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The relationship between emotional symptoms and cognitive impairments in major depressive disorder (MDD) is key to understanding cognitive dysfunction and optimizing recovery strategies. This study investigates the relationship between subjective and objective cognitive functions and emotional symptoms in MDD and evaluates their contributions to social functioning recovery.
Methods
The Prospective Cohort Study of Depression in China (PROUD) involved 1,376 MDD patients, who underwent 8 weeks of antidepressant monotherapy with assessments at baseline, week 8, and week 52. Measures included the Hamilton Depression Rating Scale (HAMD-17), Quick Inventory of Depressive Symptomatology-Self Report (QIDS-SR16), Chinese Brief Cognitive Test (C-BCT), Perceived Deficits Questionnaire for Depression-5 (PDQ-D5), and Sheehan Disability Scale (SDS). Cross-lagged panel modeling (CLPM) was used to analyze temporal relationships.
Results
Depressive symptoms and cognitive measures demonstrated significant improvement over 8 weeks (p < 0.001). Baseline subjective cognitive dysfunction predicted depressive symptoms at week 8 (HAMD-17: β = 0.190, 95% CI: 0.108–0.271; QIDS-SR16: β = 0.217, 95% CI: 0.126–0.308). Meanwhile, baseline depressive symptoms (QIDS-SR16) also predicted subsequent subjective cognitive dysfunction (β = 0.090, 95% CI: 0.003-0.177). Recovery of social functioning was driven by improvements in depressive symptoms (β = 0.384, p < 0.0001) and subjective cognition (β = 0.551, p < 0.0001), with subjective cognition contributing more substantially (R2 = 0.196 vs. 0.075).
Conclusions
Subjective cognitive dysfunction is more strongly associated with depressive symptoms and plays a significant role in social functioning recovery, highlighting the need for targeted interventions addressing subjective cognitive deficits in MDD.
Ice shelves affect the stability of ice sheets by supporting the mass balance of ice upstream of the grounding line. Marine ice, formed from supercooled water freezing at the base of ice shelves, contributes to mass gain and affects ice dynamics. Direct measurements of marine ice thickness are rare due to the challenges of borehole drilling. Here we assume hydrostatic equilibrium to estimate marine ice distribution beneath the Amery Ice Shelf (AIS) using meteoric ice-thickness data obtained from radio-echo sounding collected during the Chinese National Antarctic Research Expedition between 2015 and 2019. This is the first mapping of marine ice beneath the AIS in nearly 20 years. Our new estimates of marine ice along two longitudinal bands beneath the northwest AIS are spatially consistent with earlier work but thicker. We also find a marine ice layer exceeding 30 m of thickness in the central ice shelf and patchy refreezing downstream of the grounding line. Thickness differences from prior results may indicate time-variation in basal melting and freezing patterns driven by polynya activity and coastal water intrusions masses under the ice shelf, highlighting that those changes in ice–ocean interaction are impacting ice-shelf stability.
We study how professional fund managers’ growth expectations affect their equity investments and the consequent effects on prices. Using novel data on China’s mutual fund managers’ growth expectations, we show that pessimistic managers decrease equity allocations and shift away from more cyclical stocks. We identify a statistically significant link between managers’ growth expectations and returns on the stocks that they hold and trade. We also find that an earnings-based measure of price informativeness is increasing in forecasting managers’ investment and forecast-consistent trading, implying that active fund managers in China help move stock prices closer to underlying fundamentals.
Feed intake, a critical factor for dairy cows during the postpartum period, is intricately linked to the rumen microbiome. However, the specific roles of rumen metagenome and metabolome in modulating feed intake in postpartum dairy cows remain unclear. In the current study, 20 postpartum dairy cows were divided into low feed intake (n = 5) and high feed intake (HFI, n = 5) groups to investigate the role of ruminal microbial composition, function, and metabolism on feed intake using a combined approach of metagenomics and metabolomics. Our analysis revealed a significant enrichment of Bacteroides and Fibrobacter in HFI cows (p < 0.05), contributing to enhanced protein and energy metabolism. Metabolomic analysis disclosed that HFI cows exhibited a higher relative concentration of rumen metabolites, such as alpha-tocopheryl acetate (fold change = 9.2, p = 0.008), linoleic acid (fold change = 5.96, p = 0.007), and leucine (fold change = 4.14, p = 0.004). Spearman correlation analysis pinpointed a positive correlation between specific microbiota (Succinivibrionaceae and Prevotellaceae) and metabolites involved in amino acid and peptide metabolism, fatty acid metabolism, and conjugates. Furthermore, co-occurrence network analysis showed that the unclassified_f_Succinivibrionaceae, Succinatimonas, and Ruminobacte were significantly associated with dry matter intake-associated metabotypes, including rumen metabolites involved in fatty acids and conjugates, favonoids, and gycerophosphocholines. The feed intake variation explained by the rumen microbiome, functions, and metabolites were 29.63%, 27.30%, and 33.50%, respectively. These findings provide comprehensive insights into rumen metagenomics at different feed intake levels in postpartum dairy cows, potentially guiding strategies to manipulate the rumen microbiome for feed intake and production improvement.
