACLF patients.
Methods: In this retrospective study, 498 patients with liver cirrhosis and admission to IMC/ICU were included. ACLF was defined according to EASL-CLIF criteria. Pulmonary impairment was classified into three groups: unimpaired ventilation, need for mechanical ventilation and defined pulmonary failure. These factors were analysed in different cohorts, including a propensity score-matched ACLF cohort.
Results: Mechanical ventilation and pulmonary failure were identified as independent risk factors for increased short-term mortality. In matched ACLF patients, the presence of pulmonary failure showed the highest 28-day mortality (83.7%), whereas mortality rates in ACLF with mechanical ventilation (67.3%) and ACLF without pulmonary impairment (38.8%) were considerably lower (p < .001). Especially in patients with pulmonary impairment, the CLIF-C ACLF score showed poor predictive accuracy. Adjusting the CLIF-C ACLF score for the grade of pulmonary impairment improved the prediction significantly.
Conclusions: This study highlights that not only pulmonary failure but also mechanical ventilation is associated with worse prognosis in ACLF patients. The grade of pulmonary impairment should be considered in the risk assessment in ACLF patients. The new score may be useful in the selection of patients for liver transplantation.
Patienten mit akuter Dekompensation einer Leberzirrhose (AD) oder einem akut-auf-chronischen-Leberversagen (ACLF) stellen ein vulnerables Kollektiv für den Erhalt eines Erythrozytenkonzentrates (EK) dar. Zu den Ursachen zählen das häufige Auftreten einer gastrointestinalen Blutung, die Koagulopathie oder das Vorliegen einer chronischen Anämie. Während für viele andere Patientenkollektive das richtige Transfusionsmanagement bereits erforscht worden ist, fehlen diese Studien für Patienten mit Leberzirrhose, insbesondere für die neue Entität ACLF. Die vorliegende Studie soll die Auswirkung einer EK-Transfusion auf Morbidität und Mortalität dieser Patienten untersuchen.
Insgesamt wurden 498 Patienten mit der Diagnose einer Leberzirrhose, die zwischen den Jahren 2015 und 2019 auf eine Intensivstation der Universitätsklinik Frankfurt aufgenommen worden sind, retrospektiv analysiert. Für die statistische Auswertung wurde ein Prospensity-Score-Matching nach EK-Transfusion mit Adjustierung für mögliche Konfundierungseffekte durchgeführt. Der Einfluss der Transfusion auf die Mortalität wurde mithilfe von Kaplan-Meier-Kurven und multivariater Cox-Regression untersucht. Für die ACLF-Kohorte wurden ROC-Kurven zum Versuch der Identifizierung eines Transfusionstriggers und eines Zielhämoglobinwertes nach Transfusion angefertigt.
In der Gesamtkohorte wiesen transfundierte Patienten eine signifikant höhere Mortalitätsrate als Nicht-Transfundierte auf (28-Tages-Mortalität: 39,6% vs. 19,5%, p<0,001). Dabei wirkte sich die Transfusion primär bei Patienten mit ACLF negativ auf das Überleben aus. Nach Matching der Patienten nach Erhalt eines EKs und Adjustierung für potentielle Konfundierungseffekte blieb die Kurzzeitmortalität bei transfundierten Patienten mit ACLF weiterhin signifikant erhöht (28-Tages-Mortalität: 72,7% vs. 45,5%, p=0,03). Bei AD Patienten zeigte die Transfusion keinen signifikanten Einfluss auf das Überleben. Die multivariate Cox-Regression identifizierte die EK-Transfusion als unabhängigen Risikofaktor der Kurzzeitmortalität im ACLF (HR: 2,55; 95% KI 1,26 – 5,15, p=0,009). Die Identifizierung eines Transfusionstriggers oder eines Zielhämoglobinwertes war nicht möglich.
Die vorliegende Studie konnte zeigen, dass die EK-Transfusion einen Risikofaktor der Kurzzeitmortalität im ACLF, aber nicht für AD Patienten darstellt. Dieses Ergebnis macht fortführende Untersuchungen zur Ursachenforschung und zur Evaluierung des richtigen Transfusionsmanagements für Patienten mit ACLF notwendig.