3 resultados para social responses to elderly.

em Université de Montréal, Canada


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La méthylation de l'ADN est une marque épigénétique importante chez les mammifères. Malgré le fait que la méthylation de la cytosine en 5' (5mC) soit reconnue comme une modification épigénétique stable, il devient de plus en plus reconnu qu'elle soit un processus plus dynamique impliquant des voies de méthylation et de déméthylation actives. La dynamique de la méthylation de l'ADN est désormais bien caractérisée dans le développement et dans le fonctionnement cellulaire des mammifères. Très peu est cependant connu concernant les implications régulatrices dans les réponses immunitaires. Pour se faire, nous avons effectué des analyses du niveau de transcription des gènes ainsi que du profilage épigénétique de cellules dendritiques (DCs) humaines. Ceux-ci ont été faits avant et après infection par le pathogène Mycobacterium tuberculosis (MTB). Nos résultats fournissent le premier portrait génomique du remodelage épigénétique survenant dans les DCs en réponse à une infection bactérienne. Nous avons constaté que les changements dans la méthylation de l'ADN sont omniprésents, identifiant 3,926 régions différentiellement méthylées lors des infections par MTB (MTB-RDMs). Les MTB-RDMs montrent un chevauchement frappant avec les régions génomiques marquées par les histones associées avec des régions amplificatrices. De plus, nos analyses ont révélées que les MTB-RDMs sont activement liées par des facteurs de transcription associés à l'immunité avant même d'être infecté par MTB, suggérant ces domaines comme étant des éléments d'activation dans un état de dormance. Nos données suggèrent que les changements actifs dans la méthylation jouent un rôle essentiel pour contrôler la réponse cellulaire des DCs à l'infection bactérienne.

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Partner behavioral responses to pain can have a significant impact on patient pain and depression, but little is known about why partners respond in specific ways. Using a cognitive-behavioral model, the present study examined whether partner cognitions were associated with partner behavioral responses, which prior work has found to predict patient pain and depressive symptoms. Participants were 354 women with provoked vestibulodynia and their partners. Partner pain-related cognitions were assessed using the partner versions of the Pain Catastrophizing Scale and Extended Attributional Style Questionnaire, whereas their behavioral responses to pain were assessed with the Multidimensional Pain Inventory. Patient pain was measured using a numeric rating scale, and depressive symptoms were assessed using the Beck Depression Inventory–II. Path analysis was used to examine the proposed model. Partner catastrophizing and negative attributions were associated with negative partner responses, which were associated with higher patient pain. It was also found that partner pain catastrophizing was associated with solicitous partner responses, which in turn were associated with higher patient pain and depressive symptoms. The effect of partner cognitions on patient outcomes was partially mediated by partner behavioral responses. Findings highlight the importance of assessing partner cognitions, both in research and as a target for intervention. Perspective The present study presents a cognitive-behavioral model to partially explain how significant others' thoughts about pain have an effect on patient pain and depressive symptoms. Findings may inform cognitive-behavioral therapy for couples coping with PVD.

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Introduction Entry dyspareunia is a sexual health concern which affects about 21% of women in the general population. Characterized by pain provoked during vaginal penetration, introital dyspareunia has been shown by controlled studies to have a negative impact on the psychological well-being, sexual function, sexual satisfaction, and quality of life of afflicted women. Many cognitive and affective variables may influence the experience of pain and associated psychosexual problems. However, the role of the partner's cognitive responses has been studied very little. Aim The aim of the present study was to examine the associations between partners' catastrophizing and their perceptions of women's self-efficacy at managing pain on one side and women's pain intensity, sexual function, and sexual satisfaction on the other. Methods One hundred seventy-nine heterosexual couples (mean age for women = 31, SD = 10.0; mean age for men = 33, SD = 10.6) in which the woman suffered from entry dyspareunia participated in the study. Both partners completed quantitative measures. Women completed the Pain Catastrophizing Scale and the Painful Intercourse Self-Efficacy Scale. Men completed the significant-other versions of these measures. Main Outcome Measures Dependent measures were women's responses to (i) the Pain Numeric Visual Analog Scale; (ii) the Female Sexual Function Index; and (iii) the Global Measure of Sexual Satisfaction scale. Results Controlled for women's pain catastrophizing and self-efficacy, results indicate that higher levels of partner-perceived self-efficacy and lower levels of partner catastrophizing are associated with decreased pain intensity in women with entry dyspareunia, although only partner catastrophizing contributed unique variance. Partner-perceived self-efficacy and catastrophizing were not significantly associated with sexual function or satisfaction in women. Conclusions The findings suggest that partners' cognitive responses may influence the experience of entry dyspareunia for women, pointing toward the importance of considering the partner when treating this sexual health problem.