Pediatric bipolar disorder (PBD) is characterized by abnormal functional connectivity among distributed brain regions. Increasing evidence suggests a role for the limbic network (LN) and the triple network model in the pathophysiology of bipolar disorder (BD). However, the specific relationship between the LN and the triple network in PBD remains unclear. This study aimed to investigate the aberrant causal connections among these four core networks in PBD.
Method
Resting-state functional MRI scans from 92 PBD patients and 40 healthy controls (HCs) were analyzed. Dynamic Causal Modeling (DCM) was employed to assess effective connectivity (EC) among the four core networks. Parametric empirical Bayes (PEB) analysis was conducted to identify ECs associated with group differences, as well as depression and mania severity. Leave-one-out cross-validation (LOOCV) was used to test predictive accuracy.
Result
Compared to HCs, PBD patients exhibited primarily excitatory bottom-up connections from the LN to the salience network (SN) and bidirectional excitatory connections between the default mode network (DMN) and SN. In PBD, top-down connectivity from the triple network to the LN was excitatory in individuals with higher depression severity but inhibitory in those with higher mania severity. LOOCV identified dysconnectivity circuits involving the caudate and hippocampus as being associated with mania and depression severity, respectively.
Conclusions
Disrupted bottom-up connections from the LN to the triple network distinguish PBD patients from healthy controls, while top-down disruptions from the triple network to LN relate to mood state differences. These findings offer insight into the neural mechanisms of PBD.
As the most populous city in China, Shanghai’s human waste disposal underwent a dramatic transition between 1949 and 2010. While human waste continued to be sold to farmers as fertilizer, the authorities attempted to modernize the methods of manual removal, promoting nightsoil dump stations and vacuum trucks from the early 1970s. These new methods soon became widespread. However, urban human waste gradually lost its value as fertilizer from the late 1970s, chiefly because of the popularization of chemical fertilizers, at which point Shanghai was faced with serious human waste issues. Encountering this unforeseen shift, the municipality had to accept the reality that there were no longer rural markets for urban human waste, and that it would have to start treating human waste as refuse. In contrast to the Western model, Shanghai’s approach to modernizing human waste disposal was distinctive, having been influenced by factors beyond the city.
Natural infection by Trichinella sp. has been reported in humans and more than 150 species of animals, especially carnivorous and omnivorous mammals. Although the presence of Trichinella sp. infection in wild boars (Sus scrofa) has been documented worldwide, limited information is known about Trichinella circulation in farmed wild boars in China. This study intends to investigate the prevalence of Trichinella sp. in farmed wild boars in China. Seven hundred and sixty-one (761) muscle samples from farmed wild boars were collected in Jilin Province of China from 2017 to 2020. The diaphragm muscles were examined by artificial digestion method. The overall prevalence of Trichinella in farmed wild boars was 0.53% [95% confidence interval (CI): 0.51–0.55]. The average parasite loading was 0.076 ± 0.025 larvae per gram (lpg), and the highest burden was 0.21 lpg in a wild boar from Fusong city. Trichinella spiralis was the only species identified by multiplex polymerase chain reaction. The 5S rDNA inter-genic spacer region of Trichinella was amplified and sequenced. The results showed that the obtained sequence (GenBank accession number: OQ725583) shared 100% identity with the T. spiralis HLJ isolate (GenBank accession number: MH289505). Since the consumption of farmed wild boars is expected to increase in the future, these findings highlight the significance of developing exclusive guidelines for the processing of slaughtered farmed wild boar meat in China.
Both depression and respiratory disease are common today in young populations. However, little is known about the relationship between them.
Aims
This study aims to explore the association between depression in childhood to early adulthood and respiratory health outcomes in early adulthood, and the potential underlying mechanisms.
Method
A prospective study was conducted based on the Swedish BAMSE (Barn, Allergi, Miljö, Stockholm, Epidemiologi [Children, Allergy, Milieu, Stockholm, Epidemiology]) birth cohort (n = 4089). We identified clinically diagnosed depression through the dispensation of antidepressants, using national register data confirmed by self-reported diagnosis. At the 24-year follow-up, respiratory health was assessed via questionnaires and clinical evaluation. Metabolic and inflammatory profiles were analysed to explore potential mechanisms.
Results
Among the 2994 participants who provided study data, 403 (13.5%) had depression at any time point from around age 10 to 25 years. Depression was associated with higher risks of any chronic bronchitis symptoms (odds ratio = 1.58, 95% CI 1.21–2.06) and respiratory symptoms (odds ratio = 1.41, 95% CI 1.11–1.80) in early adulthood, independent of body mass index (BMI) and smoking status. Compared to individuals without depression, those with depression had a higher fat mass index (FMI (β = 0.48, 95% CI 0.22–0.74)) and increased blood levels of fibroblast growth factor 21 and Interleukin-6 in early adulthood. These markers together with FMI were found to partly mediate the association between depression and respiratory symptoms (total mediation proportion: 19.8 and 15.4%, respectively, P < 0.01).
Conclusions
Depression in childhood to early adulthood was associated with an increased risk of respiratory ill-health in early adulthood, independently of smoking. Metabolic and inflammatory dysregulations may underlie this link.
Coronary artery lesions are the most severe complications of Kawasaki disease. Despite recent advances, evidence of the association between risk factors and coronary artery lesion is lacking. In this study, we demonstrated the potential clinical indicators that could assist to evaluate the prevalence of coronary artery lesion among paediatric patients with Kawasaki disease.
Methods:
We retrospectively enrolled 260 paediatric patients with Kawasaki disease. Patients with coronary dilation, coronary aneurysm, and intimal thickening of coronary arteries were included in this study. Medical records of each patient were collected. Logistic regression analysis was performed to explore risk factors and the occurrence of coronary artery lesion in patients with Kawasaki disease.
Results:
Respectively, 64 (24.6%), 39 (15%), and 56 patients (21.5%) of the participants had coronary dilation, coronary aneurysm, and intimal thickening of coronary arteries. Univariate analysis revealed that age, gender, duration of fever, time of initial use of intravenous immunoglobulin, erythrocyte sedimentation rate, white blood cell counts, time of platelet increase, the maximum value of platelet, albumin, and immunoglobulin G level was associated with coronary artery lesion. In multivariable logistic analysis, those younger and mainly males were associated with all three outcomes of coronary artery lesion, lower serum albumin levels, and later initial use of intravenous immunoglobulin were linked to a higher risk of coronary dilation and coronary aneurysm.
Conclusions:
The potential risk factors that could be used to estimate the occurrence of coronary artery lesion in Kawasaki disease patients are young age, male, lower serum albumin lever, and later initial use of intravenous immunoglobulin. However, long-term follow-up and multi-centre studies are required to verify our findings in the future.
The spatio-temporal scales, as well as a comprehensive self-sustained mechanism of the reattachment unsteadiness in shock wave/boundary layer interaction, are investigated in this study. Direct numerical simulations reveal that the reattachment unsteadiness of a Mach 7.7 laminar inflow causes over $26\,\%$ variation in wall friction and up to $20\,\%$ fluctuation in heat flux at the reattachment of the separation bubble. A statistical approach, based on the local reattachment upstream movement, is proposed to identify the spanwise and temporal scales of reattachment unsteadiness. It is found that two different types, i.e. self-induced and random processes, dominate different regions of reattachment. A self-sustained mechanism is proposed to comprehend the reattachment unsteadiness in the self-induced region. The intrinsic instability of the separation bubble transports vorticity downstream, resulting in an inhomogeneous reattachment line, which gives rise to baroclinic production of quasi-streamwise vortices. The pairing of these vortices initiates high-speed streaks and shifts the reattachment line upstream. Ultimately, viscosity dissipates the vortices, triggering instability and a new cycle of reattachment unsteadiness. The temporal scale and maximum vorticity are estimated with the self-sustained mechanism via order-of-magnitude analysis of the enstrophy. The advection speed of friction, derived from the assumption of coherent structures advecting with a Blasius-type boundary layer, aligns with the numerical findings.
This study aims to explore the concept of future orientation, which encompasses individuals’ thoughts about the future, goal-setting, planning, response to challenges and behavioural adjustments in evolving situations. Often viewed as a psychological resource, future orientation is believed to be developed from psychological resilience. The study investigates the curvilinear relationship between childhood maltreatment and future orientation while examining the moderating effects of genotype.
Methods
A total of 14,675 Chinese adults self-reported their experiences of childhood maltreatment and their future orientation. The influence of genetic polymorphism was evaluated through genome-wide interaction studies (GWIS; genome-wide association study [GWAS] using gene × environment interaction) and a candidate genes approach.
Results
Both GWAS and candidate genes analyses consistently indicated that rs4498771 and its linked single-nucleotide polymorphisms, located in the intergenic area surrounding CSF3R, significantly interacted with early trauma to influence future orientation. Nonlinear regression analyses identified a quadratic or cubic association between future orientation and childhood maltreatment across some genotypes. Specifically, as levels of childhood maltreatment increased, future orientation declined for all genotypes. However, upon reaching a certain threshold, future orientation exhibited a rebound in individuals with specific genotypes.
Conclusions
The findings suggest that individuals with certain genotypes exhibit greater resilience to childhood maltreatment. Based on these results, we propose a new threshold model of stress-related growth.